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View Full Version : Jason Moran & Bandwagon - 7/11/2003, Antwerp


mke
November-8th-2003, 09:55 AM
Jason Moran - p
Taurus Mateen - el b
Nasheet Waits - d

"We are the Bandwagon, picking up passengers and dropping them off, lost, leaving them to find their own way home." That's how Moran described his trio, mid-way through the one-set, 90 minute concert. The actual introduction was a kind of (extremely loud) hip hop cut'n'paste take on the traditional spoken band presentation. A pre-recorded message gave out the names of the musicians, followed by what were presumably samples of their own playing. So you'd hear "Nasheet Waits!" followed by drum rolls.

I'd previously heard very little of Moran, apart from a few live mp3's downloaded from his website and his playing with Greg Osby on "Banned in NY," but the recent flurry of positive CD and concert reviews had whetted my appetite. This was actually the first time the Bandwagon had played in Belgium as a trio, even though this summer they played here with Sam Rivers.

After the intro, they roared into the first piece. Beginning with free playing, Moran laying out clusters so thick he was almost playing with his palms, the trio then proceeded through a veritable whirlwind of rhythmic feels before climaxing in a sort of uptempo bluesy bop for a loud and viscerally exciting piano solo. Reaching near sensory overload, I felt like I was hanging on for dear life: a great beginning!

The second song began with the piano alone: crashing dissonance which settled into a more straight-forward ballad. Interestingly, Moran approaches ballads in more of a classical/pop way than in a jazz way. Then Mateen, slumped (almost crumpled) over in his chair in a cool John Lee Hooker kind of way, came in with a fast, oddly disconnected solo. While Moran (and the trio, overall) successfully jumped from one thing to the next at a moment's notice, I had trouble understanding where Mateen's solo interventions were coming from, especially during the first part of the concert.

A drum solo anchored by the middle tom (for some inexplicable reason, every element of Waits's kit was miked, making him far too loud) opened the following number. A bouncy theme slowed down to a much sparer midtempo swing/blues. Moran gave a cue on the piano to go into a more aggressive, funky groove, but by this time it was obvious that no one atmosphere would survive intact very long. Indeed, in the time it took me to jot down what was going on, they had changed direction. Throughout the concert, there were times where you could have danced, but only for a few steps before the groove had dissipated into something else. The piece ended with a fragment of a ballad that first sounded like the opening notes of Grieg's Peer Gynt, then went into jazz chords.

Henry Threadgill's "Too Much Sugar for a Dime" was announced, and led to a very nice intermingling of free playing and a motif drawn from the theme. A quite opposite method was chosen for the next number, as free playing over a fast ostinato vamp gave way to the pretty melody of "Estate" (I think), like the sea withdrawing at low tide to reveal a completely unexpected landscape underneath. At the end, Moran amused himself by playing a simplified version of the melody in the very low register of the piano.

Moran's "Out Front" was a complete joy, a marvelously rhythmic combination of stride in the left hand and free lines in the right. Later, Mateen introduced a slow, chugging blues shuffle which was taken up by the rest of the band, only to be accelerated into an almost-boogaloo.

Then came "Straight Outta Istanbul," which has been an attention-grabber in most articles I've read. For those who don't know, they play over the recording of a telephone call in Turkish. It's highly impressive how the follow the "melody" of the female voice. After traditionally-notated scores, graphic scores, here comes the audio score? They played through the recording a number of times, breaking away when it went into a 20-second loop. It became particularly interesting when the recording went into a one bar loop, because it took on a rhythmic, hip hop-ish character, rather than a melodic one.

The quiet solo piano that followed clearly revealed Moran's (perhaps too heavy) attraction for sudden sforzandos and quick dissonances, all the while sustaining a sweet melody. The last performance was notable for its hard hip hop beat, which was intermittently deepened by the piano, which then led into a amusingly over-the-top bashing climax. As Moran announced the end of the concert, I was surprised: time had flown by, the music had not dragged once.

Other Steve
November-8th-2003, 04:59 PM
Nice job. Thanks!

mke
November-9th-2003, 11:13 AM
Originally posted by Other Steve
Nice job. Thanks!
Thanks for reading! Let me state my admiration for the incredible concert reviews you've posted here.

I forgot to note that the review came from my blog (http://be-jazz.blogspot.com)

hearsay
November-13th-2003, 12:26 PM
Nice review. This is a really great group, they definitely astonish. How do you feel about Mateen's acoustic bass guitar?

mke
November-13th-2003, 01:43 PM
Originally posted by hearsay
Nice review. This is a really great group, they definitely astonish. How do you feel about Mateen's acoustic bass guitar?
Actually, he played electric. I had seen him play the acoustic bass guitar with Sonny Simmons, Michael Marcus and Jay Rosen. Honestly, I don't like Mateen that much. When he was holding down the groove, okay, but his solo flights seemed really odd and disconnected. But the sound itself was pretty good, for an electric bass in an otherwise acoustic piano trio.

DTMX
November-13th-2003, 02:22 PM
Saw the Jason Moran Trio with guest Sam Rivers in Atlanta last month. A very good show but some people walked out after the first few songs. At least they helped pay for the band (and free up a few armrests). The Trio was good but Sam Rivers was the show. He drove all the way from Orlando to Atlanta to do the gig. That's quite a drive. They played great versions of 'Beatrice' and 'Nightfall' plus a few other others that escape me. Sam Rivers brought his flute onstage but never got to use it - a 90 minute set with no encores. Apparently they didn't tell Sam about it because he left his gear onstage and had to come back to collect his instruments while the audience was filing out. A very gracious gentleman, sticking around to talk from the stage with a few fans. The rest of the band was down in the hospitality suite for a meet'n'greet (which is probably why there was no encore) but I couldn't hang around for it. Pharoah Sanders did the same thing at the same hall a few months back.

mke
November-13th-2003, 02:32 PM
Rivers joined the trio during the festival season this summer. I didn't see them, but was told that the music was very different.

When the set was finished, Moran declared that he would be at the bar, so I guess that's what he usually does.

mke
December-1st-2003, 05:20 AM
A slightly different version of the review is up at the just relaunched One Final Note (http://www.onefinalnote.com). It looks great in OFN's spiffy new look and is flanked by pieces by far better writers, so check the site out.

yardbird
December-1st-2003, 06:54 AM
Re Mateen, I agree with mke -I don't find the bass playing to be fully integrated in the group's expression. Compared to the bass in EST -who's an acoustic with some electronic gear - the latter contribute to give the total sound of the group more dimensions - and I think more body.
(and...yeah....soul...)

Apart from that, Moran's Bandwagon is one of the more interesting groups coming from that ccntinent during the last few years.

gonzo
December-2nd-2003, 04:50 AM
comparing EST to moran's group is like comparing kenny g to wayne shorter and saying kenny g has more soul. EST is jarrett light. it borders on smooth jazz and yes i have heard them. mateen is one of the best players out there acoustic and electric and a homeboy.

yardbird
December-2nd-2003, 08:00 AM
EST borders on smooth jazz - and is Jarrett light? I think the trio has a completely different expression than Jarrett's, though Svensson himself obviously - like many other young musicians - has been influenced by Jarrett. Nothing wrong with that, Moran has his influences - Hill, Byard, Monk etc -but they both are using those influences as a springboard for creating their own style.

For the Kenny G/Wayne Shorter bit - I never thought Kenny G had soul at all. Concerning smooth jazz; for what it's worth, I just wonder how a number of international critics usually hating smooth jazz, find EST one of the most inspiring groups on todays scene, if the group
"borders on smooth jazz".

And what do you mean by Mateen being a homeboy? The matter in question was electric bass /bass guitar or double bass.