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Jean Claude Jones with Friends
Jean Claude Jones with Friends Kadima
Collective
J.C. Jones with Friends Duos II Kadima
Collective
Ariel Shibolet Metal Tube &
Consciousness Leo Records
By Ken
Waxman September 5, 2005
Boasting – if that’s the right word – the only
flourishing Free Improv scene in the Middle East, except for
some faint stirrings in Lebanon, Israel is beginning to amass
a number of improvisers able to hold their own in any context.
Already a few of the more adventurous have
become better known, as they, like countless players before
them from many countries have emigrated to larger music
centres. Reedists Assif Tsahar and Ori Kaplan have made their
mark in New York, while fusion-oriented drummer Asaf Sirkis
has become recognized in London.
More crucially, others – some of whom
immigrated to Israel from elsewhere – are involved with
creating a vibrant homegrown scene. That’s where the Kadima
Collective comes into the picture. With funding from the
United States, Kadima, under the de facto leadership of
Tunisian-born, French-raised, Berklee College grad, bassist
Jean Claude Jones, promotes concerts and produces CDs in its
own studio with the aim of connecting creative local
improvisers with one another. Kadima’s first two CDs feature
players duetting with Jones, who has been associated with the
Jazz Department of the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance
since 1987.
On hand are a violinist from the United
States, a Norwegian-born cellist, a veteran South African born
poet and clarinetist, Sabra musicians who emphasize either
vocals or woodwinds, and one ringer: American bass clarinetist
and alto saxophonist Ned Rothenberg. Soprano saxophonist Ariel
Shibolet, one of the three impressive reedists featured on the
two discs – alto and baritone saxophonist Gal Lev and flautist
Albert Berger are the others – has recorded own solo session,
Metal Tube & Consciousness.
Performances on the Kadima CDs range from
divine to dreadful, with most listing towards the former
attribute. Unfortunately, a minority of the participants sound
undisciplined rather than free, as if this is their first
experiment in free improv. Most of the spoken word/vocal
performances are a bit abstruse as well, relating more to
dadaesque sounds or Beat jazz-and-poetry than hard core
improv. Linked to the tradition of Allen Ginsberg, Jaap Blonk
or Shelley Hirsch, these verbal/vocal performances are a bit
remote from the other improvisations.
On the plus side, the one foreigner,
Rothenberg, recorded live, doesn’t mute his ideas in this
context. There’s no hesitancy in his fantasia of multiphonics,
overblowing and other extended techniques. A world traveler
who has performed in Russia, the Baltic states, South Korea
and Japan, and whose collaborators have included tabla player
Samir Chaterjee and British reedist Evan Parker, playing in
Israel is merely another surmountable challenge for him.
Jones, who has improvised with saxophonists as different as
Arnie Lawrence, Dave Liebman and Stan Getz, is comfortable in
this setting as well.
On “Petit Echo”, for example, Jones thumps
spiccato lines and squeaks from his strings to meet
Rothenberg’s wiggling freak notes and curlicue double tonguing
and snorting. Further harsh tones from the reedist are met
with reverberating pulsations. Then “Pizsa” begins with
pitched intensity from Rothenberg’s tongue fluttering and
Jones’ strummed bass lines. When the American begins a
sprightly melody in a higher node, the Israeli fingerpops
behind him. Later, there’s a comb-and-tissue-paper roughness
in the reedist’s tone as he pushes and pulls doubled timbres
up and down the scale. That’s perfectly matched with
banjo-like clanking and what appears to be a drum stick
bopping on Jones’ bass strings.
Former American, Klezmer violinist Daniel
Hoffman doesn’t come across as impressively. His two
improvisations with Jones are mostly concerned with the sort
of trilling-sparrow pitches that can be produced by undulating
bow pressure on the highest partials. Thus Jones provides
low-pitched tremolo undertones on one tune and doubles the
fiddler’s line in the upper register on the other.
Norwegian-born cellist Yuval Mesner, whose
experience encompasses stints in World music, flamenco-jazz
and rock bands, fares much better. Apparently emboldened by
his touring experience, he embraces atonality, stabbing the
strings for harsh notes, moving past standard tuning for
elevated tones and is unafraid of staccato squealing.
Contrapuntally, the bassist counters with partials and quarter
tones at points tapping his strings, and evolving in curving,
double-stopping unison with the cellist.
With a similarly eclectic background as lead
singer in a progressive rock band and as a member of vocal
ensemble, Maya Dunietz’s three improvisations reveal a
surprisingly adept pianist. Still, there are times her five
fingered rumbles and darting dynamics hint at avant-garde
parody. Especially in the second improvisation when her
hyper-kinetic cadences seem to roister into a stupefied
quasi-Ragtime, following an episode of tiny animal scratches
from the bassist, you apprehensively wonder if she’s spoofing
or serious.
The third improv underscores the question as
she skips arpeggios across the keys like a child skimming a
stone across the water. Piling on as many note clusters and
octave runs as possible, she adds childlike Wicked Witch of
the West vocal noises. All this is in response to sweeping
portamento from Jones that appears to allow his axe to moo,
bovine-like.
Someone whose jazz experience has encompassed
gigs with New York-based saxman Kaplan, pianist Daniel Sarid
and Albert Berger, who is featured on one long improvisation
on disc one, percussionist Hagai Fershtman appears to be more
about body English than subtlety on his three duets with
Jones. As the bassist also uses electronics here, his spiccato
soloing is sometimes jumbled among glass-splintering timbres.
Responding with quick action from bells, cymbals and
ratcheting percussion, the whirl-drum echoes Fershtman
produces suggest African rather than Middle Eastern roots.
Overall, however, for elevated jazz/improv
essence the individual duets between Jones and the three Sabra
reedmen – Berger on flute, Shibolet on soprano saxophone, and,
most impressively, on eight tracks split between the two
discs, Gan Lev on alto and baritone saxophones – are most
satisfying.
Usually a saxophonist, whose most recent CD is
dedicated to Steve Lacy, Berger concentrates on lower-pitched,
mouth-breathing flute vibrations on his track. Alternating
vocal cries and fripple-blocked textures, his tone is both
dense and stately. Vibrating stark, gong-like sine waves and
bell-like pulsations, Jones’ electronics throb beneath the
flute lines, and he also adds bass continuum. Next time it
would be advantageous to hear Berger on saxophone though
Commanding saxophone presence arises from Lev,
a former member of the Israeli Saxophone Quartet, who has
performed with the Israeli Philharmonic Orchestra. “Snake Me”,
on the second CD, is one definite performance where he blows
not only saxophone but home-made didjeridoo. Soon doubled
timbres split into higher-pitched elephant –trumpeting mixed
with percussive rumbling from his other horn. Using
sympathetic flattement he makes the vibrating lines more
sonorous, somehow simultaneously honking a Klezmer-like line.
When he isn’t providing a cushioning obbligato for himself,
the bassman’s deliberate plucking fills the bill, sometimes
sul tasto, sometimes sul ponticello.
It’s not only Lev’s full-bodied baritone sax
growls that impress, but – as he shows on “Improvisation No.
3” on the first disc -- his commanding alto saxophone
presence. Here he reaches a crescendo of rough, yet placid
alto textures that appear to double tongue into bagpipe
chanter suggestions. Trebling tones in staccato counterpoint
with themselves, probably some of the extra high-pitched
colors arise from the bassist’s electronics. In the mean time,
the bull fiddler seems to be occupied with creating pedal
point accompaniment.
A decade younger than Lev, Shibolet is also a
member of the Tel Aviv Art Ensemble, a local Free Jazz band.
On the first disc here his two short selections are dedicated
to the late German bassist Peter Kowald, whose solo work as
well as his virtuosity affected him as much as they did Jones.
The later may be using piezo pickups to extend the rough edges
of his strings so as not to replicate the Kowald style, even
though most of his work here encompasses swiped textures. For
his part, Shibolet blows pure colored air through his horn,
the better to emphasize its metallic qualities. Elsewhere he
uses tongue slaps and barking shrills.
Those sorts of actions appear in abundance on
Metal Tube & Consciousness, his solo CD, along with other
extended techniques such as gravelly throat crackles and
whistled watery tones. Those show up on “Field n.1”, along
with polyphonic scratched and scraped metal and a short coda
of bubbly blowing. Besides patches of circular breathing
Shibolet climbs the scale – with a pinched ney-like tone on
“For Bach III”; turns a piercing and vibrating arched pitch
into a shofar suggestion on “Black Stone On A Plate”; and
somehow manages to imply the ruggedness of an atonal Gaelic
ballad with dissonant circular breathing on “Slow Irish
Circles”.
Metal Tube’s opening track, “Slow Change, Slow
Development” is an almost 10- minute tour de force of glottal
punctuation with vibrato and tonguing changes. Pushing his
output into split tones, midway through, Shibolet’s single
horn creates a constant ostinato interrupted at time by
higher-pitched trills. It’s as if he had a chanter as well as
a reed, expanding on the bagpipe emulations Lev produces on
his Kadmina duets. Squeaking and pushing out serpentine lines,
Shibolet constructs entire phrases in altissimo without losing
the thread of the melody, climaxing by producing two
circular-breathed lines which seem to fill all the sound
spaces.
“Epilogue”, the 16th and finale tune is just
that. Focusing on producing unvarying straight lines that add
a certain gravitas to the proceedings, this theme echoes the
first track. Both a postlude and a summing up of what went
before, it rounds the improvisational circle with a smooth
legato conclusion.
On the evidence here, Israeli free musicians
seem as advanced sonically as their society as a whole is
socially. Shibolet has made his global debut. Now what’s
needed is more CDs from him and a few more, widely distributed
discs by a selection of the musicians in the Kadima
Collective.
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