Despite the somewhat misleading title,
Cuong Vu Trio Meets Pat Metheny, trumpeter
Cuong Vu has a lengthy history with the legendary jazz guitarist that goes back to
Metheny's Grammy-winning 2002 album,
Speaking of Now. Since then,
Vu has played with
Metheny enough that he is a regular part of the conversation when discussing the guitarist's more adventurous contemporary works. Despite his pedigree, having graduated from the New England Conservatory and worked with such luminaries as
David Bowie,
Myra Melford,
Laurie Anderson, and others,
Vu is a maverick. A highly gifted, forward-thinking musician,
Vu often eschews the more clarion, declarative aspects of his chosen instrument in favor of macabre growls, dampened tones, and improvisatory lines that skitter forth with the mad convulsions of a housefly. Pairing him with the uber-controlled precision of
Metheny might seem like an odd choice at first. A paragon of contemporary jazz,
Metheny is known more for his warm tone and clean lines than downtown N.Y.C. edginess. However, he is also a mutative artist whose skills bridge wide stylistic plains from languid folk to swinging post-bop and aggressive fusion. It's also easy to forget that
Metheny played on the late
Ornette Coleman's 1986 release
Song X, an album of frenetic yet deceptively restrained free jazz that works as a useful touchstone for what
Vu and
Metheny have created here. Joining the trumpeter and guitarist are
Vu's bandmates bassist Stomu Takeishi and drummer
Ted Poor. Together, the quartet plays a set of original songs that straddle the line between ambient tone poems, exploratory modal jazz, and punk-inflected noise jams. The opening "Acid Kiss" brings to mind a '70s sci-fi film, with
Vu's mournful trumpet setting the tone as the trio straggles in behind him, each note illuminating the dark alien landscape. In warm contrast, "Seeds of Doubt" finds
Vu and
Metheny playing in tandem, their crisp, pointillist melody soon giving way to a delicately soaring solo from
Metheny. Splitting the difference, cuts like "Tune Blues" and "Not Crazy (Just Giddy Upping)" showcase the group's knack for pushing swinging post-bop in explosive, ear-popping directions. Anchored by Takeishi's thick doom bass and
Poor's hyper-kinetic drumming,
Metheny and
Vu wrangle hold of the harmolodic blues of "Not Crazy (Just Giddy Upping)," body slamming each line until the whole sound is less jazz band and more like
Ornette Coleman fronting
Iron Maiden. ~ Matt Collar