Branford
Marsalis has never been one to stand still. The
acclaimed saxophonist forges new paths with an assurance
born of lifelong dedication and keenly honed knowledge,
in the company of his stunning quartet. Together they
have created Footsteps of Our Fathers, a joyous
homage to jazz immortals living and dead who helped shape
a value system that inspires not only Branford's playing
and writing, but also his determination to ensure that
true creativity will be properly documented through his
new Marsalis Music label.
"I've always been an advocate of expanding
modern concepts in jazz," Branford says of his
new album, "but I've felt this was best done
through the tradition. When my brother Wynton and I came
to New York 20 years ago and unabashedly admitted that we
were influenced by people like Miles Davis, I was shocked
that we were criticized and called 'neoclassicists'. But
I continued to do what I was doing, and waited to see if
the muse would be kind enough to let me expand the
tradition. This was the way I thought it should be done,
from talking to people like Dizzy Gillespie and Herbie Hancock."
Branford's experiences as a teacher, most recently at San
Francisco State, have only reconfirmed these feelings. "A
lot of young musicians today are more impressed with
instrumentalism than with musicianship," he
notes. "They idolize amazing players, but don't
pay attention to the music. Since my own playing has
matured in the last few years, and since my band now has
its own sound, it struck me as the perfect time to make Footsteps
of our Fathers and stress the need for a more
thorough knowledge of the tradition."
Few will doubt that Branford and his quartet, featuring
pianist Joey Calderazzo, bassist Eric Revis, and drummer
Jeff "Tain" Watts, are ready for such a
challenge. Their previous recording, Contemporary Jazz,
received the 2000 Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Jazz
Album. Where that disc focused primarily on original
compositions, Footsteps of Our Fathers revisits
four masterpieces from the years 1955-1964, a
particularly rich decade of recorded jazz.
The album opens with "Giggin'," a typically
idiosyncratic blues line that alto saxophonist Ornette Coleman recorded in 1959
with trumpeter Don Cherry, bassist Percy Heath and
drummer Shelly Manne. "Ornette Coleman is just
one of the great geniuses of the music,"
Branford explains, "and Giggin' is one
of his earlier songs, so it still has a real bebop flair.
I thought it would be great to play one of his pianoless
quartet songs with a piano, and it took me a while to
figure out how to do it. The best way is to have the
piano take the place of the trumpet, although I ended up
having Joey play Ornette's saxophone lines while I play
the trumpet lines on soprano sax. Then Joey plays his
solo with just the right hand."
Calderazzo lays out on "The Freedom Suite," the
1958 call for an end to racial discrimination that Sonny Rollins created with bassist
Oscar Pettiford and drummer Max Roach.
"Sonny is one of my all-time favorites, probably
the greatest improviser I ever heard and that
includes Louis Armstrong and Charlie Parker,"
Branford asserts. "You get the impression that
he can play anything he's ever heard at any moment
his data base is unreal. Sonny helped me a lot with
rhythm, those crazy ideas that he has bouncing around,
yet he tends to be underappreciated by a lot of saxophone
players who put all of their effort into emulating John
Coltrane. I've been fortunate to dig both Sonny Rollins
and John Coltrane, and to look upon them as equal
influences. I've always loved The Freedom Suite
and loved playing trio, and there was a time when I would
play one movement or another during our concerts, just to
get it under my belt. Normally, we're not going to do
that much trio music with the quartet, but Footsteps
of Our Fathers was the perfect time to do it."
John Coltrane, the other tenor titan acknowledged here,
created "A Love Supreme" in 1964 with his
classic quartet of pianist McCoy
Tyner, bassist Jimmy Garrison and drummer Elvin Jones. This four-part suite
became Coltrane's most popular composition, and was
recorded by a previous edition of Branford's quartet in
1991 for the AIDS Awareness anthology Stolen Moments: Red
Hot + Cool. "I wasn't really ready to play A
Love Supreme then;" Branford admits; "but
the only way to get at a piece like that is to keep
playing it, because you're not going to get it right the
first time. So I've worked on it, and my playing has come
a long way since '91. The band is in a space where we can
approximate the emotional impact that Trane's band
had."
To complete the ambitious program, Branford chose
"Concorde," which pianist John Lewis composed
for the 1955 Modern Jazz Quartet recording on which
drummer Connie Kay first joined original MJQ members
Lewis, vibist Milt Jackson, and bassist Percy Heath. "The
genius of what the Modern Jazz Quartet did is so subtle,
not in-your-face like what John Coltrane did,"
Branford emphasizes, "and 'Concorde' is our way
of saying thank you. John Lewis wrote songs that were
technically demanding for each musician in the band, yet
still required that everyone work in a group context. You
have to really be in the moment to make his music work.
We extended the performance compared to the original MJQ
recording by finding the natural points of expansion.
Where the MJQ didn't go into straight swing until Milt
Jackson's final solo, for instance, I wanted more of a
raucous, Duke Ellington thing. And Tain knows all about
[Ellington drummer] Sonny Greer. The performance just
builds and builds, then explodes."
From beginning to end, Footsteps of Our Fathers
displays a focus and sustained interaction that has
marked all of Branford's recent music. "We get
better every time," he says of his quartet with
pride. "It's unbelievable the way the band has
grown. We're all serious about playing, not like when we
were younger and more interested in having fun. That's
why, when I was in my twenties, I could join Sting's band
or The Tonight Show and not really play for a year or
more. I can't see that happening again in my future,
though. No more elegant diversions, because I don't want
to spend that much time not playing."
This degree of dedication has been reinforced by the
creation of Marsalis Music, an independent label
distributed by another artist-based company, Rounder
Records. The decision to launch such a label means even
more from an artist who has enjoyed a number of
high-profile gigs that jazz musicians rarely obtain. "I
realized that what I really wanted to do was play during
my years on The Tonight Show," Branford says.
"Really creative musical guests would come on
people like Marcus Roberts, Bruce Hornsby, Sting, Marilyn
Horne, Kathleen Battle, Wynton, and Placido Domingo
and remind me of what I wasn't doing. The irony of
the situation really hit home. It wasn't that I regretted
that gig, or playing with Sting. Both experiences were a
lot of fun, but I saw that I couldn't devote that much
time to something else at the expense of my own music.
You can't develop your conception on Saturday and Sunday.
Great musicians and great bands go on the road, they tour
and discover their own thing."
In the case of Branford Marsalis, they also create a new
record label to foster such independent spirits. "My
brother Ellis, who works in computers and doesn't play
music, told me once that he had what he called a
`philosophical conflict' at his job. He was bothered by
the clash between people like himself, who want to
provide a service to the community and make a profit, and
those who just want to make a profit at the expense of
the community. I never forgot that insight, and it
describes perfectly what Marsalis Music will be about. We
want to provide a service to the music community first.
We want to create an atmosphere where people who make
creative music can be heard."
Footsteps of Our Fathers is the first, glorious
step on that path.
September 2002
European booking agent: TED
KURLAND ASSOCIATES
For booking in Italy, contact: EMMECI
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