Dave Douglas’s electro-acoustic quartet
HIGH RISK offered a dynamic, edgy and intense set at Performance Works (in Vancouver)
yesterday evening. Fusing layered, pulse-driven techno with Douglas’s Freddie-Keppard-meets-Freddie-Hubbard, fiercely clarion trumpet lines, HIGH RISK collectively muster an infectiously
celebratory and powerful improvised music that’s as danceable as it is
creatively provocative. While Douglas has composed a seven-tune repertoire for
this new band – which recorded together for the first time on October 10, 2014,
in Brooklyn, a session that resulted in their just-released CD on Douglas’s Greenleaf label – and while each
member of the ensemble (Douglas on trumpet, Jonathan Maron on electric bass, Mark Guiliana on drums and Shigeto on electronics)
contributes heavily to the collaboration, for me the group concept seems to
rest on the innovative, wonderfully fractured loops, samples and laptop
conjurations of Shigeto, who bopped, leapt and shimmied with joyful abandon
behind a tabletop covered in rheostat boxes and circuitry. The sound palette
and rhythmic patter he managed to conjure never obscured its synthetic origins
but managed amid the electronica to engender a vibrantly zoetic feel: amazing,
richly affective sonorities. At one point, he played in duo with Douglas and
the intricate immediacy of his approach became apparent, as he built vibrant
whorls and cascades of joyful noise. Mark Guiliana’s drumming is brilliantly
propulsive, deep in the pocket yet consistently pushing forward; his
multidirectional, quickly syncopated incisions through a four-on-the-floor
backbeat were nothing short of genius. Jonathan Maron seemed to remain calm and
steady throughout the concert, but his bass-lines – by turns warmly lyrical and
darkly palpitating – kept the band centred and present. Early in their set, I
thought I heard echoes of the bluesy melody of Miles Davis’s “Jean Pierre,” and
Douglas definitely quoted the four-note tag from the Miles Davis-John Scofield
line “That’s What Happened”: in some ways, HIGH RISK makes a music that might
have emerged from Davis’s more progressive or edgy moments in his later years.
But this is a music that’s of its own present tense. Some of the most powerful
and moving moments came during the last tune, “Cardinals,” an elegiac homage
Douglas dedicated to the memory of Michael Brown. “This is a music that’s about
love,” he told the audience. Love names the high risk this music wants to take.
In the brief liner notes to the CD, Douglas writes that “improvisation
transcends barriers between people and genres. Improvisation models the way the
world can work.” My colleagues and I in ICASP
and IICSI have been thinking, and trying to produce various forms of
practice-based research, along these exact lines. The improvised music of HIGH
RISK offers one instance of a hugely successful, motivated and engaged
co-creativity, laying the contingent and extemporaneous groundwork for a viable
human community yet to come.
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