Home » Jazz Articles » Live Review » Dave Burrell: Philadelphia, PA, January 18, 21 and 30, 2012
Dave Burrell: Philadelphia, PA, January 18, 21 and 30, 2012
ByThe Rosenbach Museum & Library and Philadelphia Arts Alliance
Philadelphia, PA
January 18, 21 and 30, 2012
Dave Burrell is something of a renaissance jazzman. He recorded with drummer

Sunny Murray
drums1937 - 2017

Archie Shepp
saxophone, tenorb.1937

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Jelly Roll Morton
piano1890 - 1941
Burrell has long made Philadelphia his home, but even still his concerts there are rare. Within two weeks in January, however, he played four times; presenting two programs each new in its own way. On January 18 and 21 (including a matinee on the second date) Burrell presented a set of new compositions based on historical documents. And then on the 30th he played in a first-time meeting with Dutch drummer

Han Bennink
drumsb.1942
The Rosenbach Museum & Library in Rittenhouse Square was the home not just to Burrell's soundtrack to the past but it houses the collection of letters Burrell has spent the last year reading and researching. Civilians During War Time is the product of that work, a set of compositions about, he said, communities divided between the north and the south and families torn by the war. The six pieces played by Burrell and violinist Odessa Balan in the Saturday night concert of January 21 were, in fact, a part of an ongoing effort at which the composer plans to spend the next year working.
The strongest piece of the night was far and away the first, where Burrell played alone and was free to move. "Legends of Auction Block Runaways" began with a slow, pre-jazz ballroom feel and progressed into what felt like a literal narrativethe terror of being shackled, the panicked rush of the escapedelivered by someone who knows the piano's capabilities through and through (and, not incidentally, possessing of huge and powerful hands). If there were the sorts of quick, multiple lines of dissonance that often draw comparisons between Burrell and

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018
The other pieces were more strictly by the book. Burrell and Balan did little to embellish the scores, giving them instead a reading befitting a classical recital. Burrell is a fine jazz composer, but as with his jazz opera Windward Passages, the pieces would have benefited from an improviser's approach. "Have You Met My Son?" was a measured lament delivered in simple piano/violin counterpoint with plenty of emotional resonance, but it still could have hit harder. "One Nation" interpolated "Yankee Doodle Dandy" and "I Wish I Was in Dixie" in a way that cried out unheeded for spontaneous dialog. "Code Name: Cheap Shot" was the strongest of the of the duo pieces, following another narrative line with hints of espionage and society parties played out through ballroom tunes and a Morse code motif.
The rift between page and stage was underscored the following week when Burrell revisited "Cheap Shot" with Bennink. The drummer forced starts and stops onto it, Burrell refusing to let anything offset the single-note Morse code theme. (In another context it could have been a

Neil Young
guitarb.1945
The concert, produced by the always reliable Ars Nova Workshop, was in the cozy upper floor of the Philadelphia Arts Alliance, just blocks from the Rosenbach Library. And it was a perfect 75 minutes. "Cheap Shot" was the second piece of the program, following "The Box," one of Burrell's most enduring melodies. Throughout the set, the pair played with assured conviction, not too fast to not swing, putting emphasis not on speed but on pace.
After Burrell's two pieces the pair took on the most standard of standards, showing that their spirits were big enough to make Duke Ellington and

Billy Strayhorn
piano1915 - 1967
After bringing it to a graceful close, Burrell suggested that playing Ellington had put him in the mind of Strayhorn, to which Bennink suggested "Chelsea Bridge."
"I have to play that all the time with David," Burrell answered with a chuckle. "I won't say which David."
Instead they set into "Lush Life," playing with time and phrasing, pushing the first half of the verse, slowly punctuating the second and then settling into a mid-tempo swingwhich is where Bennink is always happiest.
Burrell announced the much demanded encore, his "Margie Pargie (A.M. Rag)," saying he would start the piece and Bennink would return in a minute. But Bennink entered sooner than that, laying rhythm with the green room door before returning to the kit. (If there's something to beat, why wouldn't you beat it?) They gave Burrell's ragtime piece a more straight-ahead readlike Burrell's beloved "Jelly Roll Joys" (he doesn't call them "blues")they seemed even more intent than before on not allowing the slightest slip, because this was the real thing. This was syncopation! And then, after a perfectly taut drum solo, Burrell came back in at something like 1.75 time, causing a momentary imbalance that only upped the ante. Bennink caught up quickly and after a couple more choruses they fractured again and split down the middle. Burrell eventually found dotted lines and parallelograms within the melody upon which to fixate again before ending with a shared intuition.
With all the starts and stops and sudden turns, this was still an old-school jazz show, filled with familiar tunes and swinging rhythms. And yes, swing is what these gentlemen relentlessly did. Not a swing dance; closer to a tire swing maybe, moving in easy patterns, and moving in its sentiment as well.
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Kurt Gottschalk
United States
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Sunny Murray
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Concert Guide | Venue Guide | Local Businesses | More...
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