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Flutes: Jeremy Steig, Krzysztof Popek & Anne Drummond
Jeremy Steig Howlin' for Judy Solid State-Blue Note 2009 | Krzysztof Popek Estate Power Brothers 2009 | Anne Drummond Like Water Obliqsound 2009 |
Full-time flutists don't get much respect in the male-dominated, hard-driving jazz culture (certain Latin leaders like Dave Valentin and Maraca Valle excepted). Truth to tell, two of the three flute specialists here don't exert enough pizzazz or subtlety to thwart those numbers.
Jeremy Steig's breathless flutery stars in the sparse 1969 and 1970 studio sets compiled into Howlin' For Judy, with a focused rhythm team of bassist Eddie Gomez and drummer Don Alias. Steig puffs his huffy-wuffy flute in looping vampy overdubs: the effect is a trancey jam, intensely one-track, kinda bongo fury for a druggy Beat party orif you want to get propheticproto-fusion, with lava lamp, spliffs and day-glo flared jeans. There's no changes outside the blues and no discernible theme but an 11-minute stretch on Miles Davis' easterly "Nardis" played late in the day. Gomez and Alias lay a comfy cushion for Steig's zo-zo, wheezy-slurpy sound and dead-simple concept.
Polish fluter Krzysztof Popek owns an attractive tone and not-too-clean if classic-honed ideas on alto flute. Estate is a mellow, straight-ahead post-bop date that, like Steig's, might've been cut in the '70s, as it covers bop hits ("Forest Flower," "Melting Pot") and the title track (Italian melody turned samba lilt by Jo
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