Alex Cline - For People In Sorrow (Live) (Cryptogramophone 2013)
In October of 2011, drummer Alex Cline and a large ensemble performed
his reimagining of Roscoe Mitchell's iconic composition, People in
Sorrow, at the Angel City Jazz Festival. In the liner essay, he explains
that he heard the work while in high school on an Art Ensemble of
Chicago album of the same name, and that it quite literally had a
profound influence on the development of his musical thought. He also
states that while he had the notion of undertaking this endeavor years
ago, he initially resisted in order to examine his motivation in wanting
to pay tribute to the work, its composer, AEC, and the group's
fostering organization, the Association for the Advancement of Creative
Musicians. Thank goodness he followed through. Cline's ensemble
performed just before Mitchell’s own group, making the tribute complete.
The band includes Oliver Lake and Vinny Golia on saxophone and
woodwinds, Dan Clucas on cornet, Zeena and Maggie Parkins on harp and
cello respectively, Jeff Gauthier on electric violin, guitarist G.E.
Stinson, bassist Mark Dresser, pianist Myra Melford, vocalist Dwight
Trible, and conductor Will Salmon. Cline retains the work's mournful,
elegant theme as a recurring anchor. He drafts many new spaces for
dialogue and free improvisation yet notates and re-creates many of the
instances that appeared on the original recording — this is remarkable
since much of it was freely improvised. The inherent compassion and
dignity of People in Sorrow proves the real inspiration for this
re-imagining. Groups of players dialogue off the theme, and individuals
take solos in relation to it and one another. The pace is restrained and
spacious until half-an-hour in. The dynamic intensifies with Stinson's
gritty slide guitar solo, backed only by Golia on an instrument
resembling a melodica. From here, the ensemble begins to build the work
to near fever pitch, yet remains grounded in the backdrop by a sung
chant from Sister Dang Nghiem, a Vietnamese Buddhist nun, via a video
projection behind the band — this can be readily heard, and also seen on
the accompanying DVD. No matter how deep and wide the ensemble ranges
in its exploration, People in Sorrow is ever present, not only as a
guiding force in the moment, but also as an enduring influence that
continues to inform possibilities for interaction between formal
composition and free improvisation. The playing by this ensemble is
canny, engaged, and wildly creative; at times their playing borders on
the awe-inspiring, both in restraint and free blowing. For People in
Sorrow is not only a fitting tribute to Mitchell, the work, the AEC, and
AACM, but proves a new high-water mark for Cline in terms of
discipline, openness, and vision. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alex_Cline itunes