Uri Caine Ensemble.
Winter & Winter 910 205-2.
With his Rhapsody in
Blue composer and pianist George Gershwin (1898-1937) began a trend in
classical music to infuse serious orchestral works with serious jazz. So it’s
not a stretch to take several of the man’s compositions back to their roots
with performances by a small jazz group, in this case the Uri Caine Ensemble:
Uri Caine, piano; Ralph Alessi, trumpet; Jim Black, drums; Joyce Hammann,
violin; Mark Helias, bass; Chris Speed, clarinet and tenor sax; and Theo
Bleckmann and Barbara Walker, vocals. The results we hear on this all-Gershwin
album of instrumental and vocal numbers are different but highly appealing.
More important, Uri Caine is a jazz and classical pianist
and composer. Among his sixteen record albums include a 1997 jazz tribute to
Gustav Mahler that received an award from the German Mahler Society; a 2009
album called The Othello Syndrome
that earned a Grammy nomination for Best Classical Crossover Album; and
reworkings of Bach's Goldberg Variations,
Beethoven's Diabelli Variations, and
various Wagner, Schumann and Mozart selections. In 2005, the Los Angeles
Chamber Orchestra named him their Composer-in-Residence through the 2008–2009
season. Yes, he knows what he’s up to.
If, like me, you grew up knowing and loving the full
orchestral version of the Rhapsody,
or even if you’ve gotten used to a smaller-scale rendition (Gershwin wrote the
piece for the smallish Paul Whiteman band), you may find the Caine Ensemble’s
jazz arrangement a bit unsettling. Like anything, it takes a little getting
used to. Whether that happens or not, however, is problematic. My mother always
told me I’d come to love Brussel sprouts if I just ate enough of them; to this
day they make me gag. Although Caine’s jazz adaptation clearly didn’t make me
gag, I don’t think I’d want to hear it too often without a dose of Bernstein
and the Columbia Symphony Orchestra thrown in more often than not.
The ensemble perform the Rhapsody first on the program, and, as I say, it may come as a
shock to classical listeners not used to jazz. I mean, the Uri Caine Ensemble
play the piece very jazzy, with some obvious riffs and improvisations but
nothing that really disturbs Gershwin's original intentions. Each instrument,
particularly the clarinet and piano, gets its fair share of the spotlight (it
is Caine's group, after all, and he's the pianist). This is an enterprising new
way to listen to an old favorite that never sacrifices the composer's
intentions or the spirit of the music. Rather than hearing a jazz-infused
classical Rhapsody, we hear a
classical-infused jazz Rhapsody.
While it might not appeal to everyone, especially old-time, die-hard classical
fans, if you can keep an open mind, it is quite fetching. I loved it.
In order for the Rhapsody
to work effectively, though, the musicians must be virtuosos in their own right
and show the utmost respect for the music. Here, the Caine Ensemble excel,
performing the work with consummate skill, innovation, creativity, and
musicianship.
After the Rhapsody
in Blue we get a series of eight Gershwin vocal and instrumental numbers
done by vocalists Theo Bleckman and Barbara Walker, with the Caine Ensemble. The
performers infuse these tunes, too, with some new twists, although it's all
mostly recognizable as traditional Gershwin. The selections include "But
Not for Me," "Let's Call the Whole Thing Off," "I Got
Rhythm," "I've Got a Crush on You," a slightly bizarre
"They Can't Take That Away from Me," "Slap That Bass," a
sort of spacey "Love Is Here to Stay," and "How Long Has This
Been Going On." Good singing, good playing, good backup, lively,
sympathetic style--it works for a delightful good time.
It will please audiophiles to know that in December 2012
at Avatar Studios, New York, engineer Ron Saint Germain recorded the music
directly to half-inch, two-track analogue tape with no manipulation or digital
processing. Yes, I said analogue tape. The sound is fully up to audiophile
standards, rich and lush, yet wonderfully well defined, with a healthy amount
of air around the instruments. Most important, there's a sonic impact that
reminds one of being at a live event and a frequency range that puts one in the
audience. Play it loud, and it only gets better, with every subtlety of every
instrument clearly, naturally delineated and voices as clean as real life.
A final word, this about the packaging: The disc comes in
a clothbound Digipak-type case, with a picture and info glued to the front and
back. It’s really quite attractive. All well and good; then, inside you’ll find
a booklet of the foldout-map variety that stretches to nearly two feet. Very
inconvenient for trying to read comfortably. Otherwise, a classy affair.
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
JJP
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