Martin Longley's New York Music Blog JOHN HOLLENBECK LARGE ENSEMBLE/CLAUDIA QUINTET 27-11-2007 Maverick Brummie musician and critic Martin Longley is currently checking out the jazzier sounds of NYC. Drummer and composer John Hollenbeck has been showing him his different sizes at the Cornelia Street Cafe and the Jazz Standard. Drummer and composer John Hollenbeck comes across as a combination of benign control freak and supremely modest humorist. He's very much the director of his (and his bandmates') pieces, applying some beautifully precise drum-patterns that also have a slippery funkiness sitting alongside their new-music accuracy. He's like a clockwork toy creation, frequently placing objects on his skins to facilitate a rickety, robotic click-clacking. Yet Hollenbeck's between-number asides are darkly funny, riddled with self-deprecating angst, as he sometimes explains the convoluted concepts behind his pieces. Hollenbeck's main forum is The Claudia Quintet, which despite his leadership, has the feel of a fairly democratic unit. On disc, one criticism is that they can sometimes sound too studied, too self-conscious of their vast panoply of influences, from minimalism to post rock to cool school jazz. Their production sound can be too ordered. On the live stage, at The Cornelia Street Café in Greenwich Village, Hollenbeck's combo solve their admittedly slight problems, appearing as a lustier prospect entirely, hardening up the funk. As Hollenbeck has said, this is an intentionally 'feminine' sound, a war waged against the macho competitiveness of much jazz music. Even though there are still many solos taken, their boundaries aren't so proscribed,
supported by changing backdrops which often become frontal-drops. Hollenbeck's Large Ensemble is another matter entirely, employing a work-force of nineteen members, including its conductor J.C. Sanford. Here, at the Jazz Standard club, horn ranks provide the dominant voice, in direct contrast to Claudia. Hollenbeck released a Large Ensemble disc in 2006, but A Blessing provides only a portion of the evening's repertoire. Because of the more traditional big band line-up, this music can't help but sound more conventionally jazzy than Claudia, and an hour's set ends up being just too short to avoid the sense that Hollenbeck is striving for equality between soft vocal numbers and forceful blowing vehicles, alternating but not enjoying the time to make these transitions feel like a natural flow. The set lifted up to its best in its second half, with Hollenbeck's suitably abstract "Long Swing Dream", which was directly inspired, nay composed, as a result of an extremely vivid dream, followed by his re-consideration of Thelonious Monk's "Four In One", with its stunning extended solo by Tony Malaby. The Claudia Quintet tour Europe in March 2008... |
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