Music Reviews

Joey Baron with Arthur Blythe, Ron Carter, Bill Frisell

We’ll Soon Find Out

Intuition

Drummer Joey Baron has recorded with folks as divergent as Laurie Anderson and Chet Baker, and was a member of Bill Frisell’s group until 1995. Add to that a stint in John Zorn’s Masada, and you have a musician who is well traveled on some rather off beat paths. On his new recording, he is joined by his former boss, Bill Frisell, along with legendary bassist Ron Carter and one of the saxophone’s premier voices, Arthur Blythe. Baron’s style, both as a drummer and as a songwriter (he wrote the nine cuts found here) is less a leader than an enabler. He builds the ground floor and lets the others add the finishing touches – which this cast of players certainly can do.

Carter plays the bass as only he can, with a subtle supporting voice, at times melodic, other moments bluesy. His tone is stellar throughout the recording. Arthur Blythe reminds us yet again why he has been regarded as a legend for decades – ideas and themes tumble from his horn as effortlessly as water tumbling over a rock. Never overplaying his hand, he meshes well with guitarist Frisell.

But of course, any record made with Bill Frisell is going to have one shining star, and that would of course be Frisell himself. Endlessly inventive, he plays everything from simple backing chords to jagged solos with entirely new methods and sounds. Quite literally, he invents new places for a guitar to go – without the histrionics of rock or the never ending rehash of Wes Montgomery or George Bensonisms that seem to plague many modern jazz guitarists. He can go from distorted lines of angular melody to rich, full comping in the space of a few bars, seamlessly flowing from one mode to another without losing the listener. He challenges the listener to dig deeper, listen harder. It’s well worth the time.

Joey Baron seems to be both very active and blessed with good taste in sidemen. On this second release from these players (the first was Down Home in 1997), he has formed the basis for a hopefully long-lasting series of musical events. As long as the results are this satisfying, the jazz world will await future installments with eagerness.

Intuition Records, http://www.schott-music.com


Recently on Ink 19...

Dark Water

Dark Water

Screen Reviews

J-Horror classic Dark Water (2002) makes the skin crawl with an unease that lasts long after the film is over. Phil Bailey reviews the new Arrow Video release.

The Shootist

The Shootist

Screen Reviews

John Wayne’s final movie sees the cowboy actor go out on a high note, in The Shootist, one of his best performances.