
Landmarks (Blue Note)
Brian Blade & The Fellowship Band
Released April 29, 2014
Grammy Nominee for Best Jazz Instrumental Album 2015
YouTube:
https://music.youtube.com/watch?v=M4uXtnNiTfs&list=OLAK5uy_mcFHHzzD1TuvOjqgqDdTBFEFdve8ygMcs
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/album/5InHDZVvNbDDvq917BmMgT?si=-NHIErO9Rv-3MXEQ-IDM-g
About:
Landmarks, the fourth recording by Brian Blade & The Fellowship Band, marks their return to Blue Note Records, released in cooperation with the Shreveport, Louisiana based label, Mid-City Records. Brian chose to record seven of the ten compositions in his hometown of Shreveport at Blade Studios which was opened in 2011 by Brian’s older brother, the drummer and producer Brady Blade, Jr. Shreveport is an inland port city situated 40 miles south of Arkansas, 20 miles east of Texas, and 100 miles north of the Gulf Coast and its location makes it a sonic catchment basin for various Afro-diasporic strains—gospel, rhythm-and-blues, the blues as such and various iterations of jazz—and vernacular folk idioms that developed indigenously in the surrounding territories.
As on each prior Fellowship Band release, Blade and pianist Jon Cowherd refract these impressions into their own musical poetry, with an ear to the individualistic styles of Myron Walden (alto saxophone, bass clarinet), Melvin Butler (soprano and tenor saxophone) and Chris Thomas (bass). For the recording of Landmarks, Marvin Sewell and Jeff Parker are on guitars. Excepting the guitarists, The Fellowship Band has remained a unit since their eponymous 1998 debut and its 2000 follow-up, Perceptual, both on Blue Note. You can hear it in the cohesion and exploratory spirit of their collective and individual interpretations, orchestrated and propelled by the leader’s in-the-moment beats and textures.
Track Listing:
1. Down River (Jon Cowherd) 0:56
2. Landmarks (Jon Cowherd) 8:22
3. State Lines (Brian Blade / Marvin Sewell) 1:04
4. Ark.La.Tex (Brian Blade) 11:37
5. Shenandoah (Traditional) 1:52
6. He Died Fighting (Brian Blade) 5:39
7. Friends Call Her Dot (Brian Blade) 4:06
8. Farewell Bluebird (Brian Blade) 13:22
9. Bonnie Be Good (Brian Blade) 4:00
10. Embers (Brian Blade) 2:21
Personnel:
Brian Blade: drums;
Melvin Butler: soprano and tenor saxophones;
Jon Cowherd: piano, mellotron, pump organ;
Chris Thomas: bass;
Myron Walden: alto saxophone; bass clarinet;
Jeff Parker: guitar (7, 9);
Marvin Sewell: guitar (3, 4, 6, 8, 10)
Recorded November 7, 2010 – January 23, 2013
Producer: Brian Blade
Recorded by Chris Bell (2-6, 8-10) and Tucker Martine (7, 9)
Assistant Engineer: Dave Coleman (7, 9), Tim Marchiafava (4, 6, 7, 9)
Mixed by Chris Bell and Joe Barbaria (4, 6, 7, 9)
Mastered by Andy VanDette
Assisted by Jeremy Lubsey
Cover Photo: Michel Varisco
Layout: Sydney Nichols
Executive-Producer: Brady L. Blade, Jr.
Review:
Four records in 16 years may not be prolific, but
clearly Brian Blade and his longstanding Fellowship Band aren’t about quantity.
While a seemingly scant two years separated the drummer’s leader debut (and
inspiration for the group name), Fellowship (Blue Note, 1998) from
its even more impressive follow-up, Perceptual (Blue Note, 2002), the
group’s next record, Season of Changes (Verve) came a full eight
years later in 2008, and beyond a label change also reflected the trimming down
of the Fellowship Band from its original septet to a sextet with the departure
of pedal steel virtuoso Dave Easley.
Another six years have passed, but Landmarks represents not only
another label change as it returns to Blue Note, but some additional shifting
on the personnel front, with the departure of Kurt Rosenwinkel, a key
member since Perceptual. These days, more often than not, the Fellowship
Band is, in performance, a lean but very potent quintet with five of its seven
original members intact; for Landmarks, however, the group enlists
guitarist Jeff Parker(making a return after being part of the group that
recorded Fellowship) and Marvin Sewell to flesh out seven of the
album’s ten tracks.
While the core quintet is absolutely capable of standing on its own—and as a
fully acoustic group to boot, as demonstrated in a knock-out
performance at the 2012 TD Ottawa Jazz Festival and virtual
roof-raiser at Nasjonal Jazzscene Victoria, during the 2011 Oslo
International Jazz Festival—there’s no doubt that Parker and Sewell have plenty
to offer on a recording that, while retaining some of the fire that’s
fundamental to the group’s live sets, clearly treats the studio as a different
environment entirely.
For one thing, the brief opener, Cowherd’s minute-long solo improvisation
“Down River,” is performed on that unwieldy progressive rock
stalwart, the Mellotron; but here, the distinctive warbling sound of fluttering
flute tapes only gives it a more strangely haunting quality that’s the perfect
setup for the title track, Cowherd’s only other compositional contribution
to Landmarks, though his unmistakable piano and pump organ work—as much
folk and country simplicity as it is jazz sophistication—is, as ever, a strong
definer of the Fellowship Band sound.
“Landmarks” opens with a relatively rare solo from Thomas that, in
duet with Cowherd, is the first of many demonstrations from the Fellowship Band
members that it’s not about individual instrumental virtuosity, though that’s a
fundamental anyway; it’s about surrendering to the needs of the song and, in
this case its simply beautiful, singable melody. As Blade enters and Butler and
Walden reiterate the theme on soprano saxophone and bass clarinet respectively,
the tune unfolds into a soprano solo of similar reverence, as Blade’s light
cymbal work is juxtaposed with more powerful runs around the kit, creating the
punctuations for which he’s become known, not just in Fellowship, but
with Wayne Shorter and Daniel Lanois. Cowherd takes the final
solo and it’s a lengthy one but, like the entire album, it tells a story rather
than merely demonstrating his intrinsic virtuosity—a mastery required to intuit
when to let loose with fireworks and when to keep things spare and simple.
More than merely a reflection of the many physical
places this group has traveled in its 16-plus year existence, the album title
speaks to inner travels, and a spiritual quality that’s been palpable since the
group’s inception, making its name more than just a word. It’s also a
reflection of extracurricular activities brought back to the group, whether
they’re Walden’s overtly jazz-centric Momentum (Demi Sound, 2009),
more reflective In This World (Demi Sound, 2010) and aptly
titled Countrified (Demi Sound, 2010); Blade’s exploratory work with
Shorter’s Quartet (together almost as long as the Fellowship Band) and
similarly searching work, albeit in a more rock-centric context, with Lanois on
projects like Black Dub (Jive, 2010); or Cowherd’ s work with
everyone from singer/songwriter Rosanne Cash and Canadian bassist Chris
Tarry to saxophonist Marcus Strickland and punk idol Iggy Pop.
But rather than any of these disparate elements being obvious, they’re subsumed
into the unmistakable, singular voice that the Fellowship Band continues to
evolve, gig after gig, year after year.
Landmarks feature s a number of brief, sometimes through-composed
miniatures that act as thematic threads that join the album together as a
conceptual whole. Sewell’s improvised piece of ambient soundscaping on
“State Lines,” reflects and sets up the five primary notes of Blade’s
“Ark.La.Tex.” which follows, a lengthy exploration that builds
slowly, with Butler and Walden (this time on tenor and alto saxophones)
creating the thematic unison lines that occasionally, wonderfully, diverge, only
to reunite as one. The piece begins to pick up steam, leading to an open middle
section where Walden’s prowess is bolstered by the joined-at-the-hip pocket
created by Blade and Thomas, only to find its way back to the original theme
and, ultimately, the composition’s primary five-note motif, ending, as it
began, with Sewell’s ambient landscape, but this time with Cowherd creating a
larger sound on pump organ. It’s a marvelous piece of writing that, in its
construction, seems to expand and contract as its episodic movements move
outwards from its gentler beginnings, only to come full circle by the time it
closes, twelve minutes later.
Cowherd’s pump organ acts as the connecting thread from “Ark. La.
Tex.” to “Shenandoah,” a lovely traditional tune that The
Fellowship Band has explored at length in concert, but here keeps to a script,
with Walden and Butler (on bass clarinet and tenor saxophone) delivering the
familiar, bittersweet theme rubato, leading to Blade’s solo introduction
to “He Died Fighting,” a song that could easily be transported into
the singer/songwriter vein of the drummer’s unexpected Mama
Rosa (Verve, 2009)—unexpected, because who’d have thought a drummer so
capable of incendiary power would also be capable of such profound poetry,
delivered with a voice so unassuming, tender and meaningful?
Landmarks’ longest piece, “Farewell Bluebird,” follows the largely
through-composed “Friends Call Her Dot,” though Walden’s
opening a cappella bass clarinet solo is not unlike Cowherd’s
“Down River” in the way that it sets up this ambling, folkloric tune
driven by Blade’s gentle but persistently propulsive playing and Parker’s
subdued but essential tripling of the melody alongside Butler and Walden. It
also seems to set up “Friends Call Her Dot,” which initially revolves
around a four-chord motif and some lovely contrapuntal playing from Cowherd and
Walden, a thematic duo that soon becomes a trio when Butler enters on soprano.
The solo section features Cowherd’s most impressive solo of the set—a lesson in
motivic evolution whose end signals a shift in time and a bluesy riff that
drives a gritty solo from Sewell that combines outré ideas with frenetic slide
guitar, marrying Cowherd’s modal support with the sound and feeling of the
Mississippi Delta.
As the Fellowship Band has grown, it has moved away from overt traditional
references, even though they’re an undercurrent throughout. Instead, as it
explores milestones both inner and outer, Landmarks further speaks
with the singular voice that the Fellowship Band has built upon since
inception. Blending folkloric references, hints of church and spiritual
concerns, jazz modality and countrified touchstones, Landmarks is the
perfect name for Brian Blade & The Fellowship Band’s fourth album; beyond
its meaning to the group, it truly is yet another landmark recording in the
core quintet’s evolutionary travels. It may have come after a long gap in time,
but that only makes it a wait all the more worthwhile.
John Kelman (All About Jazz)