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Least we forget, jazz was once popular music.
Not something that required a degree in music theory
to appreciate, nor merely a ‘quiet storm’ of
background soundtrack for your office cubicle.
It seems the young cats today, the likes of Ben
Allison, Matt Wilson, and Charlie Hunter, desire
to come down from the lofty perch jazz inhabits. Count the slightly lesser known (but most
deserving) Andy Parsons among this new breed.
A semifinalist in the 2002 Thelonious Monk Competition,
Parsons studied under Jerry Bergonzi, Bob Mintzer,
and Bobby Watson. He has recorded several discs
in collaboration with drummer Gene Lewin under
the name Fundementia.
Their reunion here includes the heavyweights
John Patitucci (Chick Corea, Wayne Shorter), and
Ben Monder (Paul Motian, Tim Ries, Patrick Zimmerli).
Parsons composed all the music here except for
the standard “East Of The Sun.” Flip! is
reminiscent of the late 1980s recordings of John
Scofield & Joe Lovano for Blue Note Records,
in that the quartet keeps both feet in jazz terra
firma but aspire to make fans of non-jazz music
(read: rock) take notice.
In fact Parsons has that Lovano tenor
sound from twenty years ago. Maybe it’s
the presence of Monder, but his saxophone
work flows with a grooving ease. The
title track sounds almost like an organ trio,
warming you to this outing. The
band delivers a continuous saxophone wrapped by
guitar throughout with Monder stepping out several
times for casual, yet calculated solos. On “Lot
Of Our Souls” His ‘anger’ rises
and is bathed by Parsons and drummer Gene Lewin’s
furious activity. Lewin is as comfortable
working with the pop band GrooveLily as playing
jazz. His
gift lies in his frenzied dynamo attack of cymbals
and skins. Think Tony Williams sits in with Weather
Report.
A spin of this disc is quite a delight. Oh yeah,
that is (was) what jazz is supposed to be all about...
~Mark Corroto
© 2003
All About Jazz
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