If fellow Illinois natives poet
Carl Sandburg and drummer
Matt Wilson were to share one quality, it would be the element of surprise. A deeply important, Pulitzer Prize-winning figure in 20th century American verse,
Sandburg (who died in 1967 at age 89) wrote about everyday life in an non-rhyming fashion with a wry, whimsical tone. He was also famously a fan of jazz and folk music, and his poems evince a musical, lyrical quality that's at once intellectually inventive and soulfully plainspoken. Much of the same could be said about
Wilson, whose
Sandburg tribute, 2017's
Honey and Salt, showcases his playful, inventive jazz that straddles the borders between avant-garde improvisation, ruminative folk, and swinging, bluesy post-bop. Here,
Wilson pays homage to
Sandburg with a thoughtfully rendered set of songs inspired by and composed around
Sandburg's poems. Joining
Wilson is a group of like-minded associates including singer/guitarist
Dawn Thomson, cornetist
Ron Miles, reedman
Jeff Lederer, and bassist
Martin Wind. Together, they play with an organic exuberance, turning
Sandburg's poems into songs, many of which feature
Thomson's measured croon. They turn
Sandburg's "Soup" into an earthy blues, "Night Stuff" into a languid, moonlit chamber piece, and "We Must Be Polite" into a roiling New Orleans second-line jam. Other tracks are equally engaging as
Wilson highlights the distinctly American quality of both
Sandburg's writing and the sound of jazz and folk music, as on the marching band-esque "Stars, Songs, Faces" and the ambient country twang of "Prairie Barn." Adding to the album's playful air of surprise is a handful of well-known guest performers, brought in not to play, but to recite
Sandburg's poems, including bassist
Christian McBride, guitarist
Bill Frisell, pianist
Carla Bley, and actor Jack Black, among others.
Sandburg himself is even featured on "Fog," his voice culled from a 1968 recording and set against a moody solo drum improvisation by
Wilson; a magical duet. Perhaps the most surprising, and enjoyable, aspect of
Honey and Salt is just how deftly
Wilson has combined his music and
Sandburg's writing, never sacrificing either or limiting the listener's ability to imbibe both at the same time. ~ Matt Collar