CD/LP/Track Review

Ken Fowser & Behn Gillece: Little Echo (2010)

By
RAUL D'GAMA ROSE,
Raul d'Gama Rose

Raul d'Gama Rose

Senior Contributor since 2003

When you hear great music, be prepared to be touched in your soul.

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Published: September 16, 2010
Ken Fowser & Behn Gillece: Little Echo

If Marc Free, Nick O'Toole and the team at Posi-Tone Records continue producing albums in the same manner as they have been since the inception of the label in 1994, they will surely be further along the path to emulating the legacy of the Blue Note label, which has produced some of the finest music of our time. Little Echo, by saxophonist, Ken Fowser and vibraphonist, Behn GilleceBehn Gillece Behn Gillece
b.1982
vibraphone
, is a further testament to the label's determination to keep contemporary music in the jazz idiom alive. These young musicians are sublimely talented and have partnered with pianist Rick GermansonRick Germanson Rick Germanson

piano
, bassist Ugonna OkegwoUgonna Okegwo Ugonna Okegwo

bass
, and drummer Quincy Davis to produce a memorable gem of a record.

Fowser has a moist, lyrical, broad tone that lopes up and down the tenor registers like a proverbial gazelle. The young vibraphonist, mature beyond his years, is a very expressive player and possesses a bright, resonant tone. His four-mallet approach looks like Gary BurtonGary Burton Gary Burton
b.1943
vibraphone
's and Joe LockeJoe Locke Joe Locke
b.1959
vibraphone
's, but swings harder and is more bluesy—often leading to the belief that he has listened carefully not only to Milt JacksonMilt Jackson Milt Jackson
1923 - 1999
vibraphone
and Bobby HutchersonBobby Hutcherson Bobby Hutcherson
b.1941
vibraphone
, but also to the prodigious work of Victor FeldmanVictor Feldman Victor Feldman
1934 - 1987
multi-instrumentalist
. The two men swap soli with telepathy, kindling melodic fires that are fed by their astounding sense of harmonic invention. The flames of this music are fanned by the excellent Germanson's harmonic stretches, and Okegwo's rhythmic boogieing, combined with Davis' subtle rhythmic shading.

None of the music is credited on the album, but in the ultimate analysis it may not matter. Whoever was responsible for it appears to be an old soul—or souls, as the case may well be. There is a fair amount of music here to suggest strong bebop roots that go back to Howard McGheeHoward McGhee Howard McGhee
1918 - 1987
trumpet
. However, the soulful "Ninety Five" and the harmonics of "Little Echo" certainly suggest that these musicians also pay their respects to musicians like Les McCannLes McCann Les McCann
b.1935
piano
. "Sap" is a fine exercise in modal magic. The brooding elegance of "The Dog Days" suggests that this ensemble can also swagger languidly rather than swinging energetically all the time. Fowser is excellent and forlorn throughout the opening of the piece, and Germanson is languid and beautiful beyond belief. This is a perfect vehicle for a vibraphonist, and Gillace's sublime talent is on fine display here—as is the rhythmic invention of Quincy Davis—making the song a centerpiece to what is a marvellously crafted album.

Track Listing: Resolutions; Ninety-Five; Sap; The Dog Days; Vigilance; Little Echo; One Step at a Time; You; Another View.

Personnel: Ken Fowser: tenor saxophone; Behn Gillece: vibraphone; Rick Germanson: piano; Ugonna Okegwo: bass; Quincy Davis: drums.

Record Label: Posi-Tone Records

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