As in most European countries, jazz in Britain prior to the '60s was largely a copycat of its American counterparts. But with the emergence of artists like trumpeters Harry Beckett and Kenny Wheeler, bassists Graham Collier and Harry Miller, and saxophonists Stan Sulzmann and Alan Skidmore, a very specific yet remarkably diverse complexion began to emerge.
From his emergence in the mid-'60s to 1971, baritone/soprano saxophonist John Surman appeared on nearly forty recordings, including some that would ultimately prove particularly influential: guitarist John McLaughlin's '69 debut, Extrapolation, composer/arranger Mike Gibbs' self-titled debut, and bandleader Mike Westbrook's Concert Band albums. He'd already demonstrated the kind of voracious musical appetite that we often think is more the domain today's younger artists, exploring the pre-Soft Machine fusion of Way Back When, the free- thinking explorations of The Trio with bassist Barre Phillips and drummer Stu Martin, and the surprising calypso on his '68 self-titled debut.
And so, Surman's nascent musical relationship with fellow reed player/large ensemble composer John Warren—like Kenny Wheeler, a Canadian expat—was really no surprise. In fact, the late '60s and early '70s were a particularly vibrant time for big band music in the UK, but with a kind of experimentation that truly represented of the era, creating more of a thinking person's ensemble instead of the dance-oriented big band music of previous decades. Vocalion's reissue of Surman and Warren's first collaboration, Talesof the Algonquin, is especially welcome since so much of their work together over the years has gone undocumented. (They would later release the '93 ECM recording The Brass Project.)
With the five-part title suite and four additional tracks all written by Warren, the album clearly belongs more to him. Surman is the primary soloist, but there are plenty of strong contributions from well-known band members including Wheeler, saxophonist Mike Osborne, and pianist John Taylor—a relative newcomer who already demonstrates an innate and personal lyricism.
The music ranges from brashly swinging full-section charts like "With Terry's Help," where Surman's powerful soprano solo demonstrates just how quickly he'd evolved into a singular voice, to the more delicately balladic and Gil Evans-inflected "The Dandelion." Despite the scripting inherent in this kind of large ensemble work, there's a refreshing looseness and sense of unfettered exploration throughout. Warren's charts allow for plenty of breathing space, most notably during the 7/4 solo vamp of "Shengebis and the North Wind," where drummers Stu Martin and Alan Jackson create a polyrhythmic maelstrom beneath Harry Beckett's more towards-the- centre trumpet solo.
With so much vital music created in what many view as the golden age of British jazz, it's important that companies like Vocalion are finally making seminal recordings like Tales of the Algonquin available on CD, bringing them to familiar audiences who have been waiting for these reissues for a long time—and perhaps more importantly, to new listeners unfamiliar with this significant period when British jazz finally asserted its own voice. - John Kelman / allaboutjazz.com
Tracks
01. With Terry's Help
02. The Dandelion
03. We'll Make It
04. Picture Tree
05. Tales Of The Algonquin
06. I The Purple Swan
07. II Shingebis And The North Wind
08. III The Adventures Of Manabush
09. IV The White Water Lily
10. V Wihio The Wanderer
JOHN SURMAN baritone saxophone, soprano saxophone
JOHN WARREN baritone saxophone, flute
JOHN TAYLOR piano
BARRE PILLIPS double bass
HARRY MILLER bass
MIKE OSBORNE alto saxophone, clarinet
STAN SULZMANN alto saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute
STU MARTIN drums, percussion
ALAN JACKSON drums, percussion
ALAN SKIDMORE tenor saxophone, flute, alto flute
DANNY ALMARK trombone
ED HARVEY trombone
MARLCOLM GRIFFITHS trombone
HARRY BECKETT trumpet, flugelhorn
KENNY WHEELER trumpet, flugelhorn
MARTIN DROVER trumpet, flugelhorn
Music composed and arranged by John Warren
Deram - SML 1094 / VOCALION CDSML 8410