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Mal Waldron : One More Time

Posted By : GuessNot4Me | Date : 15 Jun 2006 02:59:00 | Comments : 4 |
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one more time


Mal Waldron : One mOre Time - 2002

The late Mal Waldron was one of jazz’s most original and expressive colourists. He ignored the
conventional emphasis in jazz on fleet melodic invention: a typical Waldron solo contains
nothing one might call a “line”. No other pianist could make his mere choice of range on the
keyboard count for so much, to the point where it became a key structural component of Waldron’s
music. He would work over a tightly restricted set of notes in the middle of the piano, his
right hand tirelessly kneading them over and over again into the same two or three patterns.
These middle-register musings might to begin with seem half-private, but as Waldron gradually
inched up the keyboard it was as if he was pushing them with gathering force and insistence
into the light. If the tone of his music was dark, it was also often tender and far from
monochrome: in those moments when he reached up into the treble for a contrast of colour and
mood the results were delightful or, sometimes, profoundly moving. Waldron’s concentration on
texture, shape, colour and weight rather than melodic invention could make one think of
natural phenomena: the shifting dialogue of sky and sea and clouds. It is no accident that
one of his staple compositions – beautifully revisited on this recording – was “The Seagulls
of Kristiansund,” a seascape evocation that ends with mimicked gull cries. Meteorologists
classify clouds as stratus, cirrostratus, cumulus, and so forth, and one might well classify
passages of his music in a similar way – dark and threatening; wispy; delicate; serene. If
the analogy seems far-fetched, listen to the opening of “Rites of Initiation”, which could
easily – right from the opening raindrop plink! – pass as a tone-poem depiction of a gathering
storm.

Two tracks on One More Time feature Waldron as a solo pianist, a format in which he was too
rarely recorded. By conventional standards he had a modest technique (which is more of a
comment on the expressive limitations built into such standards), but no other pianist, for
instance, has found subtler shadings in a tremolo. For proof just listen to “All Alone,”
six minutes almost entirely given over to the device, from the opening thrum on middle E
to the wistfully broken treble octaves that broach the theme to the bright, billowing haze
of notes that closes over its final cadence. “In the Land of Clusters” employs a favourite
Waldron device: a chordal shape is grasped in each hand and shifted chromatically up or down
the keyboard. Sometimes the hands work in contrary motion, sometimes in the same direction
but at different speeds – the auditory equivalent of moiré patterns.

On the disc’s remaining six tracks Waldron is accompanied by the bassist Jean-Jacques Avenel.
Waldron’s approach to rhythm and musical space encourages bassists to avoid conventional
“walking,” and Avenel is an excellent partner for him on open-ended vehicles for improvisation
such as the spontaneously conceived “Rites of Initiation” and “The Seagulls of Kristiansund” –
slowly rocking one- or two-chord tunes that Waldron could easily sit and unpack for much
longer than he does on this occasion (some previous recordings of “Seagulls” have been over
20 minutes long). On other tracks Avenel’s accompaniment is occasionally less appropriate,
cluttering up the music with bursts of hyperactivity – understandably enough on “Blues for
JJ’s Bass,” but with less justification on “You” and “Waltz for Marianne.” Two tracks are
graced by appearances from Waldron’s musical partner of 40-odd years, Steve Lacy. “You” is
a balmy, rather old-fashioned-sounding waltz; Waldron’s classic “Soul Eyes” is for most of
its length a piano-and-bass performance: Lacy slips in right at the track’s end, like an old
friend dropping by to say hello, or farewell.

This CD was recorded in January of last year, and released in October; in December, Waldron
died of cancer at the age of 76. He contributes a brief, almost unbearably poignant comment
to the liner notes: “Measured against eternity, our life span is very short, so I am extremely
happy to have this record as a high point of mine.” But he wasn’t ready to go gently into
that good night quite yet: he made sure that the liner notes also included contact details
for his booking agent.

Nate Dorward

Cadence, June 2003


1. All Alone 6'16
2. Rites of Initiation 11'41
3. You 8'15
4. Blues for JJ'S Bass 5'53
5. The Seagulls of Kristiansund 7'40
6. Waltz for Marianne 5'17
7. In the Land of Clusters 5'22
8. Soul Eyes 6'29

Total running time : 56'56"

Piano : Mal Waldron
Double Bass : Jean-Jacques Avenel
Soprano saxophone : Steve Lacy

http://rapidshare.de/files/23076264/MW_OMT.part1.rar

http://rapidshare.de/files/23077702/MW_OMT.part2.rar

pswd : www.AvaxHome.ru

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Posted By: Zarmazievex Date: 15 Jun 2006 09:13:53
Thank you so much !
Posted By: ostndr Date: 15 Jun 2006 13:58:16
Yes, many thanks! Good to see more jazz returning to Avax!
Posted By: s1ngle Date: 15 Jun 2006 23:31:01
thanks very much!!
Posted By: Oveja Negra Date: 16 Jun 2006 04:16:29
You got me with the description, let's see how good is this 8)

Thanks a lot for sharing!
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