Quantcast
NEWS |
Return to home page





Here In the Moment
Gail Pettis
Freefall
The Chuck Anderson Trio
Another Night in London
Gene Harris
Folk Songs for Jazzers
Frank Macchia
Where Is Love?
Kelley Suttenfield
Room 13
Yair Loewenson Trio



Trio Reenactment
Info | Enter
Dave King
Info | Enter
Frank Macchia
Info | Enter
Kurt Rosenwinkel
Info | Enter




CD/LP Review | Published: June 25, 2008

Banshees
Scott DuBois | Sunnyside Records (2008)


By Troy Collins
Discuss    

Guitarist Scott DuBois is a rising presence on the New York jazz scene, an impressive soloist and gifted writer whose abilities garnered the attention of legendary saxophonist David Liebman, who served as a sideman on DuBois' previous releases, Monsoon (Soul Note, 2002) and Tempest (Soul Note, 2007). Banshees is the Sunnyside debut of the guitarist's international quartet, which features the Berlin based multi-reedist Gebhard Ullmann, fellow New Yorker Thomas Morgan on bass and Copenhagen resident Kresten Osgood on drums.

With their labyrinthine head melodies and intricate rhythms, DuBois' thorny compositions lend themselves to extended thematic development. An astute melodist, Dubois reveals a mellifluous side on a pair of supple ballads that offer dynamic contrast to the session's roiling intensity.

Reminiscent of John McLaughlin's adventurous pre-fusion efforts and the austere angularity of contemporary masters like Joe Morris and the late Derek Bailey, DuBois favors an asymmetrical approach, navigating oblique intervals with a nimbleness that would make Eric Dolphy proud. A tonal purist with a bright, naturalistic timbre, DuBois eschews electronic efx, unleashing his quicksilver cadences on a clean-toned hollow body with kinetic force and focused intensity.

DuBois' sparring partner on the front line, Ullmann is a renowned international artist whose previous quartet album, New Basement Research (Soul Note, 2007) was one of 2007's most impressive records. A triple threat multi-instrumentalist, each of his horns elicits its own personality; his tenor is burly and effusive, while his sinuous soprano is as acerbic as his haunting bass clarinet is otherworldly.

Full of youthful brio, Morgan (a veteran of DuBois' previous sessions) and Osgood deliver odd-metered grooves with virtuosity and empathetic interpretative skills, providing an elastic underpinning for DuBois and Ullmann's circuitous statements.

While the majority of the session consists of pithy free bop, DuBois also contributes two heartfelt ballads. The pastoral meditation "Canaria" is a work of understated beauty that unfolds at a glacial pace. The plangent "Old Man on Platform" is an opulent essay in post-Coltrane spirituality that waxes and wanes with a languorous undercurrent of shimmering energy.

Despite his capacity for restrained euphony, DuBois' strong suit is revealed in a series of turbulent compositions that careen into surprising detours in rhythmic structure. Galloping bass lines and crackling ride cymbals usher in a riot of interactivity, inspiring gruff multiphonic caterwauling from Ullman and bursts of rapid fire notes from the leader. DuBois augments abstruse swing with a variety of intriguing devices; stop time interludes ("Inverse"), lock step grooves ("Mouse Song") and dynamic counterpoint ("Mid to the West") all add layers of density to the quartet's fervid explorations.

A most impressive release, Banshees is as hair-raising as the title suggests. A singular talent, DuBois is definitely an artist to keep an ear on.

Track listing: Mid to the West; Bend; Canaria; Inverse; Mouse Song; Old Man on Platform; Apparition.

Personnel: Scott DuBois: guitar; Gebhard Ullmann: tenor and soprano saxophones, bass clarinet; Thomas Morgan: bass; Kresten Osgood: drums.

Style: Modern Jazz

Read more reviews of Banshees.

Visit Scott DuBois on the web.


Be the first to post a comment on:
Scott DuBois' Banshees

Signup & post a comment!





More articles by Troy Collins

A Memory Of Vienna
Many Worlds
Cyrillic
Troy Collins' Best of 2009
Creative Orchestra (Koln) 1978




Recent CD Reviews
Kenny Davis - Kenny Davis Kenny Davis
Kenny Davis
Marbin - Marbin Marbin
Marbin
Paquito Hechavarria - Frankly Paquito Hechavarria
Frankly
Soren Moller / Dick Oatts - The Clouds Above Soren Moller / Dick Oatts
The Clouds Above
Hadley Caliman - Straight Ahead Hadley Caliman
Straight Ahead
The Red Earth Collective featuring Soothsayers Horns - Red Earth Dub The Red Earth Collective featuring Soothsayers Horns
Red Earth Dub

CD Review Search
Artist Name  
Album Title  
Record Label  
Author  
 




 
(93)




Gene Harris

Sweet Georgia Brown
From Another Night in London

More | Recent | Top









Advertise | Contact Us | Site Map |


All material copyright © 2010 All About Jazz and/or contributing writer/visual artist. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy