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Jones
for Elvin - Volume 2
CD review by
Jason West from Earshot Jazz (May 2000)
Led by saxophonist
Steve Griggs and featuring world renowned drummer Elvin Jones, Jones For
Elvin Volume 2, like its Vol. 1 predecessor, stems from the inseparable
link between music and passion.
Griggs is passionate
about John Coltrane; and every Coltrane fan -- which should include every
jazz fan -- will enjoy listening to this recording for the similarities
and differences that Griggs' tenor provides. Fantastic energy and range
magnetize Griggs' solo ideas. Sculpted legator phrases reinforce his melodic
sensibilities. Beneath these are subtle harmonic grooves -- the hallmark
of Griggs' well-crafted compositions.
He is passionate about
Elvin Jones. In the liner notes to Vol. 2 he writes: "Learning from Elvin
is pure, transcendent joy." Nowhere is this more evident then on "Zones
For Elvin," a tempoless tableau that provides Jones unlimited space for
creating cymbal crescendos and hourglass drum rolls.
"Keiko's Kimochi"
is named for Elvin's wife and business manager who also attended this
May 19998 session. In Japanese, "Kimochi" means "feeling" -- a fitting
translation given that here Jones stretches the time from slow to glide,
furnishing the music with rare rhythmic sensitivity.
Perhaps the most amazing
and certainly the most educational piece on Vol. 2 is a song that Elvin
struggles on. "Chromatic Carioca" is the last of seven cuts and its rhythmic
combination of eight notes and triplets initially catches Jones off guard.
Phil Sparks' bass nails the Latin feel, but you can hear Elvin trying
different approaches. Yet, what he ultimately creates is one for the ages.
Finally, Griggs is
passionate about music. His writing is origianl and his arranging intelligent.
On this recording he has surrounded himself with some of Seattle's best
musicians -- trumpeter Jay Thomas, guitarist Milo Petersen, and acoustic
bassist Phil Sparks -- who also happen to be his close friends.
Joe Hadlock, who taped
the three day session at Bear Creek Studios; Kate Kulzer, who captured
the images that adorn the CD's insert and cover; and John Bishop who disigned
the layout -- each in their way reflects the consideration Steve Griggs
has invested in this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. You can hear it in
the music.
Says Griggs of this
recording: "I was in the Elvin Zone." Welcome to the Griggs zone.
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