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No Room For Argument
Wallace Roney | Concord Music Group


By Jim Santella Discuss        

An homage to Miles, Wallace Roney’s Stretch Records debut incorporates souvenirs that encompass the varied career of the incomparable Miles Davis. From echoes of his benchmark sextet to repetitious rock beats and sampled voices, Roney documents a valuable piece of history. Furthermore, the sampled voices include those of Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X and Deepak Chopra. Moving closer to dramatic intensity in this performance, Roney surrounds himself with artists who share his feeling of respect for what Davis was doing after 1970. “NeuBeings” paints a picture of electronic Miles without tampering with the trumpet sound. His tone remains pure and rich; the single most important element in Davis’ arsenal. The title track and “Cygroove” travel farthest from the mainstream. “Metropolis” contrasts that feeling with a dramatic, straight-ahead charge. “Midnight Blue,” as well, veers away from the rest of the program; this one a beautiful ballad. But most of Roney’s session focuses on the kinds of electronic magic that polarized the jazz world through several decades. Is it adventurous and innovative or “selling out” and unimportant? Is the use of synthesizers and other electronic instruments playfully trite, or in keeping with creative exploration? Wallace Roney doesn’t hold back. Like the late trumpeter who paved the way, Roney soars into territory that is charged with emotion and doesn’t look back to see who likes it. Recommended, No Room For Argument eschews foot-tapping swing for a surging infusion of dramatic adventure.

Wallace Roney at All About Jazz.
Visit Wallace Roney on the web.


Track listing: No Room for Argument; Homage & Acknowledgement (Love Supreme/Filles de Kilimanjaro); Straight No Nothing; Metropolis; Christina; NeuBeings; Cygroove; He Who Knows; Virtual Chocolate Cherry; Midnight Blue.

Personnel: Wallace Roney- trumpet; Steve Hall, Antoine Roney- tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, bass clarinet; Geri Allen- piano, Fender Rhodes, electric piano, synthesizer; Adam Holzman- Wurlitzer electric piano, organ, mini-moog, synthesizers; Lenny White- drums; Val “Gelder” Jeanty- sample programming.

Style: Mainstream/Bop/Hard Bop/Cool
Published: January 01, 2001


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Articles by Jim Santella
Monk Competition 2008: Saxophones
Jazz & Blues: A Tribute to B.B. King
Persistence
Energy Fields
Cleome: Live Takes
Soliloque
Conversations With My Family
Jim Santella has been contributing CD reviews, concert reviews and DVD reviews to AAJ since 1997. His work has also appeared in Southland Blues, The L.A. Jazz Scene, and Cadence Magazine. More about Jim...



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