The family business of jazz is a perilous one.
Expectations come high when a child follows the
parent's example. Will the offspring be as productive,
or will comparisons undermine their prospects before
they mature?
Bassist Dave Phillips is the son of improvisatory
bass legend Barre Phillips. Such a pedigree is not
always a boon. Phillips handles it well by playing
much differently than pére, writing his own
compelling compositions and, most importantly,
assembling a wonderfully cohesive group.
The assembly happened more than a decade
previous. The group, Freedance, is Phillips on bass,
John O'Gallagher on alto, Rez Abbasi on electric and
acoustic guitars and Tony Moreno on drums. Prayer,
their second album, is the happy result of all the time
the quartet logged together.
Phillips works in the traditional role of the
bassist, albeit one who writes all the compositions and
adds a healthy amount of creative counterpoint. His
technique is solid and unassuming, never doing too
much or overstating his case. Freedance is a successful
venture - the four players elevate to a unified sound, a
stirring reminder of what can occur when groups
develop over time.
The album begins rather subtly with "Window."
The piece, vaguely ECM-ish, sounds languid and soft
but with a tighter jazz sensibility. Abbasi even has
John Abercrombie-like moments. O'Gallagher's pure
tone gels nicely with Phillips' firm pizzicato. Abbasi,
when not soloing, uses chord voicings and effects to
play the role of the piano. "Annabella" swings with
snaky lines by Abbasi and a lovely arco lead by
Phillips. The title track follows, opening with cerebral
bass figures followed by a reflective statement by
O'Gallagher, augmented towards the end by Abbasi's
biting attack until resolving back into quiet.
Phillips' music is worked over into excellent
group statements by the quartet. The jerky rhythms of
"Thread" come out of the robotic bassline. "Night Owl"
is a perky short number with a whimsical melody;
"Spilt Milk" follows with an extended bass intro that
recalls some the elder Phillips. The song morphs into a
fusion blowout featuring Abbasi and Moreno in duo
until resolving into the quartet playing the cousin of
the theme from "Night Owl."
"Tribute to Stu" is named for the late drummer Stu
Martin, with whom Barre Phillips and John Surman
had a long-standing trio. The piece begins with a long
Moreno solo before a theme that could have been
played by his father's trio launches concurrent solos
by O'Gallagher and Abbasi. The album closes in the
mellow way it began, featuring Abbasi on acoustic
guitar for "Circle Above" and recalling his background
with Eastern sounds and tonalities on "Incarnation."
Prayer demonstrates that music benefits from a
slow organic process. Phillips will have a lot to teach
to his children if they choose to pick up the bass.
This review originally appeared in
All About Jazz-New York.
~ Andrey Henkin