TRIO BEYOND
Saudades
ECM
Trio Beyond, consisting of Jack DeJohnette,
Larry Goldings, and John Scofield, is, in concept at least,
a tribute to drummer Tony Williams’ group Lifetime,
one of the earliest rock/jazz hybrids that pointed the way
forward for many musicians in the early 1970s. Lifetime
featured Williams, organist Larry Young, and guitarist John
McLaughlin (later reformed editions featured Allan Holdsworth
in the guitar seat), and combined the freewheeling improvisation
of jazz with the grinding muscle of the rock power trio.
Though the original group created a stir with its first
recordings, Emergency! and Turn It Over,
it was short lived, in part because of poor management and
record sales. The derailing and general dismissal of fusion
by most musicians and writers in the 1980s and 90s kept
the group on the backburner of jazz history. However, with
reassessment of some key fusion musicians and bands, interest
in Lifetime has again come around.
DeJohnette, a drummer who was around when
Williams was in his heyday, is a natural to fill Williams’
drum seat, and it seems possible that there are few other
drummers who could do so. Larry Goldings fills Larry Young’s
organ chair, and while he is a bit less abstract an organist
than Williams, he is capable of investigating the harmonic
outer reaches of these tunes. Scofield has distinguished
himself as a great guitarist with clear McLaughlin influences.
But Scofield is able to do it all—jazz, swing, blues,
rock-influenced guitar jamming, as well as more outside
playing., making him a great addition to Trio Beyond.
Saudades, recorded live in London in 2004,
shows that the group is much more than a Lifetime cover
band. The spirit of both Williams and the original Lifetime
band dictates that the group moves beyond mere imitation,
and they do this admirably. There are hard-hitting versions
of some key Williams and/or Lifetime tunes, to be sure:
“Pee Wee,” “Emergency,” Coltrane’s
“Big Nick,” and McLaughlin’s “Spectrum”
bristle with muscular energy and power, but Trio Beyond
also digs into the music Williams and his cohorts created
and were inspired by both before and after Lifetime. But
there is more here—the opening version of Joe Henderson’s
“If” swings manically, thanks in large part
to DeJohnette’s never-flagging energy. Goldings’
orginal composition “As One” gives him the opportunity
to demonstrate his Larry Young influences, and also allows
the band to show a dramatic range of emotion that is more
delicate than the more jam-oriented tracks, yet every bit
as powerful. The song melds into a 45-second snippet of
Larry Young’s “Allah Be Praised” groove.
That leads to the ten-plus minute original title track,
credited to all three musicians. “Saudades”
and “Love In Blues,” a jam from the second CD
of this set, both sound like spontaneous improvisations
based on a loose framework. During both of these numbers
the band really lives up to the spirit of both Lifetime
and Williams, performing very much like a seasoned, road-tested
band rather than some supergroup studio project.
Two other surprises, both very pleasant, on
CD two, are “Seven Steps to Heaven,” a Miles
Davis track that became a staple for his live band around
the time that Williams happened onto the scene. The group
soft sells the melodic statement here, making the song at
once familiar and a little bit new, even for seasoned jazz
listeners. Then there is a lengthy version of the Jule Styne
classic “I Fall In Love Too Easily,” another
song long associated with Miles, on which the group displays
a great depth of emotional reserve that can only be summoned
by musicians who have mastered their craft and played for
a long time.
In short, Saudades is a really great
album of solid music created by three of today’s best
jazz artists in tribute to music created by some heavy hitters
from the past who deserve their due. The quality of musicianship,
the excellent choice of material, and the performance itself
(always more important than what the project looks like
on paper) are all top notch, and those with open ears and
an expansive spirit will be carried away by the sounds Trio
Beyond creates to a freewheeling, truly wonderful musical
universe.