Search - Michael Blake :: Drift

Drift
Michael Blake
Drift
Genres: Jazz, Special Interest, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

Brooklyn-based saxophonist Michael Blake revels in a restless new-fangled modernism, drawing upon jungle Ellingtonia and African pop, ambient and retro-lounge music, and even Texas twang. That he is able to maintain an eve...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Michael Blake
Title: Drift
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Intuition
Release Date: 4/3/2001
Genres: Jazz, Special Interest, Pop
Styles: Avant Garde & Free Jazz, Modern Postbebop, Bebop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 750447321328

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Brooklyn-based saxophonist Michael Blake revels in a restless new-fangled modernism, drawing upon jungle Ellingtonia and African pop, ambient and retro-lounge music, and even Texas twang. That he is able to maintain an even keel as he navigates styles on the aptly titled Drift owes to his wit and resourcefulness as a writer and his passion as a music fan. Blake, who produced the album, makes full use of the aural canvas, keeping the margins alive with textural effects. Unfortunately, a certain facileness dogs Drift, which features an expansive cast, including pianist Frank Kimbrough, trumpeter Ron Horton, and bassist Ben Allison--like Blake, members of the Jazz Composer Collective. On the 11-minute "Duty Free Suite," a travelogue, Blake's channeling of Donald Byrd, Charles Mingus, and Eddie Harris fails to resonate. Known for his work with the Lounge Lizards, he doesn't have much impact on tenor, less on soprano, leaving it to lively sidemen--including guitarist Tony Scherr, tuba player Marcus Rojas, slide trumpeter Steve Bernstein, and drummer Matt Wilson--to stoke the music with personality. --Lloyd Sachs

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CD Reviews

Is There Such a Thing as Noir Jazz?
Jan P. Dennis | Monument, CO USA | 11/17/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"There is if you're Michael Blake. After the audacious Kingdom of Champa, I wondered if Blake was a one-trick pony. Yeah, Champa was pretty remarkable, but what was he going to do for an encore? Champa, with its suite-like, song-cycle-ish structure, seemed unrepeatable. And Blake has wisely chosen a different approach, although something similar is going on at the heart of this music. Both seem rooted in the land--Champa in Southeast Asia, Drift in the American West. The cover photo, dry and dusty as Kayenta, Arizona, gives the game away, as does the neo-Duane Eddy guitar of Tony Scheer on the title cut. But there's lots of other weird junk going on--for example, check out the North- Africa-meets-Bali vibe of Mean as a Swan (great title), and the Malian sensibility of Toque, which drifts into controled chaos as it fades into oblivion. The Creep is a bit of whacked-out Ellingtonia whose tangoesque bridge is especially appealing. Lady in Red is neo-hip lounge music, played pretty straight-ahead, so much so, in fact, that its sly sensibility only begins to peak through in Blake's fine tenor solo. Teo Walks starts out like Island music on uppers, achieves a wicked groove, then becomes a vehicle for some mean blowing. The 11 1/2 minute Duty Free Suite is the most ambitious cut here. It begins with a slow section, recalling the opening of Drift, moves into a rolicking romp, slows down again, then finishes off with a Steely Dan-like bloozy grove. With Dry Socket we're firmly back in the West, tipped off by the deep twang of Tony Sheer's guitar, but a West that John Wayne would have a hard time recognizing with its boozy edginess. Afro Blake sounds like LA meets Nigeria. The Coleman Hawkins tune Maria, the only non-Blake composition on the cd, manages to preserves a Hawkins-like sensibility while sounding utterly modern, gorgeous, and nothing at all like Hawkins. Here and in Lady in Red, the Noir thing really comes to the fore. More drop-dead gorgeous playing shines through Residence, along with a bunch of mysterioso ambient background sounds (is that a zither I hear?).This music has definite affinites with Ben Allison's Medicine Wheel--indeed, Allison handles bass duties--in its unabashed modernism, its hip ecclecticism, its moments of utter beauty arising out of the most unlikely musical situations.I gotta admit, it took me a little while to warm up to this music, but since I've gotten onto its aesthetic, I can't keep it out of my cd player. Unless something absolutely spectacular comes out in the next month and a half, this is my album of the year."