This volume in the
Marsalis Music Honors Series is dedicated to new recordings by New Orleans clarinetist, composer and arranger
Alvin Batiste (whom many of jazz fans know for his stints with
Ray Charles,
Cannonball Adderley, and the great
Clarinet Summit band with the late
John Carter,
David Murray and
Jimmy Hamilton). Produced by
Branford Marsalis -- who appears on three cuts -- the core band is made up of
Batiste, drummer
Herlin Riley (he and
Marsalis were students of
Batiste's), and newcomers
Lawrence Fields on piano and
Ricardo Rodriguez on bass. Guests include guitarist
Russell Malone and vocalist
Edward Perkins, who appears on four cuts.
Batiste comes up with a thoroughly contemporary jazz album that does not forgo or forget the tradition. "Clean Air," with vocals by
Perkins, is a little unsettling at first but settles in nicely with lovely playing from
Malone and the bandleader. On "I Wonder Where Our Love Has Gone,"
Batiste references the standard "Summertime" before slipping into a gorgeous blues with wonderful piano work by
Fields. "Bumps" takes New Orleans second-line rhythms, marries them to Afro-Cuban ones, and marries them to a bop framework.
Riley's drum work here is utterly brilliant. The ballad "Ever Loving Star" is a showcase for vocalist
Perkins, and he digs deeply into the soul of the tune; the solos taken by
Batiste and
Marsalis on tenor complement each other wonderfully and take the tune into entirely new regions. The wonderfully breezy "Edith" is a gorgeous workout for the leader, supported with a floating middle register by
Fields. The knotty head in "The Latest" is
Batiste at his very best, and
Rodriguez's bass work here showcases his versatility to flit between bop, post-bop and even modal jazz without ever losing his sense of time. But it's on the ballads such as "Skylark" that the great clarinet master, despite his quickness and depth, gets to showcase his inherent sense of lyricism, and he does. With
Malone as a foil, he allows the blues to influence every single line. The knotty "Bat Trad" references the outside, but just a bit as the sheer muscular bebop is played seemingly seamlessly and
Batiste leads them through the various themes and interpolations with real style and command. While the four vocals on this set may be a distraction for some, they shouldn't be. For one, the playing of this band is nearly symbiotic. Secondly,
Perkins is a fine singer, and thirdly, this is one of the hardest swinging albums to hit the shelf in 2007. ~ Thom Jurek