By Nick Metzger
Blue Dream
is the debut album from the Jamie Saft Quartet, featuring Saft on piano,
Bill McHenry on tenor saxophone, Bradley Christopher Jones on bass, and
Nasheet Waits on drums. Multi-instrumentalist, composer, and sound engineer
Jamie Saft is likely the most well-known of the quartet, having been a
fixture of the American underground since the mid-nineties or so. His
massive back catalogue includes not only his solo work, but collaborations
with John Zorn, Wadada Leo Smith, Nick Millevoi, and Joe Morris to name a
few. The phenomenal New York saxophonist Bill McHenry also leads his own
quartet and has collaborated with the likes of Hamid Drake, Paul Motian,
and Andrew Cyrille. Bradley Christopher Jones has worked with Marc Ribot,
Elvin Jones, Ornette Coleman, and is a member of Vibes with Bill Ware and
EJ Rodriguez. Nasheet Waits (son of the great Freddie Waits) has played
with Jason Moran, William Parker, John Medeski, and leads the Nasheet Waits
Equality Quartet. This album finds the quartet gliding through a fantastic
set of originals and standards with elegance, passion, and capability.
The album kicks off with Vessels finding the group winding up
behind Saft’s lumbering chord progression and McHenry’s light tenor sax
tones. The rhythm section keeps a steady unadorned time, until the midpoint
at which Waits lets loose a fury of rolls and cymbal shimmer and the pace
quickens, the saxophone soloing wildly over the upswing in intensity. Equanimity begins with Waits’ rustling percussion solo, the rest
of the band jumping in at about a minute and thirty seconds. Jones plucks
out a romping bassline and Saft takes an extended solo to which McHenry
adds the occasional honk or odd lick. Sword’s Water presents
precipitous sax runs and squall over turbulent piano and the rumble of the
rhythm section. For the quartet’s first standard of the collection they
offer a rich interpretation of Frank Sinatra’s Violets for Your Furs, with Saft proving the platform for the
band’s airy retelling of the melody in the style of Coltrane’s classic
quartet. The title track Blue Dream bursts from the gates with an
up-tempo beat and walking bassline. Saft adds measured chords and runs as
the song bobs along, McHenry only appearing during the last minute to
harmonize with Saft. Infinite Compassion rolls to life in the same
manner as Sword’s Water, however after about a minute the theme is
stated by Saft which segues into the main melody and we are treated to
powerful solos by McHenry.
The second half of the records starts with another standard, this time Sweet Lorraine, made famous by Nat King Cole. The classic is given
a terrific rendition here; McHenry’s tone is warm and soft, his playing
reflective. The moody Walls follows, beginning with Saft rolling
sustained chords over Jones’ lines of arco. Waits adds cymbal shimmer as
McHenry traces the shapes produced by Saft and offers subtle counterpoint. Decamping presents a stout reprised melody, the sax and bass both
offering brief vamps in between which nicely frame the piece. The song has
some serious bounce to it and offers a nice change-up to the more moody
preceding and proceeding pieces. Words and Deeds returns us to the
bottom of the ocean with a gorgeous piano motif over taut rhythms. Jones
displays some terrific pizzicato runs which segue into a husky and potent
solo by McHenry. Mysterious Arrangements begins with a wash of
piano and percussion, the saxophone pleading somberly. The bass switches up
the rhythm and the song turns into an undulating piano suite. The album is
closed with There’s a Lull in My Life, Mack Gordon and Harry
Revel’s ballad from the 1937 movie Wake Up and Live that is given
an extended treatment by the quartet including soft piano and airy sax
lines over barely there percussion and a deep bobbing bass line.
This is fairly conventional jazz by this blog’s standard, which isn’t meant
as a detractor just as a bit of information for the reader. Perhaps it
doesn’t break any new ground but the songs and sequencing are stellar and
the playing is superlative. I’ve been really enjoying this record and have
given it multiple spins. I wasn’t sure what to expect to be honest, this
being a Jamie Saft record after all, but I like this direction and I think
this is a really great band he’s assembled. Blue Dream, in
addition to his recent (and equally great) solo piano album Solo A Genova, find Saft releasing some very compelling music this
year.
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