CD/LP/Track Review

David Weiss & Point Of Departure: Venture Inward (2013)

By
DAN BILAWSKY,
Dan Bilawsky

Dan Bilawsky

Senior Contributor since 2010

Jazz fan, music educator and writer.

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Published: March 15, 2013
David Weiss & Point Of Departure: Venture Inward

Fans of trumpeter David Weiss may be a bit confused when they take a look at this album. At quick glance, it reads like a re-tread of Weiss' Snuck In (Sunnyside, 2010), which has a near-identical line-up playing a near-identical program, but there's a good reason for that: both albums were actually recorded a day apart in completely different environments. Snuck In—and companion piece Snuck Out (Sunnyside, 2011)—capture Weiss' Point Of Departure band (mostly) live at New York's Jazz Standard on March 25, 2008; The majority of Venture Inward's tracks were recorded in a studio a day earlier.

It's tempting to run a complete compare-and-contrast on all three albums, but it isn't really necessary. All of these records, when viewed as a single body of work, help to provide a complete picture of this band at a specific point and time and they're all first rate.

Weiss' Point Of Departure quintet points directly to the late '60s, but doesn't really live there. The band takes inspiration from trumpeter Miles DavisMiles Davis Miles Davis
1926 - 1991
trumpet
' second great quintet and its membership, trumpeter Charles Moore, and original thinking pianist Andrew HillAndrew Hill Andrew Hill
1937 - 2007
piano
, but it puts its own spin on material connected to these artists. Weiss chose wisely when he put together this group of highly respected modernists, who fit this music well without kowtowing to its creators. Tenor saxophonist JD AllenJD Allen JD Allen

sax, tenor
shares the front line with Weiss, and both men marry the unpredictable with the melodic at every turn. Guitarist Nir FelderNir Felder Nir Felder
deftly changes hats, as he delivers shimmering background commentary one minute and probing solo work the next, and drummer Jamire WilliamsJamire Williams Jamire Williams
is a beacon of intensity. Bassist Luques CurtisLuques Curtis Luques Curtis
, who's replaced by Matt ClohesyMatt Clohesy Matt Clohesy

bass
on the Sunnyside albums, acts as a musical adhesive, binding all manner of sound together at any given moment.

Pianist Herbie HancockHerbie Hancock Herbie Hancock
b.1940
piano
's "I Have A Dream," which features some winning interplay between Weiss and Allen, and drummer Tony WilliamsTony Williams Tony Williams
1945 - 1997
drums
' "Black Comedy," which moves with strength and off-kilter buoyancy, open things up. Moore's lengthy and intense "Number 4" finds the band exploring a loose-tight rhythmic duality, as solos get passed around and things congeal and disintegrate at will. The majority of this music is powerful and direct, but finesse does find a way into the picture on Hill's "Pax," which follows on the heels of his sly "Venture Inward." Moore's "Snuck In" serves as potent conclusion to an exciting album that's built around a new take on the late '60s "new thing" esthetic.

Track Listing: I Have A Dream; Black Comedy; Number 4; Venture Inward; Pax; Snuck In.

Personnel: David Weiss: trumpet; J.D. Allen: tenor saxophone; Nir Felder: guitar; Luques Curtis: bass; Jamire Williams: drums.

Record Label: Posi-Tone Records
Style: Straight-ahead/Mainstream

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