Following in the mold of his 1994
Booker Little album
In Our Lifetime, his 1997
Wayne Shorter-inspired Stargazer, and his 2000
Mary Lou Williams project
Soul on Soul,
Dave Douglas again draws inspiration from a jazz hero and digs into the music of legendary bop trumpeter
Dizzy Gillespie on his artfully nuanced 2020 sextet album,
Dizzy Atmosphere: Dizzy Gillespie at Zero Gravity. The music showcased on
Dizzy Atmosphere was initially presented by
Douglas at a 2018 concert at New York's Jazz at Lincoln Center. Included in that line-up was trumpeter
Ambrose Akinmusire, guitarist
Bill Frisell, pianist
Gerald Clayton, bassist
Linda May Han Oh, and drummer
Joey Baron. Due in part to scheduling conflicts, and a desire on
Douglas' part to avoid repeating himself, he decided to bring together a different ensemble for this studio recording. Only drummer
Baron makes a return, joined instead by trumpeter Dave Adewumi, guitarist
Matthew Stevens, pianist
Fabian Almazan, and bassist
Carmen Rothwell. Barring newcomers
Rothwell and Adewumi, each of these musicians have played with
Douglas in the past and bring an empathetic sense of excitement and group interplay to the recording. The interesting choice to bring on board a second trumpeter is no happenstance and falls in line with
Gillespie's own tradition of playing alongside younger up-and-coming trumpeters, including
Miles Davis, and in the case of his storied big band,
Lee Morgan. Here, New England Conservatory and Juilliard graduate Adewumi takes on the role of the second horn, his warm tone and inventive lines working as both complement and contrast to
Douglas. As with his past tribute albums,
Douglas eschews basic cover arrangements and instead offers a mix of originals and reworked versions of
Gillespie's songs that use the iconic trumpeter's music as a jumping-off point. That said, there are two straight-up covers here in the group's effusively funky reading of
Gillespie's classic Afro-Cuban bop anthem "Manteca," and their bluesy, plunger mute-accented take on the
Cab Calloway band tune "Pickin' the Cabbage'; both of which find
Douglas marrying the kinetic energy of
Gillespie's swinging '40s ensembles with his own group's edgy harmonies and off-kilter improvisations. Equally synergistic are
Douglas originals like "Con Almazan" and "Cadillac," which reference
Gillespie's "Con Alma" and "Swing Low, Sweet Cadillac," but take them in unexpected directions; deconstructing their groovy and soulful Latin rhythms into dramatically fractured soundscapes. Similarly unexpected are cuts like the moody "See Me Now" with its juxtaposition between
Stevens' shimmering high-end guitar lines and
Almazan's burnished low-end piano, and the buoyant "Subterfuge, whose sparkling, harmonized trumpet melody still manages to bring to mind
Gillespie's bright-toned big-band arrangements. ~ Matt Collar