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WESTWORD
- DEC. 9, 1998
Getting
Bolder
The
Boulder Creative Music Ensemble is still
taking
chances after all these years.
By
Thomas Peake
"Jazz
is dead,"
says Fred Hess, founder and leader of the Boulder
Creative Music Ensemble (BCME). "It died in the
Sixties. We had fusion for a while, and there have
been some other things. There have been a lot of
individuals doing this and that, but there's no
jazz.These people are all relating, for better or
worse, to the past.
Hess's
statement is supported by plenty of empirical
evidence.With jazz about to enter its second
century, the genre once dubbed "the sound of
surprise" finds itself in a conundrum. Since the
late Sixties, jazz rebels have followed a path to
free expression paved with stones of
self-indulgence, while preservationists have thrown
New Orleans-style funeral parties marked by zealous
efforts to raise the style to the stature of
classical "If people know music. As a result, many
friends of jazz their jazz history, orthodoxy have
abandoned hope, and radicals they'll laugh have
jumped ship. But aficionados of the form themselves
crazy need not succumb to millennial gloom. Ninth
because they'll know Street Park, the latest BCME
disc, proves that where this stuff's sophisticated
remedies can breathe new life coming from into this
American art.
The
secret, in Hess's mind, lies in structured
improvisation, a clever, middle-of-the-road tack
that's both respectful to jazz heirs and
adventurous in spirit. "When we do free improvs,
they always sound like the weather," notes the
saxophonist, composer and arranger, who's been a
jazz-lover since the late Fifties. "If you want to
do random music, a lot of folks like that, but I
don't. I like the order thing."
Born
in 1981, the ensemble has evolved over time (it's
ranged from four players to twenty), but it's
always included some of the area's finest
instrumentalists. The current incarnation is no
exception. In addition to Hess, who has made two
critically acclaimed solo CDs for the Capri label
and is currently part of Ginger Baker's Denver Jazz
Quintet, the band includes clarinetist/saxophonist
Mark Harris and saxophonist Glenn Nitta, two BCME
charter members who frequently appear in other
musical configurations. Also on board is trumpeter
Ron Miles -- arguably the most praised jazz artist
in Colorado -- and a cherished rhythm section that
consists ofbassist Kent McLagan and drummer Tim
Sullivan.
Like
cohorts Harris and Miles, Hess is an instructor at
Denver's Metropolitan State College, but he did
much of his own learning outside the classroom.
During the mid-Sixties, the New Jersey native
studied with famed hard-bop altoist Phil Woods at
the New Hope, Pennsylvania, home once owned by
CharlieParker (Woods married Parker's widow). "We
used to drive over on Saturdays for a half-hour
lesson for five bucks," remembers Hess, adding that
the exercises provided him with "a real foundation
in bebop harmony." In the years that followed, Hess
worked within the relatively mainstream jazz
boundaries established by two of his idols, John
Coltrane and Sonny Rollins. But that all changed
after a 1978 visit to Creative Music Studio in
Woodstock, New York, where he got an opportunity to
observe Anthony Braxton, George Lewis and Roscoe
Mitchell, a trio of artists affiliated with the
Association for the Advancement of Creative
Musicians (AACM). "I wanted to see how they were
doing it," he says, "because I heard these records
and I knew they weren't going, '1-2-3-4' and
counting it off." He was right, and he soon
realized that these onetime evangelizers for free
jazz had stepped back from the precipice. Because
they felt, in Hess's words, "that people had played
as high and squeaked as high and as loud as it
could be done," they were striving to add a degree
of control to thei improvisations via flow charts,
pictograms and the like. At the same time, though,
these performers continued to strive for new and
unusual effects. Upon seeing altoist Joseph Jarman,
another AACM inductee, honk a multiphonic (i.e.,
play several different notes simultaneously) during
a solo concert, Hess says, "I nearly jumped out of
my chair because it was such a novel
thing."
After
spending two years refining his technique and
searching for a musical language to call his own,
Hess enrolled at theUniversity of Colorado-Boulder.
While earning a doctorate in classical composition,
he came up with a system of notation based on the
natural elegance of sub-atomic collision maps (he
has an avocation for nuclear physics) that BCME
still uses to this day. During the Eighties, the
group's set lists were dominated by originals of
the sort that appear on the recent reissue of
Between the Lines, a wonderful series of BCME
recordings cut between 1988 and 1990. But even as
the Lines sessions were taking place, Hess had
begun to focus much of his attention on jazz's
repertory. With BCME or one of the three other
orchestras he's led over the years, he has overseen
concerts featuring the works of Braxton, Louis
Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Thelonious Monk, Count
Basie, Thad Jones, Jelly Roll Morton and Mary Lou
Williamson, to name a few.
According to Hess, who's published several books of
musical transcriptions, he tries to present such
efforts "in a way that's closes to bringing out its
grand quality." To that end, he allows himself to
manipulate the presentation in ways that are not
always readily apparent to those on the other end
of his horn. Hess's version of Monk's "Misterioso"
combines the best of the pianist's 1947 and 1968
renditions, while his modification of Ellington's
"Caravan" is drawn from three of the Duke's
variations on the tune. But Hess has moved beyond
such methodology and is now attempting to apply the
knowledge he gained from dissecting the work of
jazz giants to his own compositional efforts. He
modestly calls Ninth Street Park "very informed,"
and it certainly is. But the disc also blends hot
vamps, smooth solos and swinging arrangements into
a witty and gorgeous postmodern
pastiche.
The album is full of references that walking jazz
encyclopedias will appreciate but that won't
present barriers to casual listeners. Take "Loose
Leaves," which alludes to the many jazz covers of
"Autumn Leaves," popularized in 1955 by schmaltz
king Roger Williams. "If people know their jazz
history, they'll laugh themselves crazy because
they'll know where this stuff's coming from," Hess
says. "And if you don't, it still should work." As
for "After the Leap," it's shaped entirely from
solos by saxophone superman Lester Young -- a
deconstruction/reconstruction that's as devout as
anything by Wynton Marsalis even as it exhibits the
healthy irreverence of John Zorn.
Similarly playful is "Close to the Beach," a
classical track in the guise of a jazz number in
which threads from several Ron Miles songs,
including "Howard Beach," are woven together. "I
had to do a big orchestra piece to finish my
degree, so I wrote a trumpet concerto for him --
all from his themes," Hess says. "I was playing in
his group in the early Nineties, so I took the
melodies that we were playing and I used them as
all my material in this piece."
As Hess concedes, people who don't immediately hear
the connections between the traditional and the
avant-garde in his music are unlikely to
investigate them -- but he encourages them to try.
Paraphrasing an earlier conversation with Miles, he
says, "It shouldn't matter where you start, because
if you have the passion, you'll want to discover
what else has gone on. You will eventually fill in
the blanks to make the bigger picture that you
would need to function within that
picture."
In other words, there's still harmonic potential to
be mined from jazz, but musicians and fans alike
need to search for it. And after all these years,
the contributors to the Boulder Creative Music
Ensemble are still digging.
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