Ximo Tebar's guitar style is not typical in the contemporary electric jazz tradition of
John McLaughlin,
Pat Metheny, or
John Scofield in that it displays little distinction in and of its own voicings. What
Tebar does own is a sense of teamwork and a greater theory of the melodic whole with his fellow bandmembers.
Steps, his seventh album, is a very appropriate title for this recording in three discernible ways. There's a progression of size in these combos, from quartet, quintet, sextet, septet, and octet. Compositions from post-bop and the jazz fusion era are used, as well as modern contemporary originals. Though somewhat based in acoustic music, the electric Fender Rhodes piano played by
Orrin Evans is very present throughout, while add-ons include a horn section, vocals, and a cello. Though
Tebar's guitar is at the focal point, he is not the main voice, but instead represents a straight shooting laser beam of conceptual originality that precludes personal individuality. What is unique is the clever way he interprets any given composition. Alex Blake (longstanding member of
Randy Weston's bands) and Boris Koslov (the
Mingus Big Band stalwart) switch their regular roles, with Blake on acoustic upright and Koslov on the electric bass guitar, while rock-solid drummer
Donald Edwards plays his ever consistent role as a rhythmic taskmaster.
Tebar "covers" five standards, all of them quite differently, with new ideas surrounding the original themes. The theme from "Pink Panther" for instance incorporates a neat and clean modern approach merged with heavy contemporary funk without dismissing the slinky mood of the song.
Wayne Shorter's "Nefertiti" is adapted into a light, breezy samba,
Herbie Hancock's fusion classic "Actual Proof" is done very faithfully to the original in short form, and
John Coltrane's "26-2" is deviated beyond initial recognition, with Blake's bass, Stefan Braun's cello, wordless vocals from Ester Andujar, a funky tick-tock beat, and
Tebar's sneaky quick guitar lines. "Steps" is a supercharged extrapolation of
Coltrane's "Giant Steps" with harmonies from "Milestones" also tossed in, tricky and synapse fast. Clearly a tribute to
Wes Montgomery, "Four on Six for Wes" has the guitarist exploiting seamless rhythm changes via tiny notes and hip, literate chords borrowed from the master with scatting included, while the
Edwards penned "Essential Passion" is very much like "Actual Proof" in design, but more lithe, animated, and not over the top heavy. This is a quite credible effort for
Tebar and his groups, not as uneven as the lineups might suggest, sporting the diversity of a restless mind that refuses to stew in only one jazz genre, and does not take his own presence in a group setting so deadly serious. ~ Michael G. Nastos