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DONNY McCASLIN - Perpetual Motion (2010)

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Perpetual Motion is tenor saxophonist Donny McCaslin's first dedicated foray into the electrified realms of funk, R&B and soul. A renowned soloist whose memberships in Dave Douglas' Quintet, Mingus Dynasty and the Maria Schneider Orchestra have won him great acclaim (including a Grammy nomination for his work with Schneider's Orchestra), McCaslin has delved into groove-based territory in the past, but never as exclusively as he does on this simmering electro-acoustic platter.

McCaslin's recent releases have relied on primarily acoustic line-ups, including the brass augmented set, Declaration (Greenleaf, 2009), and the stripped-down trio effort, Recommended Tools (Greenleaf, 2008). This heavily amplified session features Adam Benjamin (Kneebody, Dave Douglas' Keystone) on Fender Rhodes and piano, electric bassist Tim Lefebvre (Uri Caine Bedrock, Wayne Krantz Trio) and either longstanding associate Antonio Sanchez or Mark Guiliana in the drum chair. Alto saxophonist and co-producer David Binney makes a guest appearance on the punchy swinger "Impossible Machine," while keyboardist Uri Caine appears on a few choice cuts, including the surprisingly elegiac solo piano piece that closes the album, "For Someone."

The majority of the date is founded on hard-hitting funk vamps and percolating polyrhythms, though a few pieces sidestep convention, revealing McCaslin's stylistic diversity. The atmospheric "Firefly" is one such example, gradually developing into an impressionistic rubato ballad, highlighted by Benjamin's spacey, over-driven Fender Rhodes cascades. Proving to be a perfect foil for McCaslin, Benjamin's two-fisted piano and Rhodes variations on the bluesy R&B of "Memphis Redux" transcend lyrical convention, fusing nostalgia and futurism into an ingenious hybrid.

A capable writer of engaging themes, McCaslin's real strength lies in his virtuosic, stream of consciousness solos. Confidently balancing inside and outside traditions, McCaslin gracefully modulates from blistering linear runs and plangent lyrical refrains to exacting altissimo figures and multiphonic accents, revealing a sophisticated sensibility that demonstrates his wide-ranging appreciation for the tradition, in all its guises.

Supported by the congenial interplay of his band mates, McCaslin's Olympian tenor excursions are copiously documented throughout the session, especially on the marathon title track, which encapsulates his entire dynamic range. A magnanimous leader, McCaslin also provides ample room for his sidemen to shine. Lefebvre's futuristic, efx-laden bass solo on the fusion-laced "L.Z.C.M." and Sanchez's kinetic duet with the leader on the intro to the wicked post-bop number "Claire" are notable highlights.

Buoyed by an outstanding ensemble, McCaslin reveals a facet of his artistry on Perpetual Motion that has been primarily relegated to his sideman gigs and a few tunes from his earliest records, proving yet again that he is one of today's most diverse, engaging and talented performers.  -  Troy Collins





The protean tenor saxophonist Donny McCaslin touches down on numerous musical platforms on this bristling disc. There’s his probing, modernist “Five Hands Down,” the squirmy space-funk of “Memphis Redux,” and “Firefly,” a deep, pensive cut that begins as a ballad but evolves into something far more churchy thanks to Adam Benjamin’s Fender Rhodes and David Binney’s haunting electronics. Perpetual Motion is fiercely contemporary and exploratory, though not so abstract as to be inaccessible. Binney’s electronica elements and sparkling production evoke hard rock and pop, and those Rhodes timbres, as delivered by Benjamin or Uri Caine, point to fusion. Alternating drummers Antonio Sanchez and Mark Guiliana and bassist Tim Lefebvre propel the album, and the sequencing always honors surprise.

The long tracks are busy, dense with the kind of jazz twists and rock turns listeners became attuned to in the electric Miles and Mahavishnu groups. Dive into “L.Z.C.M.” for the toughest funk-based foray. An homage to influences Led Zeppelin and Christian McBride, it evokes the Herbie Hancock of “Future Shock” while establishing its own groove: The rhythm section is mighty here; McCaslin fatback, jagged and fleet. The man digs into the material, no question, and never runs out of ideas-or passion.

Two tracks give this rich album unexpected depth: the pell-mell, exuberant soundclash “East Bay Grit,” which flashes by in a half-minute, and Caine’s “For Someone,” the haunting ballad that caps the outing. The peacefulness is welcome, since the turbulent trip preceding it is a blast.  -  Carlo Wolff


Tracks
Lista de Títulos
01. Five Hands Down (Donny McCaslin)
02. Perpetual Motion (Donny McCaslin)
03. Claire (Donny McCaslin)
04. Firefly (Donny McCaslin)
05. Energy Generation (Donny McCaslin)
06. Memphis Redux (Donny McCaslin)
07. L.Z.C.M. (Donny McCaslin)
08. East Bay Grit (Mark Guiliana/Tim Lefebvre/Uri Caine)
09. Impossible Machine (Donny McCaslin)
10. For Someone (Uri Caine)

DONNY McCASLIN  tenor saxophone
DAVID BINNEY  electronics, alto saxophone (tracks: 9)
ANTONIO SANCHEZ  drums (tracks:1 to 5)
MARK GUILIANA  drums (Tracks:6 to 9)
TIM LEFEBVRE  electric bass
ADAM BENJAMIN  electric piano (tracks: 1 to 7, 9)
URI CAINE  piano (tracks 4, 10), electric piano (tracks 8)

Recorded September 2010 at System Two, New York, NY
Greenleaf Music - GRE-1017
https://greenleafmusic.com


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