Give(Columbia Records)
The Bad Plus
Released March 9, 2004
JazzTimes Top 10 Albums of 2004
YouTube:
https://music.youtube.com/watch?v=fig32Wp6H8I&list=OLAK5uy_n6hhiNtig-GE3x1qHZqxxBzWfHHUhpaQM
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/album/5VgOcl2cNKQ2zKDi71cqh7?si=F2kUzOzgRo-pR6s5EPD9Fw
About:
Ethan Iverson, Reid Anderson and David King first played together in 1989 but established The Bad Plus in 2000. The band recorded their first album, a self-titled effort released on Fresh Sound, after playing only three gigs together. A live performance at the Village Vanguard was heard by Columbia Records representative Yves Beauvais, and the band was signed to Columbia in 2002. Their major label debut album, These Are the Vistas, was released in 2003. Give is the third studio album released by The Bad Plus. It contains covers of Ornette Coleman’s “Street Woman,” The Pixies’ “Velouria,” and Black Sabbath’s “Iron Man.”
Track Listing:
1. 1979 Semi-Finalist (David King) 5:18
2. Cheney Piñata (Ethan Iverson) 4:50
3. Street Woman (Ornette Coleman) 3:59
4. And Here We Test Our Powers of Observation (Reid Anderson) 4:22
5. Frog and Toad (David King) 3:37
6. Velouria (Black Francis) 5:37
7. Layin’ a Strip for the Higher-Self State Line (David King) 4:18
8. Do Your Sums/Die Like a Dog/Play for Home (Ethan Iverson) 5:05
9. Dirty Blonde (Reid Anderson) 3:43
10. Neptune (The Planet) (Reid Anderson) 5:30
11. Iron Man (Geezer Butler / Tony Iommi / Ozzy Osbourne / Bill Ward) 6:04
Personnel:
Ethan Iverson: piano
Reid Anderson: bass
David King: drums
Recorded Fall 2003 At Real World Studios, Box, Wiltshire, England
Produced by Tchad Blake and The Bad Plus
Engineering and Mixing: Tchad Blake
Assistant Engineer: Claire Lewis.
Mastering: Bob Ludwig
Art Direction: Josh Cheuse
Illustrations: Matt Freisen
Photography: Marcelo Krasilcic
Review:
When the
soothsayers and tastemakers at Esquire magazine posited in their March 2003
issue that the Bad Plus’ These Are the Vistas just might be the one album that
could single-handedly make jazz relevant again, they failed to include this
caveat: relevant for white rock scribes and other assorted geeks who couldn’t
swing from a rope.
This renegade piano trio has already been the object of gross hyperbole in
JazzTimes (Stuart Nicholson raves in the April 2003 issue that These
Are the Vistas “is one of the most important jazz albums to appear in
more than a decade”). Other writers for Entertainment Weekly, the New York
Times, the New Yorker, the Washington Post and Rolling Stone have been equally
effusive in their praise of the self-proclaimed “power piano trio.”
I, however, come not to praise the Bad Plus but to bury them. Never before in
the history of jazz (or even psuedo-jazz) has a band played so little so loud
for so many and gotten so much-hype, that is. I confess, I don’t get what all
the fuss is about. And as far as their eagerly waited follow-up on Columbia
goes-frankly, I don’t Give a damn.
Wildly overrated, the Bad Plus is a one-joke movie whose premise runs thin all
too quickly. As Elaine Benes pointed out in an episode of Seinfeld while
watching a video rental of the insipid Weekend at Bernie’s: “OK, we get it.
He’s dead! We get it!” Similarly, I must submit: “OK, we get it. It’s an
acoustic piano trio where the drummer plays really loud! We get it!”
Other drummers have dabbled in this louder-is-better idea-for example, Matt
Wilson’s “Schoolboy Thug” from 1998’s Going Once, Going Twice on
Palmetto-but haven’t made a career out of it. I certainly have no problem with
powerhouse drumming: witness Tony Williams with Lifetime, Billy Cobham with the
Mahavishnu Orchestra, Lenny White with Return to Forever, etc. But I do have a
problem with Bad Plus drummer David King, whose perfunctory plodding makes
Ginger Baker sound like Philly Joe Jones. And yet, his ham-fisted approach to
the kit is precisely what gives the Bad Plus its wide appeal among nonjazzers.
If pianist Ethan Iverson’s rhapsodic lines, off-kilter rhythms and harmonic
deconstructions throw them for a loop, they can always grab onto King’s
throbbing, moronic backbeat.
Iverson is undeniably talented. A good humored iconoclast who is equally
immersed in jazz and 20th-century classical, he has turned out a string of fine
recordings for the Fresh Sound New Talent label, where the Bad Plus had its
debut as a group back in 2001. And his stint as musical director for the
prestigious Mark Morris Dance Company marks him as a seasoned pro as well as an
accomplished artist. But for all of his cascading lyricism, high level of
intelligence and technical facility, he doesn’t seem terribly interested in
swinging. That aside, a lot of what he plays on Give strikes me as alternately
schmaltzy, corny or just plain lame. The resulting sound is the piano trio that
Schroeder from the Peanuts gang would eventually front in his 20s after growing
up in the East Village and running into two rebellious lads who introduce him
to the music of Nirvana, Aphex Twin and the Foo Fighters.
In a nutshell, it’s loud but ultimately more beholden to Beethoven than bebop,
more Rachmaninov than “Rockin’ in Rhythm.” It’s Stravinsky with a slamming
backbeat-which might sound good in theory, but Iverson’s tendencies toward
gooey sentimentality and rococo stylings are disconcerting, to say the least.
I will, however, give it up to Bad Plus bassist Reid Anderson, whose
resounding, deep-toned bass lines and keen sense of placement give this band
its backbone-and whose own albums as a leader for Fresh Sound New Talent,
notably 1999’s Abolish Bad Architecture and 2000’s The
Vastness of Space, have been fabulous and fresh-sounding, Ornette
Coleman-inspired gems.
Yes, the Bad Plus is clever, creative, audacious and artsy. But so was the
Penguin Cafe Orchestra, and they never played a week at the Vanguard. And so
are dozens of other cutting-edge Downtown bands in New York-but they don’t get
invited to play at the hallowed halls of jazz either. Simply put, there is
nothing about the Bad Plus that should merit weeklong engagements at the
Village Vanguard, other than the promise of corporate marketing muscle and a
flood of advance hype behind the band.
Make no mistake, this is not a white/black thing. I can think of numerous
“white bands” that should be playing at the Vanguard (including John Zorn’s
Masada, Tim Berne’s Paraphrase, Tony Malaby’s quartet, Donny McCaslin’s
quartet, Dave Binney’s group, Jim Black’s quartet, Ben Allison’s Peace Pipe,
Michael Blake’s Elevated, Frank Kimbrough’s trio, Ben Monder’s trio, Ari
Hoenig’s quartet, John Hollenbeck’s trio, David Tronzo’s trio, etc.) but they
can’t fill the place for two sets over six consecutive nights like the Bad Plus
can. In the end, it’s not about black or white-it’s about green.
Meanwhile, the Bad Plus’ music either registers with you or it doesn’t. It’s
either hugely meaningful or hopelessly lame. It either grows on you or it wears
out its welcome quickly, mostly depending on which decade you were born in. If
you’ve only had a steady diet of Korn, Goo Goo Dolls and Smashing Pumpkins all
your life, I suppose this stuff might be a revelation. If, on the other hand,
your record collection already is brimming with many vintage Blue Notes,
Riversides, Prestiges and Savoys, the Bad Plus probably won’t do anything for
you.
Those born in the early ’80s and who developed their musical tastes in the late
1990s will no doubt be more likely to “get” the Bad Plus. (A cursory scan of
the audience during one of the trio’s weeks at the Village Vanguard revealed a
median age of, I’m guessing, about 23-probably none of whom had ever set foot
in the Vanguard before). Whereas, those from Ira Gitler and Nat Hentoff’s
generation (people forming their musical tastes at the height of the bebop era)
will undoubtedly not get the music of the Bad Plus.
And then there are those from the fusion generation-like myself, born in the
’50s and formulating their musical aesthetic in the late ’60s and early ’70s.
These people could go either way on the Bad Plus. After all, innovative,
renegade outfits like the Mahavishnu Orchestra, Return to Forever, Weather
Report and the Eleventh House all played quite loud while opening our
rock-trained ears to a world of jazz harmonies and improvisation. But then, all
those bands also led some of us to Miles and Trane, Bird and Diz and all the
great jazz piano trios over time from Wynton Kelly and Ahmad Jamal to McCoy
Tyner, Oscar Peterson, Phineas Newborn and on and on. So while some from my
generation may indeed appreciate the Bad Plus, I don’t buy the trio’s act. Or
at least I’m wildly ambivalent about these bad boys.
Their song titles alone reveal a wry streak that I do appreciate-“Here We Test
Our Powers of Observation” and the pointed “Cheney Pinata.” And they cover both
Ornette Coleman’s “Street Woman” and Black Sabbath’s “Iron Man” without irony,
which I like. It’s their original material that I find a bit iffy. The opener
to Give, King’s “1979 Semi-Finalist,” carries a heavy undercurrent that is
about as subtle as King Crimson’s “In the Court of the Crimson King.” King has
his bass drum tuned wide open here, a neat trick he may have copped from
watching Joey Baron at Tonic in New York or somewhere back in his native
Minnesota, while pianist Iverson plays it strictly courtly. And though there’s
plenty for Generation X (or Y and Z, for that matter) to grab onto here in
King’s huge-as-a-house backbeat, there’s really nothing for the Ira Gitler set
to sink its collective dentures into, save for Anderson’s rich, anchored yet
interactive bass lines. Ultimately, it’s an exercise in artsy pretentiousness,
a la the aforementioned Penguin Cafe Orchestra.
There’s a Keith Jarrett-ish quality to Iverson’s vaguely Latin “Cheney Pinata,”
one of the few highlights of Give. And on Ornette’s “Street Woman,” Iverson
reveals a freewheeling right hand with a strong contrapuntal left. While
drummer King plays it much looser here, his boisterous bashing around the kit
is anchored by Anderson’s humongous Hadenesque bass lines. King’s aggressive
drum ‘n’ bass undercurrent on Anderson’s “Here We Test Our Powers of
Observation” is juxtaposed against Iverson’s frilly filigrees, which raise the
haunting specter of Richard Clayderman. Anderson’s brilliant, interactive bass
work on King’s “Frog and Toad” is almost enough to overcome Iverson’s dainty
playing here, which is far too precious, fastidious and borderline George
Winston.
Their take on the Pixies’ “Velouria” is perhaps meaningful only to those who
get the reference (I don’t). Again, Iverson’s playing on the delicate intro is
marked by schmaltzy Claydermanesque forays that would be more appropriate in
Carnegie’s Zankel Hall than the Village Vanguard. And when the band kicks into
high gear, ultimately building to a grandiose crescendo, King’s insistence on
stating the one so blatantly (the antithesis of hip) will annoy all but
remedial listeners.
“Layin’ a Strip for the Higher-Self State Line” is a pretentious title for some
ill-advised attempt at a country boogie-woogie novelty number with King laying
down a clumsy imitation of a second-line groove. But lo and behold! The drummer
does show that he can legitimately swing on the brief bridge section, though
it’s not enough to save this cornball offering.
The suitelike “Do Your Sums-Die Like a Dog-Play for Home” travels through three
distinct moods. Along the way, the bad boys demonstrate how clever they are at
executing unison lines, though Iverson’s tinkling in the “sensitive” rubato
section of this ostentatious track is particularly annoying. Anderson’s “Dirty
Blonde,” an overwrought vehicle in search of Michael Bolton, sounds like
Liberace playing at a CYO dance.
Anderson’s “Neptune (The Planet)” is easily the most intriguing number on Give.
Far more calm and introspective than the rest of the album, it features the
ham-fisted King in his most relaxed and bearable role. There’s actually a sense
of breath and dynamics here that is lacking elsewhere. And the album’s closer,
an interpretation of “Iron Man,” is another mischievously grandiose display
with Iverson layering some glistening right-hand glissandos on top of the
headbanger’s anthem once sung by none other than Ozzy Osbourne. Cute the first
time around, but the joke wears thin fast-like this whole record.
But let’s face it, the Bad Plus didn’t make Give for me or for
Ira Gitler or Nat Hentoff or anyone who has spent too much time with stacks of
Blue Note, Prestige, Riverside and Savoy recordings. They made it for the
20-somethings who wouldn’t know Mel Lewis from Mel Blanc or Max Roach from Max
Bialystock.
This album works if you truly believe that Kurt Cobain is as valid a musical
influence as Miles Davis or John Coltrane. Or if you like your drums really
loud. The rest of us remain only slightly amused by all this bashing and rococo
noodling.
Bill Milkowski (JazzTimes)