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  | BOB GLUCK ~ INFINITE SPIRIT: REVISITING MUSIC OF THE MWANDISHI BAND FMR 398 (Barcode: 649849982254) ~ USA ~ Jazz Recorded: 2015 Released: 2016
This is a fascinating album by American pianist / composer / electronic music performer and composer / educator / writer and a former Rabbi Bob GluckFind albums by this artist, recorded in a quartet setting with trumpeter Eddie HendersonFind albums by this artist, bassist Christopher Dean SullivanFind albums by this artist and drummer Billy HartFind albums by this artist, which as the title suggests, revisits the music performed and recorded by the Herbie HancockFind albums by this artist sextet, often called the Mwandishi Band after the title of their seminal album "MwandishiFind albums with this title", the first of three albums the ensemble recorded, which includes also "CrossingsFind albums with this title" and "SextantFind albums with this title". Hancock formed this band in the early 1970s after he left the Miles DavisFind albums by this artist group, where he played for many years.
Gluck wrote and published the book entitled "You´ll Know When You Get There: Herbie Hancock And The Mwandishi Band", where he analyzes the music and it´s hardly surprising he also created a musical facet of his fascination with this subject. By drafting two of the original members of the sextet: Henderson and Hart to take part in this project, Gluck is able to get as close to the source of this music as possible, without engaging Hancock himself of course. The album presents just five lengthy pieces, two of which were composed by Hancock, two others by Bennie MaupinFind albums by this artist (one features an introduction composed by Gluck) and just one is an original composition by Sullivan, which means that most of the music originates from the Mwandishi output.
The overall modus operandi, i.e. openness, lengthy improvisations, minimalism and introspection, and above all an atmospheric approach to music creation, which of course is a much more European way of doing things, and finally the use of electronics (which on the original recordings was created by Patrick Gleason) lead to what Gluck obviously intended: a revisit of the Mwandishi music, but also a tribute to one of the most fascinating chapters of the American Jazz idiom, and sadly perhaps one of the last contributions to the genre originating on US soil.
The music is of course everything one might hope for. Brilliantly performed by all four participants, it flows elegantly and yet also passionately from start to finish, leaving the listener wishing for more when the music is over. Despite their age Henderson and Hart are still very much the Masters they always were, Sullivan provides the anchor for the music with his steady pulsations, and his original composition fits the Mwandishi music ideally. Gluck´s piano and electronics create the frame which defines the melodic and harmonic structures and he wisely eschews imitating Hancock in any way, making his own statements.
Overall this is an album which besides presenting some fascinating music has also an educational message and pays tribute to the glorious history of the Jazz idiom. Highly recommended!
| Updated: 29/04/2016Posted: 29/04/2016 | CD 1 Digipak Recommend To A Friend |
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