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MICHAËL ATTIAS - Credo (2005)

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Saxophonist Michael Attias has played a bunch of gigs as a sideman with some well known musicians over the years, but recently he has started to make releases as a leader. His singular effort Credo, recorded in 1999, is finally seeing the light of day.

The music has a joyous positive energy from the opening title track. The written material is intelligent and sophisticated without being bloated and pretentious. Mark Taylor (French horn) solos first and leads it back perfectly to more written material and a tempo change. Attias' solo on alto sax is burning from note one with Igal Foni (drums) and Chris Lightcap (bass) urging him on, leading into some skillful yet gutsy call and response writing. Reut Regev (trombone) also turns in a great solo. Yet another tempo and groove change leads into Sam Bardfeld's violin solo, which is good—perhaps riddled with a few too many "hot licks" (cliches), but still on the same page with the other soloists and the written material. The title track is concise, which adds to its overall power; how many people know how to balance writing and improvisation? Not many. Attias is one.

"Dream That Darn starts out like some twisted football fight song, then moves quickly to a slow, sultry swing—then double-time. Intelligent but not clever to the point of annoyance, the written material leads into another first-rate trombone solo by Regev and another wonderful solo by the leader, again on alto. On the short-ish "Labat," Attias switches from alto to baritone. It's a welcome change in orchestration and he certainly uses the full range of the instrument.

Though this is Attias' CD, the leader has the confidence to share the music's solo space. The total sound and collective focus are the greatest strengths of Credo, a strong, original release which goes to show you that it's not always the big names who make the best music.  -  Francis Lo Kee  /  allaboutjazz.com


Altoist Michaël Attias' music sometimes recalls that of Charles Mingus, particularly in some of the themes and ensembles, while the soloing is influenced a bit by Ornette Coleman. However, Credo is not a derivative effort, and Attias' band displays plenty of freshness and a life of its own. Four of the selections feature a pianoless quartet with trombonist Reut Regev blending in well with Attias, matching wits and creative ideas. The other four numbers add the French horn of Mark Taylor and violinist Sam Barefield. Attias has a fairly original sound on alto and his inside/outside music keeps one guessing. A stimulating and recommended set.  -  Scott Yanow


Tracks

1. Credo

2. I's

3. Orange

4. Dream That Darn

5. Hot Mountain Song

6. Mes Petites Amoureuses

7. Labat (Igal Foni)

8. Berechit


MICHAËL ATTIAS  alto saxophone, baritone saxophone

CHRIS LIGHTCAP  bass

IGAL FONI drums

MARK TAYLOR  french horn (1, 2, 5, 6)

SAM BARDFIELD  violin (1, 2, 5, 6)

REUT REGEV  trombone (1 to 6, 8)


All music composed by Michaël Attias, except (7) by Igal Foni

Recorded April-June 1999 at Good And Evil Studios

Clean Feed – CF051CD   (Portugal)



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