MARC JOHNSON
Shades of Jade
ECM
Bassist Marc Johnson’s latest ECM release
Shades of Jade is quite possibly the most gorgeous
jazz album released this year. From his work with the quartet
comprised of himself, drummer Peter Erskine, and guitarists
Bill Frisell and John Scofield to his bass work on more
than 100 albums by artists including Eliane Elias, Enrico
Pieranunzi, Paul Motian, Gary Burton, and as a mainstay
of the John Abercrombie trio, Johnson has consistently been
one of the most tasteful bassists around. On Shades
of Jade he brings together a true all-star jazz group
and allows them to interact beautifully, anchored and supported
by himself and drummer Joey Baron to create an album where
the whole is truly more than the mere sum of the parts,
no matter how impressive those parts may be.
On “Ton Sur Ton” Johnson and his
supergroup come out with the cool jazz “Ton Sur Ton.”
With its tight melodic line and restrained air, the piece
is like an outtake from a great lost West Coast jazz session
circa early ‘60s. The tightness of the ensemble should
come as no surprise—Elias and Johnson have been working
together for some time now, and Baron sat in on Elias’
2002 release Kissed By Nature. Elias leads off
with a concise piano solo, but tenor saxophonist Joe Lovano
quickly steps to the fore, providing a gorgeous solo sound
that hovers between Stan Getz cool and a Ben Webster full-bodied
bouquet. With the exception of the closing track, all the
compositions here belong to either Johnson or Elias, with
several collaborations between the two. “Apareceu”
is a gorgeous Elias composition that allows Lovano to take
the tenor ballad spotlight, which his recent recordings
with Hank Jones, George Mraz, and Paul Motian have shown
he handles with aplomb. It’s great to see Elias’
piano playing and compositional skills taking center stage,
putting her secondary career as a chanteuse in the background.
She’s a major jazz player, and deserves to be heard
in a pure jazz setting such as this one.
The Johnson/Elias penned title track is seven
and a half minutes of pure meditation, as Johnson and Baron
create a sonic backdrop over which Lovano floats while Elias
provides soft patterns that drift across the landscape as
clouds or recurrent thoughts. “In 30 Hours”
is another impressionistic ballad that features Lovano heavily.
Though the group’s output up to this point on the
CD has been lyrical, tasteful, and perhaps a wee bit restrained,
the attentive listener will in no way be bored. Nonetheless,
the arrival of Marc Johnson’s clever “Blue Nefertiti,”
a blues based on Wayne Shorter’s famous melodic line
“Nefertiti” shows that this group can swing
in a traditional sense, cementing a place for them as one
of the best small jazz groups recorded in recent memory.
John Scofield’s guitar work is featured less on this
disc than Scofield’s tenor or Elias’ piano,
but when he steps out, as on this tune, he provides a funky,
blues-soaked guitar solo that truly rocks the house. Elias
follows with an amazingly blues/gospel-tinged piano solo
that will cause many who’ve heard her primarily as
a Jobim interpreter to sit up and take notice.
“Snow,” another Elias tune that
seems to have inspiration in Debussy and Keith Jarrett,
touches on the pop piano-trio lyricism of Esbjorn Svensson,
but which is tempered by the aforementioned classical and
jazz influences as well as the hand of Herbie Hancock. The
track also demonstrates well the near-telepathic communication
between Johnson, Elias, and Baron. “Since You Ask”
and “Don’t Ask of Me” are features for
Johnson. The first is primarily a bass solo, gently supported
by Baron’s cymbal washes, while the latter is an adaptation
of an Armenian folk song that emphasizes Johnson’s
interest in music of other cultures, which he has demonstrated
on previous projects as well. Johnson’s beautiful
bowed playing is featured over a drone provided by organist
Alain Mallet.
Shades of Jade provides a well-programmed
bag of mixed grooves and moods, and is that rarest of jazz
recordings in this day and age—one that seems to have
an organic sensibility, that has been put together in just
the right way, much as Kind of Blue or Herbie Hancock’s
Maiden Voyage. There is no question that this is
one of the finest jazz recordings to be released this year.