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As If Anything Could Be The Same

by Jack Wright / Ben Wright

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    As if anything could be the same is a duet album by the father and son team of saxophonist Jack Wright and contrabassist Ben Wright . In the world of improvised music, or non-idiomatic improvised music if one must, Jack Wright is a seminal figure. A self-taught bluegrass and folk musician as a youth, and later a history professor at Temple University, Wright's trajectory out of "normal" life coincided with his burgeoning political activism during the early 1970s. His subsequent involvement in improvised music followed soon after, though his first recording (Free Life Singing , Spring Garden Music, 1982) didn't appear until the early 1980s. All along, Wright has been a tireless champion of improvised music, actively seeking out gigs in remote areas where exposure to improvised music was nil; a veritable Johnny Appleseed of improvisation.
    "As If" is contrapuntal and interactive, perhaps the most conventionally jazz-like piece on the album. Here, Jack's burnished soprano tone is (unintentionally) reminiscent of Steve Lacy, and the interplay with his son's arco bass is playful, even whimsical. Each piece, however, unfolds in its own unique way as father and son test each other then pause for a brief embrace, ignore and then listen intently to some disembodied inner voice, never truly following and yet never purposely diverging. Each piece, however, has more than a few gem-like moments of clarity, where the musical whole is more than the sum of the parts. Dave Wayne
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1.
As If 08:46
2.
Anything 13:12
3.
Could 15:30
4.
Be 10:53
5.
The Same 14:17

about

Saxophonist Jack Wright has been a force in free improvisation since devoting himself full-time to that discipline in 1979. During those thirty-five years he has taken an expansive view of what improvisation can be, and what kind of sound world a saxophone can create. His earlier efforts arose as a natural response to and continuation of the expressionistic free jazz of the 1960s, but a collaboration with Bhob Rainey in the late 1990s led him to reduce the volume and density of his sound, though not, paradoxically, the passion. Rather than abandoning one style for another, he has conserved and retained the sounds of all of his musical incarnations, with the result that he has been able to fashion a broad sonic vocabulary to draw on in any number of different improvisational contexts. He has also devoted himself to developing the music by reaching out to listeners, potential listeners, and fellow musicians through his frequent performances at venues of all sizes throughout the world. In this CD, a collaboration with his son Ben on double bass, his ecumenical approach to improvisation is on full display.
The disc opens with an energetic, texture-heavy statement on the bass, which is quickly joined by staccato notes from the soprano saxophone. The piece is full but at the same time is full of space. Here as in the other pieces the improvisation doesn’t follow a narrative arc but instead has more of the kind of color-based dynamic that painter Hans Hofmann described as “push-pull”: layered timbres creating a sense of sonic depth and movement. This can be heard to full advantage in Be, which overlaps squealing, popping and grunting sounds from the saxophone and struck strings, overpressure-bowing and brightly articulated tremolo from the bass. But despite the preponderance of color as a shaping element, a trace of expressionism can be found running throughout all five tracks as a kind of subterranean stream irrigating and feeding the growth above ground. But at times it comes to the fore, as in the plangent alto and overtone-laden bowed bass on the second track, or the moaning of both horn and bass at the beginning of The Same. Conversely, the kind of reductivist sound shaping that Wright has become known for is by no means absent from the disc. Nearly all the selections feature it to some extent, though it dominates the closing track. Dan Barbiero

credits

released May 1, 2014

Alto Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Jack Wright
Contrabass – Ben Wright

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Relative Pitch Records New York, New York

NYC-based independent record label specializing in avant-garde, free jazz, free improvisation, experimental.

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