Canadian pianist
Paul Plimley and his bass playing compadre
Lisle Ellis have been making records together for over 20 years, even if no one knew about them other than a few handfuls of staunch free jazz fans in the U.S. and Europe. On his last HAT disc,
Density of the Lovestruck Demons,
Ellis and
Plimley made a recording solely of
Ornette Coleman's music. It was a creative and ardent exercise in reaching through the artist's music to the place
Coleman himself reaches for: the place where tune and composer separate and the improvisation leaves the realm of music entirely to become possessed solely by the world of sound. Here,
Plimley,
Ellis, and drummer Donald Robinson take that a step further.
Plimley's compositions dominate this recording -- and they should, as he is as fine a writer as we have in jazz -- but they are anchored in key places by three
Coleman compositions, all of which are (in)famous for the amount of freedom they allow the interpretive players. The set opens with the beginning of a suite -- a thematic, really -- which holds within it several other compositions. The theme is stated briefly and Robinson establishes a slippery rhythm, which
Ellis commands in a few bars.
Plimley then spontaneously composes over the top, accenting chromatic changes and eighth note rows in tonal variation. This is immediately followed by a reading of
Coleman's "W.R.U." The trio dynamic is revealed here for how well it works in
Plimley's pianism.
Coleman's theme is established firmly if fluidly by all three and carried into a mode change by the rhythm section. Here,
Plimley takes off, moving in a circular fashion, further and further away from the tune until he reaches a space where the improvisation transforms itself back into the body of the thematic variation played by the rhythm section at that moment! This also happens with more focused intent on "Trio Tuning," a four-part suite which includes an alternating series of tunes by
Plimley and
Coleman (actually two different takes of
Coleman's "I Heard It Over the Radio" are interspersed with
Plimley's minor key extravaganza "The Reception"). Again, it's all thematics. The entire recording is based on these "themes and variational themes" which
Plimley and
Ellis concoct over solid jazz themes and rhythms. Certainly, this is free jazz, because it could be nothing else. It does swing, and it moves and pushes the boundaries of what jazz might consider itself to be, but it does so with respect for the piano lineage of the music, and with a sense of humor (check out the
Vince Guaraldi quotes on "In the Hand of the Land, Eyes to the Sky"). This is one of
Plimley's finest moments to date. ~ Thom Jurek