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Europe Jazz Network
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OFFICIAL WEB SITE: www.yellowjackets.com Music as exploration is a concept as old as jazz itself. Some of the best compositions and most prolific musical careers have started at point A by artists and bands with little or no conception of point Bs whereabouts. Such is the story of the Yellowjackets, an outfit that began as the session band for guitarist Robben Ford in the late 70s and took on a life of its own in a matter of a few years. More than two decades after its genesis, the band continues to delve into every corner of the musical universe simply because its there to be explored and weave a multi-layered and innovative tapestry of sonic experience. By the mid 1970s, Ford had assembled keyboardist Russell Ferrante, bassist Jimmy Haslip and drummer Ricky Lawson a team of up and coming players who backed him on his mostly instrumental 1977 release, The Inside Story. Although Fords label wanted him to follow up with a more pop- and vocal-oriented album, the band then known as the Robben Ford Group preferred the instrumental approach. They renamed themselves the Yellowjackets, and while Ford made appearances on their first couple albums, the band and its former leader parted on amicable terms after the release of Mirage a Trois in 1984. "That was a very exciting time for instrumental music," Ferrante recalls. "It seemed like a lot of people were open to mixing and matching various musical styles. There wasn't the strict compartmentalization that you see in radio now." With the success of innovative instrumental bands like Weather Report around the same time, crossing and merging genres had become a successful strategy, artistically as well as commercially. "There was no thought about whether this style should go with that one," Ferrante adds. "Nothing was genre specific. It was just the music that we had all played R&B music and electric music and acoustic music, blues, pop, the whole thing was just all music. We just did what came naturally." By 1987,
Lawson had left the band and was replaced by William
Kennedy, whose polyrhythmic sensibilities opened doors to
an even greater sense of exploration and a further
departure from the familiar, Haslip recalls. Subsequent
albums Politics (1988) and The Spin
(1989) dispensed with some of the multi-layered
intensity of Four Corners and took a more
acoustic direction. Greenhouse, released in
1990, welcomed tenor saxophonist Bob Mintzer into the
Yellowjackets lineup. Mintzers dedication to the
jazz tradition, along with his highly developed skills as
an arranger, have since taken the Jackets to a new
level of sophistication over the past twelve years. Haslips high praise picks up where Mintzers modesty leaves off. "Bob is an amazing musician," he says. "He has a very distinct voice. Hes the really serious traditionalist in the band. He also has a very wide, eclectic view of composing, so he lends himself to what we are trying to do. Hes very much into experimentation, and he has his own big band, so his skills as an arranger are also very good to have on board." Throughout the 90s, the Jackets continued to explore a diverse cross section of sound and rhythm. The relaxed and mellow Dreamland, released in 1995, marked a brief reunion with Warner Brothers that also spawned Blue Hats in 1997 and Club Nocturne in 1998. The Yellowjackets enter the new millennium with the release of Mint Jam on the Heads Up International label. Recorded live at the Mint in Los Angeles in July 2001, the two-disc set is scheduled for international release in March 2002. Backing up the regular lineup of Ferrante, Haslip and Mintzer on Mint Jam is drummer Marcus Baylor. While the
Yellowjackets are optimistic about the future, even the
charter members arent about to limit their options
by mapping that future too carefully. European booking
agent: SAUDADES TOURNEEN |