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It is about
time that Steve Lacy, that percipient nous of modern music, scored on
a major label like Verve. He has been universally recognized among his
musician peers for decades as one of the most articulate players of the
soprano saxophone. He is also a prolific composer who inevitably dedicates
his compositions to artists who have inspired him. He is one of a handful
of jazz musicians adept in that most difficult form, the art song. And
if this is not enough, Lacy belongs to that rarefied class of musicians
along with trombonist Roswell Rudd- who can interpret the music
of Thelonious Monk with authority.
These two CDs
substantiate the above-mentioned qualities. A special treat is that on
the Verve CD he is reunited with his "school days" buddy, Roswell Rudd.
On each composition, be it a Monk, an Ellington, or a Lacy, the two masters
glide with aplomb through the melodic structures and swing the counterpoints
like Ginger Rodgers-Fred Astaire dancing. Lacy, known for his meticulous
articulation, seems elegantly loose with Rudd as his confrere. On "The
Bath" (a song about pleasure, dedicated to Dexter Gordon), listen to Rudds
wah-wah-wah at 4:34 and you can feel the human body sensuously slide into
a tub of hot water, maybe even a bubble-bath.
Throughout
his career, Lacys intellect and sentience have taken him to ancient
sources of wisdom. On "Traces" he sets music to a poem by the Zen monk
Ryōkan. Irene Aebi, in her unique operatic dialect, sings the words
beatifically to Lacys precise melody. This art song format is one
of the distinguishing features of Lacys music.
"Hooky" is
a solo soprano saxophone recital recorded in a church. The music ranges
in content from the tile track (with Lacy pronouncing "dont go to
school" before he launches into the melody) to a cycle of six songs inspired
by the Tao of Lao-Tzu. The Tao cycle opens with a complex structure dedicated
to John Coltrane. It ends with Lacy wandering through the church exploring
its sound qualities while he plays a repeating riff dedicated to Duke
Ellington, "Life On Its Way."
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