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David Friesen: Waterfall Rainbow
By
Waterfall Rainbow
Inner City
1977
Today's Rediscovery is Waterfall Rainbow, from a bassist who garnered significant attention back in the '70s and '80s, but sadly never sustained it for reasons unknowncertainly nothing to do with his talentand has, in the decades since, remained an active player, but one largely forgotten by the general jazz public.
After taking a relatively bold step and making Color Pool (Muse, 1975), his first album as a leader, a solo bass outing, David Friesen moved to Inner City Records and released Star Dance the following year. A quartet date that teamed the Pacific Northwest bassist with

Oregon
band / ensemble / orchestra
Paul McCandless
woodwindsb.1947

Steve Gadd
drumsb.1945

John Stowell
guitar, electricWaterfall Rainbow, released a year later in 1977, brought Stowell and McCandless back from Star Dance but replaced Gadd with drummer

Bob Moses
drumsb.1948

Gary Burton
vibraphoneb.1943

Dave Liebman
saxophoneb.1946

Michael Gibbs
tromboneb.1937

Pat Metheny
guitarb.1954

Nick Brignola
saxophone, baritone1936 - 2002

Oregon
band / ensemble / orchestra
Ralph Towner
guitarb.1940

Glen Moore
bass, acousticb.1941
Friesen's penchant for emphasis on his low register instrumentcombined with a gut-deep tone and powerful virtuosity that makes his current undervalued status all the more curiousmight have rendered Waterfall Rainbow a bit too challenging for the average ear. But like fellow bassist

Miroslav Vitous
bassb.1947
Elsewhere, compositions like the opening "Spring Wind"at just under eight minutes, Waterfall Rainbow' longest track, though the album's penultimate piece, "Dancing Spirits Before the Lord" comes closeare melody rich and, consequently eminently accessible in a pastoral fashion, with plenty of stretching space but always in service of the song. With McCandless' soaring oboe and Towner's pianistic approach to 12-sting guitar, there are clear hints of the music they were making in Oregon, but the rhythmic combination of the muscular Moses combined with Saporito's astute percussion choices significantly distance it from

Oregon
band / ensemble / orchestraCollin Walcott
percussionb.1945
It may be the album's greater eclecticism that, while garnering it no shortage of critical praise at the time, positioned it as somewhat less successful than the more instrumentally focused Star Dance, but the benefit of hindsight and nearly four decades of distance has rendered Waterfall Rainbow, perhaps, the more memorable of the two. Still, with both albums possessing no shortage of charm, it's truly a case of hair-splitting. In fact, with Stowell and McCandless common to both, Star Dance and Waterfall Rainbow are best taken as an inextricably linked pair, both memorable in their own right...and both rife for Rediscovery.
So, what are your thoughts? Do you know this record, and if so, how do you feel about it?
[Note: You can read the genesis of this Rediscovery column here .]
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