David Murray's last Motema Music offering, Plays Nat King Cole en Español, wowed listeners with its inventive reading of the music from the great singer's two Spanish-language albums with a Cuban ensemble. On Be My Monster Love,
Murray unveils his
Infinity Quartet (named for the jazz loft he and
Stanley Crouch operated in New York in the 1970s) with pianist/organist
Marc Cary, drummer
Nasheet Waits, and bassist
Jaribu Shahid. While a Latin-tinged groove on opener "French Kiss for Valerie" sets the tone in post-bop terms, this is a varied affair that showcases the many aspects of the tradition
Murray embodies in both his playing and arranging. He provides a link between an
Ellington-ian elegance and the deep, gospel-influenced emotionalism of
Albert Ayler, the soulful, melodic, inquisitive investigations of
Ben Webster, and the modal openness of
John Coltrane. The title track features
Macy Gray (the first of three tunes here with lyrics by writer Ishmael Reed), offering her raw, sensual vocal on a fingerpopping swinger.
Gregory Porter makes three appearances as well, first on the nearly gospel-ized R&B of "Army of the Faithful (Joyful Noise)," driven by
Cary's B-3 and recalling
Murray's Special Quartet with the late
Don Pullen. The midtempo "Sorrow Song" is actually a deeply moving ballad with the saxophonist offering a rounded warmth in his tone as
Waits' skittering cymbals set the groove. Rich, modal soul and Latin rhythms underpin
Porter's vocal on "About the Children," with lyrics by
Last Poet Abiodun Oyewole.
Shahid's bassline is a propulsive glue, holding seemingly disparate elements together in a glorious whole.
Murray's former teacher, trumpeter Bobby Bradford, guests with the quartet on the skillfully skewed blues walk that is "The Graduate." But the set's finest moment is on the nearly straight-ahead sprint that is "Stressology," with
Murray getting in some of his most fleet-fingered lines and righteous groans. The interplay between
Cary's piano and
Shahid's bass is breathtaking. Be My Monster Love is a diverse, travel modern creative jazz through a prismatic lens. While
Murray's compositions are tighter and more song-like than ever (the presence of these excellent vocalists highlights this), he simultaneously offers a group of stellar players the opportunity (collectively and individually) to shine and push their margins. Highly recommended. ~ Thom Jurek