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The Beat Suite, alto saxophonist Steve Lacy's latest foray into what he calls lit-jazz, features
the poetry of the Beats – jazz lovers all – set to Lacy's music. The Beats (Jack Kerouac, Alan
Ginsberg, Gregory Corso, William Burroughs and more) are given a surprisingly accessible
treatment here, considering Lacy's reputation for being "out there."
Steve Lacy, under the influence of the great New Orleans altoist Sidney Bechet, started his
musical journey playing Dixieland back in the early fifties, but moved quickly into the realm of
avant-garde, playing with pianist Cecil Taylor from 1955-57. In a nearly fifty-year career, he has
made more than eighty recordings as a leader; but thirty-plus years of living in Europe – recording
on
small labels there – has kept his US profile lower than it should be.
The soprano saxophone, eschewed by much of the jazz world from swing through bebop, is a
notoriously tough horn to master; but Lacy is an unparalleled talent on the
"straight horn." His tone on The Beat Suite is rich, smooth and beautifully
controlled, while the overall feel of the disc is closer to his Dixieland roots than his later more
avant-garde sound or his Monk tributes. The swirling mix of his alto and George Lewis's vibrant
trombone weave sinuous New Orleans lines around the front horn: the voice of Irene Aebi.
Aebi is a long-term musical collaborator of Lacy's, as well as his wife of thirty-plus years. Her
voice has been described as an acquired taste. It is a singular instrument – joyous
histrionics, completely channeled to the task at hand, from this viewpoint. Her horn-like tone seems
a gorgeous amalgam of trumpet and clarinet, a sound that adds to the Dixieland atmosphere of the
disc, with much of the music consisting of her singing accompanied by slaloming trombone and alto.
But from the angle of the words of the Beats, she might as well be scatting. For better or worse,
the lyrics are all but indecipherable. For my taste, her tone and delivery are so compelling that it
matters not. (The poems are printed in the cover booklet for those who are interested, and Gregory
Corso's "The Mad Yak" is a grim, surreal gem.) The three horns dance together, an
ebullient sound. Lewis on trombone growls and snarls at times; Lacy's clean lines have a purity and
simplicity; and the rock-solid but inobtrusive bass/drum team – Jean Jaques Avenal and John
Betsch – help keep the sound anchored to the more traditional end of the spectrum, while Aebi
chortles, trills and at times comes close to yodeling.
Lacy says: "This is highfalutin' material. It's not for everybody." Maybe he's right.
The sound could certainly scare off a neophyte jazz fan, but for anyone who has done some serious
listening, the roots of this music lie deep in tradition, and The Beat Suite is one of Steve
Lacy's most purely beautiful sets.
~ Dan McClenaghan
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Track Listing: Wave Lover, Song, Naked Lunch, Private Sadness, A Ring of Bone, The Mad Yak, Jack's Blues,
Agenda, In the Pocket, Mother Goose
Personnel: Steve Lacy, alto saxophone; Irene Aebi, voice; Geroge Lewis, trombone; Jean Jacques Avenel,
bass;
John Betsch, drums
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