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The
idea of An AMERICAN DIARY sprung from my memories of youth. There were two
camps in my family, the jazzzers and the longhairs. Picture a very crowded
tenement, three railroad rooms in the Bronx filled with my father, his brother,
out of work tapdancers billed in vaudeville as ‘Moe’ and ‘Boe’, and my aunts
and uncles who were struggling singers, musicians and composers. One grandfather
played jazz guitar and another blared opera and classics on his radio to
ward off the dreaded ‘jazz’ coming from the living room. Since we’re from
Italian-Jewish ancestry, there was an extra spicy heat in our debates as
to what was considered ‘high’ and ‘low’ art. So my split personality began
early, not just musically but culturally, as well. All through the ‘40’s
it was Puccini vs. Hot Club of France, and Caruso vs. Ol’Blue Eyes. Mateo
dragged me to the opera while my Dad planned the usual jaunt to catch one
of the big bands on Broadway. It was an incredible time!
My initial concept for this album was to interpret some pieces by Puccini,
since his melodic and harmonic concept alway thrilled me. But that work
was slow and daunting. I discovered once I began a piece that it was hard
to find a ‘jumbping-off’ place for inprovisaton. Also the melodies tended
to sould too sweet, maybe even corny, for the quartet I’d imagined. Then,
browsing through my collection, I discovered a record of a piano sonata
by Copland written in 1927. I was especially taken by the Vivace movement.
At a slower tempo, I thought it sounded like what Monk would write 25 years
later. So I decided to research works by other American composers not usually
covered in the jazz scene.
––Mike Mainieri
On An AMERICAN DIARY, Mike Mainieri and colleagues, saxophonist Joe Lovano,
bassist Eddie Gomez and drummer Peter Erskine, claim common cause with the
modernist lineage of 20th Century American composers. The acoustic quartet
present a virtual floating landscape of American Classical Music spanning
over a century of musical influence. Constructing a patchwork of jazz compositions
built upon the works of Samuel Barber, Leonard Bernstein, John Cage, Aaron
Copland, Charles Ives, Roger Sessions, William Grant Still, and Frank Zappa,
An AMERICAN DIARY is a portrait of our great musical heritage.
Characteristically ‘American’, these inspiring masters were all uncompromising
individualists, innovators, and occacionaly, outright renegades. Similarly,
Mainieri, Lovano, Gomez and Erskine, legendary in their own right, have
pioneered countless contributions to the jazz world, and beyond, both as
individual artists and frequent collaborators. Collectively represented
in this work, An AMERICAN DIARY reveals a panaramic view of the American
spirit and vast musical life. From turn-of-the-century town-meetings, holiday
picnics and marching bands, to legitimate concerts and orchestral commissions;
from Broadway shows, film productions, and rock extravaganzas to Ceorge
Cershwin, John Coltrane, the beat of New Orleans, and Bo Diddley––all is
embodied in the An AMERICAN DIARY picture. An all embracing, investigative
spirit endures as this ground-breaking collaboration accepts no barrieris
when adapting the works they respect to their own interpretations.
Somewhere, the yearning finale of Bernstein’s West Side Story, is reharmonized
with a waltrz rhythm, while the chameleon-esque, master saxophonist Lovano
limpidly searches for "a place for us." Similarly, Zappa’s King
Kong begs to be opened up and blown on, though rather than Kong’s beastliness,
the band examines the pores and fissures of what might be the tragic ape’s
quasi-human psyche. Gomez performs remakably playing the head of Copland’s
Piano Sonata in unison with Mainieri. Mainieri arranges the first movement
of Sessions’ mournful Piano Sonata No 1 beautifully for alto clarinet, arco
bass, bass, concert maribas and drums. His vibes partake of haunting distendednesss
from a pedal he invented that bends and delays notes, with Lovano’s spectral
grace in response.
Town Meeting, Mainieri’s own comoposition, alludes to convening villagers
with church bells, an Appalachian melody and an expansive free section that
recalls the squabbling that often ensues, followed by a theme which settles
down the townsfolk, and a coda that sends them swinging merrily out the
door. Mainieri extracts the melody from Barber’s 1932 Overture To The School
For Scandal and writes a blowing section which on cue leads the soloist
back to the piece’s bridge. Lovano’s Hudson River Valley is an ‘uptown meeting’
as a meandering, deep tenor, vibes, spry bass and emphatic drums discourse
with the intimacy of a family in long-running and ever enjoyable argument.
William Grant Still’s Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child elicits a
Lovano quote of Summertime and themes from Still’s own African-American
background. In a distinctive way, drummer Erskine places mid-tempo Music
Of My People at the cross-roads of black-boogie and American minimalisim.
Gomez opens the traditional Scottish melody In The Gloaming by bowing; Mainieri
plays piano while Lovano roams the crepuscular mood and Erskine sparingly
applies brushes to cymbals. Out of The Cage recalls that iconoclast’s preparded
piano miniatures more than it resembles his later aleatory works. In The
Universe of Ives is an astounding reconception of Ives’ impossible, and
of course unfinished work, Universe Symphony, deserving comment directly
from the man who dared to confront its cosmic metapghor. Lovano’s clairinet
loosly quotes the trumpet part of Ives’ masterpiece The Unanswered Question.
Jazz and contemporaty composition draw toegether on An AMERICAN DIARY as
if personal the freedoms championed by improvisation were longing for the
structural rigors afforded by fixed form. Whereas the wedding of these presumably
opposing strains is rather one of thorny love, the provocative entries in
An AMERCICAN DIARY expertly advance the strongest, most attractive attributes
of both lines.
$ 11.95 + s/h
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Somewhere
King Kong
Piano Sonata (Vivace)
Piano Sonata No. 1
Town Meeting
Overture To The School For Scandal
Hudson River Valley
Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child
Song Of My People
In The Glaming
Out Of The Cage
In The Universe Of Ives
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Produced
by Mike Mainieri
Ensemble:
Joe Lovano Tenor
& Soprano Saxophone, Alto Clarinet
Mike Mainieri Vibraphone, Concert Marimba, Bass Marimba, Piano,
Xylophones, Gongs, Chimes, Midi Vibes
Eddie Gomez Bass
Peter Erskine Drums, Percussion
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