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CARLA BLEY BIG BAND - Looking for America (2003)

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Carla Bley is the love child of Duke Ellington, Gil Evans, and Charles Ives. But still, that does not seem to tell the whole story. Born into a musical family, pre-war, on the West Coast, Bley naturally became a musician and spent a good deal of time in church to boot. The latter of these biographical facts are made apparent in at least one selection on each of her many recordings. Churchy and steeped in rural gospel and R&B, her inspirational music is like no other.
I suspect that it would suffice to say that no one, and I mean no one, can pen a chart like Carla Bley. Original composition or arrangement, her charts burst with freshness and identity. Bley has always favored low brass (and high and middle brass, for that matter), whose earthquake sounds and rumbled through all of her recordings. Her brass writing also adds to her keen sense of humor, never a novelty, and always creatively tasteful to the mix. All of this is in evidence on her new recording Looking for America.
Conceived while composing and recording her most recent outing, 4 X 4, Bley wanted to return to big band writing. She believed that the national anthem needed a bit of updating and thus a 21-minute suite on "The Star Spangled Banner" resulted. Needless to say, this alone makes Looking for America one of the most important recordings of the year. The suite is progressive and inventive. Bley folds into the familiar melody funk, gospel, blues, and imagines what the song would sound like if performed by Charles Mingus, Sun Ra, Ornette Coleman, and Joe Lovano altogether. As in all of her compositions, there is a large trombone presence and her regular trombone soloist Gary Valente is featured. Also featured are trumpeter Lew Soloff, tenor saxophonist Andy Sheppard, and alto saxophonist Wolfgang Puschnig, all seasoned Bley associates. Carla Bley knows well how to compose for them, just as Duke Ellington did for Ben Webster, Cootie Williams, and Johnny Hodges.
Bley frames this recording with the scaffolding of the idea of the mother country. The theme of motherhood arises in the opening "Grand Mother" and is carried throughout the disc with "Step Mother,""Your Mother," and "God Mother." All of the "Mother" pieces are short and reflective. "Los Cocineros" and "Tijuana Traffic" are suitably Latin flavored, the latter very much recalling a lazy Tijuana taxi ride.
"Old Macdonald Had a Farm" is updated in the same way as the national anthem, with a funky undercurrent upon which rests that low brass. This big band outing is superb in every way, as is typical of Bley’s recordings. Forget that mainstream stuff—Carla Bley is the real thing.  -  Michael Bailey


Tracks
1. Grand Mother
2. The National Anthem: OG Can UC?/ Flags/ Whose Broad Stripes?/ Anthem /
     Keep It Spangled
3. Step Mother
4. Fast Lane
5. Los Cocineros
6. Your Mother
7. Tijuana Traffic
8. God Mother
9. Old MacDonald Had A Farm

CARLA BLEY  piano, conductor
STEVE SWALLOW  bass
BILLY DRUMMOND drums
DON ALIAS  percussion
LAWRENCE FELDMAN  alto sax, soprano sax, flute
WOLFGANG PUSCHNIG  alto sax (solos), flute
ANDY SHEPPARD  tenor sax (solos)
CRAIG HANDY  tenor sax
GARY SMULYAN  baritone sax (solos)
EARL GARDNER  trumpet
LEW SOLOFF  trumpet
BYRON STRIPLING  trumpet
GIAMPAOLO CASATI  trumpet
JIM PUGH  trombone
GARY  VALENTE  trombone
DAVE BARGERON  trombone
DAVID TAYLOR trombone
KAREN MANTLER  organ, glockenspiel
ROBERT ROUTCHplays french horn on The Mothers

Recorded October 7 and 8, 2002, at Avatar Studios, New York, N
All compositions by Carla Bley except (9) (trad., arr.  by Carla Bley)
ECM Records / WATT Works Inc.  WATT/31   067791 - 2




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