Saxemble
ASIN: B000002N5E
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Saxemble is the first major-label release by a quintet that includes drummer Cindy Blackman and four reed players including James Carter. This quintet inevitably reminds one of the World Saxophone Quartet, for Saxemble also capitalizes on the resemblances between a four-horn combo and a vocal quartet to emphasize the doo-wop and gospel flavors in modern jazz. And like the WSQ, Saxemble attacks the middlebrow stolidity of mainstream jazz both from the low-brow perspective of '50s R&B and from the highbrow angle of '60s free jazz. It's a measure of the album's success that Saxemble finds the common thread that ties together pieces by Monk, David "Fathead" Newman, Eddie Harris, and Albert Ayler. --Geoffrey Himes
Saxemble,SaxEmble,Warner Bros / Wea,Avant-Garde,Jazz,Jazz Music,Pop,Post-Bop
Average customer rating:
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Saxemble
SaxEmble Manufacturer: Warner Bros / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000002N5E Release Date: 1996-05-14 |
Tracks:
Amazon.com
Saxemble is the first major-label release by a quintet that includes drummer Cindy Blackman and four reed players including James Carter. This quintet inevitably reminds one of the World Saxophone Quartet, for Saxemble also capitalizes on the resemblances between a four-horn combo and a vocal quartet to emphasize the doo-wop and gospel flavors in modern jazz. And like the WSQ, Saxemble attacks the middlebrow stolidity of mainstream jazz both from the low-brow perspective of '50s R&B and from the highbrow angle of '60s free jazz. It's a measure of the album's success that Saxemble finds the common thread that ties together pieces by Monk, David "Fathead" Newman, Eddie Harris, and Albert Ayler. --Geoffrey HimesCustomer Reviews:
Not So Much a Group Effort.......2004-04-13
Saxophone collective.......2001-11-09
It's not a bad album, & yet I find it hard to see the point of doing something so close to the WSQ. The choice of covers sometimes borders on the obvious--"Freedom Jazz Dance", "Rhythm-A-Ning", "Monk's Mood"; & the arrangements & original compositions aren't especially remarkable. These are mostly the work of Michael Marcus, who is (perhaps immodestly?) the most heavily featured soloist on the disc, along with the young James Carter. I don't think Marcus a very interesting player; Carter _is_ an interesting player, but he's occasionally tempted here into the showoffy grotesquery that can sometimes overwhelm his good sense. Frank Lowe is disappointingly the least prominent musician on the album, with only three brief solos. He's a veteran of the ESP scene of the 1960s whom I'd have liked to hear a little more of; the curious are instead directed to his solid 1980s album _Decision in Paradise_ (with its remarkable band of Geri Allen, Don Cherry, Grachan Moncur, & the Moffetts). -- Cindy Blackman strikes me as perhaps the wrong choice for a drummer here: she is very good at booting it along, but she's not a subtle player nor does she have much concern for sound-colour. The sound is thus rather hard & unlovely--this really could have used a bassist, in fact, as the effect of having a sax choir over drums is to make the overall sound rather topheavy.
Worth a listen to those curious about the players involved, but it's hard to get too excited about this disc, considering how oversubscribed the field of saxophone quartets already is. Grab the WSQ's _Dances and Ballads_ to hear how it should be done, or some of ROVA's discs to hear a more exclusively avantgarde take on the instrumentation.
Jazz Music: