There is an easy familiarity among the participants on the
John Abercrombie Quartet's
39 Steps. Each of its members -- guitarist, pianist
Marc Copland, bassist
Drew Gress, and drummer
Joey Baron -- have played together in various situations for decades. In the case of
Abercrombie and
Copland, their association goes back some 40 years to
Chico Hamilton's touring group and the fusion band
Dreams. Both
Baron and
Gress have played with the guitarist and pianist on and off since the '90s. The predominate mood here is linear post-bop and lyric balladry, though there is an overarching group meditation on the pieces titled for Alfred Hitchock's films:
Abercrombie composed six pieces here (including "Vertigo" and the title track);
Copland two (including "Spellbound"), and there's a group improvisation called "Shadow of a Doubt." The pianist's "LST" is a midtempo number with an elaborate melody and a gorgeous solo by the composer showcasing motivic invention in the upper register accompanied by gorgeous chord voicings from
Abercrombie. The lush, melodic invention in the guitarist's "Bacharach" offers the pianist a platform to build a multi-hued timbral spectrum, while
Abercrombie slips along its underside in an understated yet intricate solo,
Gress punctuates his lines with rich wooden tones and
Baron whispers along on snare and cymbals.
Copland's "Spellbound" is as mysterious as its title implies.
Abercrombie's dual string intro is followed by
Gress's, which is darkly illumined by the pianist's middle-register chordal inventions and
Baron's slippery shuffle. The guitarist's solo follows a scalar line, purposely syncopating his movements and creating a gentle swing. The title track is one of the loveliest ballads
Abercrombie has composed. It makes full use of both the piano's and guitar's possibilities as chord instruments, but its solos all move fluidly along subtle yet intensely lyrical lines. The set closes on the most unusual version of "Melancholy Baby" ever committed to tape, though even in its angular rhythmic thrust and contrapuntal individual statements, exhibits a keen sense of listening and melodic counterpoint.
Abercrombie's
39 Steps offers the sound of a veteran quartet playing at the height of its individual members' intuitive and collective abilities. ~ Thom Jurek