Search - Saxophone Summit, Joe Lovano, Michael Brecker :: Gathering of Spirits

Gathering of Spirits
Saxophone Summit, Joe Lovano, Michael Brecker
Gathering of Spirits
Genres: Jazz, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (6) - Disc #1

While a band co-led by three celebrated saxophonists might suggest Kansas City's swing-era cutting contests, this meeting of Michael Brecker, Dave Liebman, and Joe Lovano is something very different. Gathering of Spirits i...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Saxophone Summit, Joe Lovano, Michael Brecker, David Liebmann
Title: Gathering of Spirits
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Telarc
Release Date: 8/24/2004
Genres: Jazz, Pop
Styles: Modern Postbebop, Bebop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 089408360725

Synopsis

Amazon.com
While a band co-led by three celebrated saxophonists might suggest Kansas City's swing-era cutting contests, this meeting of Michael Brecker, Dave Liebman, and Joe Lovano is something very different. Gathering of Spirits invokes the collective vision and apocalyptic energies of John Coltrane's 1960s meetings with exploratory saxophonists like Eric Dolphy and Pharoah Sanders. The opening "Alexander the Great" finds the three limbering up at a relaxed tempo, while pianist Phil Markowitz's "12th Man" is a gorgeous modal tune that recalls Miles Davis's Kind of Blue. With Coltrane's "India," though, the band's power begins to assert itself, gathering further force in the lyric intensity of "Peace on Earth" (another Coltrane tune) and concluding in the roaring overtones of Brecker's title composition. Propelled by bassist Cecil McBee and drummer Billy Hart, Brecker, Liebman, and Lovano inspire one another to touch on the roots and branches of their individual creativity. --Stuart Broomer

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CD Reviews

What could've been a tedious blowing session . . .
Jan P. Dennis | Monument, CO USA | 09/02/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

". . . instead turns out to be a jazz recording of great substance and subtlety.



Face it. These things don't always work. Unless the artists (here Joe Lovano, tenor sax, alto clarinet, tarogato, African blackwood flute; Dave Liebman, tenor sax, soprano sax, Indian flute; and Michael Brecker, tenor sax, Bulgarian wood flute; plus rhythm section Phil Markowitz, piano; Cecil McBee, bass; and Billy Hart, drums) can put aside ego and musical self-aggrandizement, superstar blowing sessions generally come across as mildly interesting but rather indulgent. Not so here. Each of the sax players has deep respect for his fellows, and all are concerned more with creating a vibe of mutuality, congeniality, and largesse than one of a ruthless cutting session. Not that this admirable sense of oneness of purpose lessens or tones down the intensity of soloing and group conversation; rather, it enables each player to situate his musical statements in a context of conviviality and generosity rather than deleterious competition.



And the listener is the winner.



Perhaps surprisingly (although not really, if one has been closely following his career), Dave Liebman comes across as every bit the peer of his two colossal bandmates, Brecker and Lovano. His work on soprano (on the first three numbers), especially marks him as a player to contend with.



In a sense, this can be seen as a Coltrane tribute--although it is much more than that--as the two central pieces ("India" and "Peace on Earth") are compositions by the late master. Both are rendered lovingly but not slavishly, each with its own magical character ("India" restless, probing, sonically sophisticated with its use of esoteric wind instruments; "Peace on Earth" elegiac and magisterial), each carrying, esp., the late Coltrane emphasis on spirituality to new heights. I really like Cecil McBee's arco bass playing on the latter, plus the warmth and beauty of the three tenors.



This disc turns out to be a real surprise for me, because I couldn't imagine it working. But it does. And wonderfully. Eminently worth acquiring."
Great music making
S. Lee | California | 08/21/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"What an incredible pleasure to hear three saxophonists who play so differently co-exist within the same music... Three of the best tenor saxophonists alive today were able to put down some of their ego and enjoy playing with each other. They could have played it safe and played standards throughout the CD or just mixed it up with some of their own more conventional pieces. But instead they tried to extend beyond some of their comfort zones... In this day and age when record companies are cutting jazz out of their payroll left, right, and center, it is great that Telarc actually let the musicians express themselves.



Don't get caught up in the tunnel-visioned ideas of catagorizing music into what is jazz and what is not jazz. These "traditionalists" will not accept any advances in music beyond bebop. Changs and development in music as in all art is a reflection of the society it grew in. To ignore new developments in music let alone developments from 50 years ago, is to ignore something about the world we live in. Truthfully, it's not as if I can listen to Ornette Coleman in my car. A person cannot put free improvisational music on for "background" music. It takes a little effort on the part of the listener to follow the development of the music. But in the right mood, free improvisation can be the most revelatory!!! The emotional expression, the flowing of ideas, and musical interplay between band members can reach unimagined peaks in free improvisation."
A surprise
N. Dorward | Toronto, ON Canada | 09/22/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"The three-tenors lineup wasn't too promising-looking--I expected a by-rote blowout. What a surprise then that this turns out to be a thoughtful, well-planned session with some genuinely challenging music. David Liebman seems to be responsible for organizing it--at least, much of the repertoire & arranging bears his mark, & the rhythm section (Phil Markowitz, Cecil McBee, Billy Hart) is players I associate with Liebman. As you'd expect from Liebman, Coltrane's spirit is prominent here--but Liebman is one of the most idiosyncratic of Trane's followers, so the music actually sounds quite fresh, not least because Liebman is attracted to the rubato free balladry of very late Coltrane, & there are some very "outside" moments here--notably the start of the title-track & the long "Tricycle". Great stuff, with the honours shared all round (& that includes the sidemen, who all get solo features on "Tricycle"--Markowitz, the least celebrated player here, sounds especially fine). There are far too many supergroup albums out there that have little inherent musical reason to exist; this album places emphasis on substance rather than flash, & is all the better for it."