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Synopsis
Album DescriptionI first got wind of drummer and composer John Hollenbeck about five years ago, not so long after I moved to New York City. According to the Village Voice, there was a smart new music scene bubbling up in the East Village at a healthy distance from the well established, capital-D "Downtown" scene centered around the Knitting Factory ? and Hollenbeck was somewhere near the center of it. In specific, something besides java was brewing at alt.coffee, a homey little Internet café that resembled a college dorm room with a service counter. Every Monday night, the venue played host to the Refuseniks, an intrepid little trio of musical explorers comprised of Hollenbeck, accordion player Ted Reichman ? then making waves as a member of Anthony Braxton?s latest bands and David Krakauer?s turbocharged klezmer trio ? and bassist Reuben Radding. Many patrons did their level best to ignore the group as they surfed the web, but eventually word began to spread about the new music percolating at the coffeehouse. One night early in the band?s run, a woman named Claudia came forth from the throng to profess her ardent admiration for the band. "She rambled on and on about how she was going to make our gig a regular thing ? she was going to tell all of her friends," Hollenbeck recalls. "When she was done captivating me with her good intentions, Reuben and I sauntered up to our instruments for the next set. He softly whispered to me, ?She?s never coming back.?" Radding?s premonition proved accurate ? the Refuseniks never saw Claudia again. "We tried to continue the relationship with casual fibs," Hollenbeck says, "like, ?Hey, I saw Claudia on the street,? or ?Claudia left me a message that she is definitely coming this week.? But Claudia maintained her absence. Eventually, Radding joined her, abandoning New York in pursuit of higher education. After a few months, Hollenbeck gathered a group of friends to form a new quintet. Alongside Reichman, the drummer enlisted the staggeringly inventive vibraphonist Matt Moran (who would come to be his closest musical partner), clarinetist/saxophonist Chris Speed and bassist Drew Gress. Moran was as yet unknown to most New Yorkers, but Speed?s slippery microtones and Gress?s assertive melodicism were familiar elements of saxophonist Tim Berne?s teeming music. Surprisingly, Claudia joined the new band as well, as its namesake and resident muse. "I called the group the Claudia Quintet in homage to Reuben," Hollenbeck says, "and I also wanted the group to have a sensitive, feminine quality." He hoped to downplay his leadership, in order to emphasize the ensemble. Since he intended to have the band play fully notated works as well as improvisations, Hollenbeck also saw in the name a parallel to the conventions of chamber music ensembles like the Arditti Quartet. Whether intentional or not, Claudia lent yet another quality to her namesake ? a slippery sort of elusiveness that makes the band impossible to pin down and define. Is the Claudia Quintet a jazz band? A chamber ensemble? Truthfully, like its antecedents from the Modern Jazz Quartet to the Anthony Braxton Quartet, the band is both, and everything in between. A classically trained composer, Hollenbeck girds the opening "Meinetwegen" with rigorous structure ? yet the music moves and lives and breathes naturally, flowing organically from an initial melodic kernel. Voicings shift amongst groupings of clarinet, vibraphone and accordion ? establishing the group?s signature shimmer ? while Gress?s solid drive and Hollenbeck?s light, lithe beat give the track undeniable propulsion. True to the paradoxical Claudia, somehow "Meinetwegen" is simultaneously swift and unhurried. "a-b-s-t-i-n-e-n-c-e" weds scrabbling free improv to odd-metered funk, while revealing both percussionists? penchant for extending their sonic palettes through the use of cheap plastic toys. "Love Song for Kate" allows Gress and Speed to wax unapologetically rhapsodic in one of Hollenbeck?
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CD Reviews
First outing of emerging monster band Jan P. Dennis | Monument, CO USA | 06/15/2004 (5 out of 5 stars) "I waxed rapturous about The Claudia Quintet's second offering, I, Claudia, and immediately set about trying to obtain this, their initial outing. It took a while, but am I ever glad I finally got hold of it! This grand disc is just about its equal."Earthereal" chamber world-jazz, that's what we've got here. These guys are probably its only purveyors, but the aural territory they stake out is filled with mystery, beauty, and rich coloration. As in their second offering, instrumental timbre and group interaction dominate. A good part of their sound, again, relies on Matt Moran's unusual vibes conception. But each member of this extraordinary assemblage of instruments (leader John Hollenbeck, drums & percussion; Matt Moran, vibes & percussion; Ted Reichman, accordion; Chris Speed, clarinet & tenor saxophone; Drew Gress, double-bass) makes a unique contribution to the gloriously inscrutable soundscape. Together, they manage consistently to conjure strange sonorities, playful polyrhythms, weird warblings, and titillating timbres. Some of the tunes (esp. "Burt and Ken") bear a faint resemblance to Ben Allison's great group, Medicine Wheel, but although both bands create very smart postmodern jazz, The Claudia quintet has perhaps an even more distinct sound, on account of its strange instrumentation, so effectively and engagingly deployed.Along with artists like Mephista, John Wolf Brennan, and the Jazz Composers Collective (Ben Allison, Frank Kimbrough, Michael Blake, and others), The Claudia quintet is pushing back the frontiers of jazz in a most attractive and beguiling way. Among the most fascinating music being made today."
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