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Chris Taylor: Nocturnal
ByA heavyweight cast of musicians, notably keyboardist Scott Kinsey, drummers Gary Novak, Kirk Covington and Dave Weckl, and soprano saxophonist Steve Tavaglione bring their energy and considerable chops to bear, though always in service of Taylor's compositional design. As a musician, Taylor sits most comfortably in such notable company, and his opening guitar break on the through-composed "Voices in My Head" is a model of economic, persuasive language; throughout Nocturnal Taylor's lead work is as gutsy as his accompaniment is deft. Tavaglione follows Taylor's suit over bassist Ric Fierabracci walking bass, the guitarist's feathery chords, and Novak's continuously inventive drumming. Pianist George Whitty's crystal clear tumbling lines spur Novak on. From Taylor and his cohorts there is virtuosity aplenty, though nicely bite-sized, and never straying into self-indulgence.
Electronic drums, courtesy of Tracey Kroll, provide forward momentum on "Ear to the Rail." Keyboardist John Findlay and Taylor both leave scorch marks on this bubbling tune, which bridges the territory between Weather Report and Tribal Tech. On this number and the trimmer trio setting of the title tracka seductive mood piece which features Taylor on both acoustic and veena-like slide guitarprogrammed vocals of an Indo-Tibetan flavor add ambience. Taylor and Tavaglione engage in high speed unison lines on "You Know What I'm Saying," a rhythmically engaging number fired by Novak, where Taylor the guitarist shines. Tavaglione and Kinsey trade in typically effusive manner, building tension through their disciplined give-and-take, with neither abandoning the dialogue in search of bragging rights.
The elegant quintet piece "Green Divided by Blue" highlights Taylor's compositional nuances and melodic sensibility with its compelling narrative, with the guitarist, Whitty and Fierabracci unfolding short but enticing statements that carry the tune. The potent Taylor/Fierabracci duet, "All of Us," is like a hybrid of guitarist Bill Frisell's darker-hued country blues and bassist/producer Bill Laswell's alchemy, with its sotto voce tabla and electronic undercurrents. Subtly unfolding contrast are key to the music on Nocturnal. There's a no-frills approach to the jazz fusion "Bela," with Whitty impressing on keyboards. The meditative "Recluse," is followed by the gently grooving blues "Here to There," with Tavaglione's EWI singing like a harmonica. "Odd Hours"the longest trackis an evocative epic, heady and brooding.
An impressive recording debut, Nocturnal highlights Taylor's ability to weigh exciting improvisation and artistic flair within shifting compositional terrain. Beautifully produced, this polished offering is the result of thirty years honing a craft.
Track Listing
Voices in my Head; Ear to the Rail; Nocturnal; You Know What I'm Saying; Green Divided by Blue; All of Us; Bela; Recluse; Here to There; Odd Hours.
Personnel
Chris Taylor
guitarGary Novak: drums (1, 4, 7); Ric Fierabracci: bass (1, 3-7, 9-10); Steve Tavaglione: soprano saxophone (1, 4, 10), tenor saxophone (5), alto saxophone (7), bass clarinet (8), EWI (9-10); George Whitty: piano (1, 5), keyboards (7), Rhodes (9); Chris Taylor: guitars, keyboards and programming (1-10); Tracey Kroll: electronic drums (2); Kevin Freeby: bass (2); John Findlay: keyboards (2); Joel Rosenblatt: drums (3, 5); Scott Kinsey: keyboards (4, 10); Gary Hasse: upright bass (8); Dave Weckl: drums (9); Francesca Russo: voice (9); Kirk Covington: drums (10); John Czajkowski: baritone guitar (10).
Album information
Title: Nocturnal | Year Released: 2011 | Record Label: Abstract Logix