Joe McPhee, Piotr Michalowski & Andrew Drury
Live at Edgefest
★★★½
Edgefest serves as one of the
larger American Midwest's avant-garde jazz festivals. Since 1997, the Kerrytown
Concert House has provided an up-close and personal listening experience
through this now four-day long festival. Its popularity, support, and collaborations
have continued to grow in recent years. In 2017, Joe McPhee, Andrew Drury, and
Piotr Michalowski performed three improvisations that have finally met my ears
nearly two years later. Joe McPhee is no stranger to me, and while I have not
heard Drury's music, I know that the two have played with each other before.
Michalowski resides in Ann Arbor and besides being a self-taught horn player,
he teaches at the University of Michigan and writes for the Ann Arbor Observer.
So this setting and player arrangement was all new to me, and I was determined
to go in with little expectations and to really listen to the interactions the
players had with each other.
"Improv
1" is the meat of the album, spanning eighteen minutes compared to the
other tracks, which don't even equal that run time when combined. I found
myself listening closely to every sound that was carefully made. Drury really
uses his drum set like a canvas, painting beautiful strokes of different
colors, but also able to ease into steady rhythms that push the other players to
the forefront. Drury appears very confident in the space he inhabits and plays
using a variety of techniques; going on textural excursions and then
immediately after I hear him exploring different grooves that would fit perfectly
on Sun Ra's Space Is the Place. Traversing through multiple
routes within the jazz tradition, Michalowski is memorable and very often
melodic. The first few minutes reminds me of McPhee's presence and reputation
as a jazz giant. Through that pocket trumpet, he stretches out every sound that
could possibly be made by such an unimposing and underutilized instrument. The
breathy playing takes on a natural and abiotic component within the music,
almost like the wind. The three players gracefully display their deep knowledge
of jazz music and its ever-changing styles, while creating something completely
new and engaging through pure improvisation.
"Improv
2" is perhaps a further exploration in that direction; the first two
minutes being Drury developing a theme and then breaking it down, rebuilding it
with different textures. The drums are busy and robust, barely allowing any
room to squeeze the horn players in. When McPhee arrives, he blows his way
through any preexisting barriers. I truly am a sucker for baritone saxophone
and Michalowski scratches that itch of mine perfectly on this track. When he
starts up after McPhee's frenzy, he decidedly takes the music to a cooler,
ominous place. The drum patterns change, adjusting to this newly uncovered
atmosphere. Right when it's about to come to a close, McPhee joins back in; the
two voices increase their pitches, searching for some escape while the drums
hold them back. Out of the three pieces, this seems to be the most
"conventional" and accessible for listeners who may not be accustomed
to this musical form. The third and final improvisation goes into more
unexplored territory; more in tune with the musical styling of free
improvisation players.
There are few sounds at first, but at about two minutes
in I could feel something brewing. The horns are bubbling, shaping a stream of
sound that is stopped by a squeaking dam. The light tapping from the drums
signal a shift, as McPhee's pocket trumpet wails and allows a small voice to
escape. Michalowski enters with an underlying, shaky
melodic line that combines with Drury's pulsing rhythm; at times it sounds very Middle Eastern.
In one terrific move, the music evolves
dramatically into textures that sound unlike
any instrument and played by none other than
Joe McPhee. The trills are abrasive and tantalizing and I have absolutely no
clue how he does it. While McPhee's playing
is fairly subdued throughout this whole recording, this last minute takes me to
the extremes he sometimes reaches. This release has stayed low-key and, as far as I know, has also been taken down
from Bandcamp. The audio quality is quite shoddy and really requires some good
headphones to hear all the intricacies. Besides that, it's a sublime sliver that showcases these artists' talents and
should be listened to with receptive
ears and an open mind.
Favorite Song: Improv 3
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