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The
Long and Short of It
Fred Hess Quartet | Tapestry
Track Listing: Norman Says, Skippin' In, Happened Yesterday, MLE,
The Clef's go to the Big City,
From Bottom to Top, The Long and Short of It, Gear Tips, The Last
Trance
Personnel:
Fred Hess--tenor saxophone; Ron Miles--trumpet; Ken Filiano--bass;
Matt Wilson--drums and
electric drill Style: Modern Jazz/Free Improvisation
Saxophonist Fred Hess writes dreamy music. Not music that is otherworldly
or romantic or visionary per se, but dream inducing, at its plain
meaning. His compositions beg for improvisation and its players
are required to open up to the possibilities.
The right mix of players is a key to making his music work. The
Long And The Short Of It is his third quartet record and follows
2002's Extended Family, also on Tapestry Records. Hess combination
of musicians makes this date spot on, as they find a comfortable
groove to toss around Hess arrangements.
Since moving to Colorado twenty years ago, Hess and Ron Miles have
been the suitable one-two, saxophone/trumpet combination. Besides
recording on each others sessions they have combined forces
for Ginger Bakers band and the Boulder Creative Music Ensemble.
Their seemingly unassuming style plays as if they are twins, separated
at birth.
But this recording is really more about the rhythm section of Ken
Filiano and Matt Wilson. Filiano is an in demand bassist heard on
many Nine Winds recordings, and last year he released his first
solo session, Subvenire. Matt Wilson, a mainstay of the Either/Orchestra
in the early 1990s, has become a critically acclaimed leader recording
five discs for the Palmetto label.
The disc opens with, closes with, and features throughout the bass
of Filiano. His strum, pluck and bow approach is more like that
of a vocalist than a mere timekeeper. This deftly engineered disc
presents his sound in a very woody three dimensions. From
Bottom To Top finds Hess and Wilson following Filianos
lead, and mimicking his voice, Hess squeezing the top of his horn
and dredging the bottom.
Drummer Matt Wilson is also a perfect match. He is a younger American
version of Han Bennink, a true jazz drummer who loves to bash, thwack,
and whack or simply play quiet-like rhythms. He picks up an electric
drill on Gear Tips, a sort of Raymond Scott-on-LSD tune
with Ron Miles playing the muted underwater trumpet. Wilsons
stock in trade is never covering the same ground twice. He speeds
and slows The Long And Short Of It, surging and retreating
the Ornette figures with a different approach each time around.
Hess and Miles switch off the front line throughout the blues Happened
Yesterday and MLE. Both players handle difficult
passages with such nonchalant ease. The more you listen to Fred
Hess playing, the more you'll probably compare him to the
late Joe Henderson. Both are superb composers with a gentle style
that fools you into believing what they do is without effort.
But then getting lost inside a stellar recording like this makes
dreaming effortless.
~ Mark Corroto
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