CHARLIE HUNTER TRIO
Friends Seen and Unseen
Rope-A-Dope
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Charlie Hunter has been plying his groove-laden
8-string guitar work for some time now, and has become a
popular fixture among both modern jazz guitar fans and jam
band fans. His uncanny ability to play bass lines, provide
chord comping and still play stellar solos, as well as the
fact that his guitar sometimes sounds rather like a Hammond
B-3 organ certainly helped gain him notice. However, the
novelty of Hunter’s dexterity would have worn off
long ago if not for the fact that he is constantly challenging
himself and providing his listeners with new contexts for
his sound. After a series of trio albums, Hunter presented
listeners with a soul-jazz quartet on Ready…Set…Shango!
2001’s Songs From the Analog Playground found
him playing with a series of guest vocalists that included
Norah Jones and Kurt Elling. Right Now Move, Hunter’s
first recording for the Rope A Dope label, found him performing
all original compositions with an expanded band that included
trombone, saxophone, and harmonica. His latest release,
Fr iends Seen and Unseen finds him back in trio
territory. Concise, clean, and without any unnecessary frills,
it is one of his finest recordings to date.
Hunter’s music is all about groove,
but he’s able to mine an amazing number of different
grooves and doesn’t get bogged down in the jamming
for jamming’s sake school of guitarism. Hunter’s
trio model is that of the 60’s organ trio. Those groups
generally allowed the organist to function as bassist, so
they were able to add a horn player and still retain the
trio format. Hunter goes that one better, playing not only
the organ and bass roles but also that of guitarist. Few
listeners hearing this recording in a blindfold test would
identify it as a trio.
The first two tracks mine somewhat familiar
territory, with “One for the Kelpers” finding
a cool soul-jazz groove that is reminiscent of the work
of Richard “Groove” Holmes or Johnny “Hammond”
Smith, with saxophonist John Ellis doing his best Gene Ammons
work. “Freedom Tickler” could have come from
an early Medeski Martin and Wood album, and while it’s
a pleasant ride, it provides few surprises. More interesting
is the Hunter original “Lulu’s Crawl”
allows Ellis to dip into a sonic palette that is reminiscent
of the sax work heard on obscure surf tracks by groups like
the Revels. At the same time, the bluesy tune also finds
Hunter dipping into a rock-influenced guitar sound with
lots of satisfying distortion and pedals. It’s like
a trip to a cheap strip club on acid. Hunter’s “Darkly”
continues to mine a mysterious vibe, but the reference point
this time is a straight-ahead jazz group with flute, again
a sound that harks back at least three decades. Hunter and
his group are able to reference these earlier sounds without
really ever coming across as retro, in large part because
Hunter and Ellis both are modern jazz musicians whose solo
voices come across as completely their own.
The album’s middle track, a rendering
of Abdullah Ibrahim’s “Soweto’s Where
It’s At” is a revelation. Ibrahim’s gentle
melody is provided with loads of American gospel and blues
subtext by Hunter, who rarely plays in such an unabashedly
straightforward blues style. Hunter’s solo on this
track is stunning, with everything in place and not a wasted
note to be heard. Ellis is overdubbed in the final statement
of the melody as a complete woodwind section, playing tenor
sax, bass clarinet, and flute. It’s a marvelously
serene performance that will not fail to impress any listener.
On the disc’s second half Hunter provides
an effects laden base for an angular post-modern jazz freakout
(“Running In Fear From Imaginary Assailants”),
does a less traditional take on the blues (“Eleven
Bars for Gandhi”), and explores other jazz-oriented
grooves (“Bonus Round” and “My Son the
Hurricane”). The final track, “Moore’s
Alphabet,” plays to Hunter’s jam-based audience,
bringing to a satisfying conclusion a CD on which Hunter
has managed to compact every positive element in his style
and the trio format he favors into a cohesive, comprehensive
whole. For those enamored of groove based jazz or jam music,
soul jazz, or modern guitar, Friends Seen and Unseen
is likely to be one of the highlights of the year.