Conceptualized around the visionary paintings of Harlem-born artist Romare Bearden (1911-1988), saxophonist
Branford Marsalis'
Romare Bearden Revealed celebrates the obvious as well as the less tangible connections between the jazz Bearden loved and the artwork it inspired. Reflectively performing some of the songs Bearden co-opted as titles for paintings,
Marsalis also includes original compositions inspired by the bluesy, organic quality inherent in Bearden's art. Featuring his working quartet of pianist
Joey Calderazzo, bassist
Eric Revis, and drummer
Jeff "Tain" Watts, the album also includes appearances by the whole
Marsalis family. Brother
Wynton Marsalis revisits his post-bop "J Mood" from his 1985 album of the same name, which featured cover art by Bearden. The trumpeter also keeps things bawdy with some brilliant plunger work on a live recording of
Jelly Roll Morton's "Jungle Blues." Similarly, "B's Paris Blues" finds
Branford turning his trademark soprano sax to the 1961 Bearden work Paris Blues, celebrating the beauty and ennui of American black musicians who expatriated to France for artistic and social freedom. Even
Harry Connick, Jr. drops by for a lithe and soulful stride duet on
James P. Johnson's "Carolina Shout." Perhaps most compelling, though, is guitarist
Doug Wamble's solo turn on "Autumn Lamp." Inspired by Beardens' 1981 rural vision of a blues guitarist playing by himself under the glow of candle lamp,
Wamble utilizes a resonator guitar with a slide, calling to mind
Mississippi Fred McDowell's version of "Keep Your Lamp Trimmed and Burning" (perhaps Bearden's inspiration as well?). From one great artist to another, this is an earthy and accessible homage. ~ Matt Collar