Fred Anderson is amazing. Approaching 80 years old, he's been releasing about an album a year for more than a decade, all of consistently high quality. That's in addition to running his club, the Velvet Lounge in Chicago, which had to relocate in 2006. Fortunately for listeners, he's showing no signs of slowing down.
From the River to the Ocean continues his musical partnership with
Hamid Drake, this time with help from bass players
Harrison Bankhead (part of
Anderson's regular trio with
Drake) and Josh Abrams and guitarist
Jeff Parker, all of whom had recorded with
Anderson before. With Abrams doubling on guimbri on a couple tracks and
Bankhead playing cello or piano on two other tracks, the album displays more variety than the lineup might indicate initially. "Planet E" kicks things off with a nice
Parker solo once the band finds the groove after the intro. The rhythm section sounds amazing, with the basses panned wide and
Drake's light but propulsive drumming.
Anderson enters after
Parker's solo with his big tone and searching, melodic lines while
Drake kicks things up a bit to spur him on. The fantastic "Strut Time" has
Bankhead switching to cello and starts with a killer solo from
Fred. This one's also got nice dual soloing between
Bankhead's cello and
Anderson's sax, then cello with
Parker's guitar. "For Brother Thompson" is an elegy to the late trumpeter
Malachi Thompson that inhabits a place akin to
Coltrane's
A Love Supreme after
Drake's chanted intro. "From the River to the Ocean" has
Bankhead back on bass with Abrams moving to guimbri, a fantastic sonic pairing.
Parker contributes another great solo before making way for an excellent arco bass solo from
Bankhead and another fine statement from
Anderson.
Parker really adds a lot to the sound on this album without being overly conspicuous while doing it. Of course,
Fred and
Hamid really make this album work.
Drake is certainly one of the finest drummer/percussionists on the planet and, despite his relative lack of renown outside Chicago,
Anderson is one of the absolute greatest inside/outside tenor players there is, always moving forward but never losing sight of melody. They just never seem to run out of ideas, constantly pushing the music and finding new avenues to take. They might be known as avant-garde players, but this album is totally approachable and extremely soulful.
From the River to the Ocean is not only among
Anderson's finest albums to date, it has to be among the top jazz albums of 2007.