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Kurrent Duo at The Bop Stop

Kurrent Duo with Brian Charette and Jordan Young
The Bop Stop
Cleveland, Ohio
October 26, 2017
Taking the tried and true organ trio format and turning it on its side,

Brian Charette
organ, Hammond B3b.1972

Jordan Young
drumsb.1978

Ben Monder
guitarb.1962
In support of their recent release, Charette and Jordan embarked on a brief tour of several northeastern venues that included Cleveland's Bop Stop. In front of a small, but appreciative crowd, the duo managed to bring to life this challenging music while expanding on the vibe of such open-ended settings. For Charette, he employed the house's vintage B3 organ, along with some of his own keyboards and custom electronics. On top of the organ he placed a device that utilizes something known as circuit bending. Dating back to the '60s, this technique involves manipulations of an instrument's circuit boards in such a way that they misfire and create unique textures and loops. Jordan sported a larger than usual set up that included stacked cymbals, an Alesis electronic drum pad, and his own keyboard and vocoder. In referring to this departure from his usual bop kit, Young called it his "fusion" set up.
The duo opened the first of two generous sets with "Doll Fin," a quirky melody voiced on Charette's keyboards and supported by a repeating vamp. Young's vocoder and pitch bending via bent elbow on the snare added to the overall vibe created by this ethereal gem. "Time Changes" lived up to its title with the twosome hitting every twisted bend and turn and striking a more mainstream pose. By direct contrast, "Mano Y Mano" hints at Charette's taste for progressive rock of the '70s. It downright wailed in spots, with the lead melody being simply a rapid flourish of notes.
In acknowledging the experimental nature of the music, Charette teased with the audience by stating "this isn't your dad's organ group." Nonetheless, "Standing Still," written when Brian was seventeen, featured plenty of heavy grooving within the tradition. Even the frantic head of "Conquistador" gave way to a medium swing that allowed Charette to stretch out at length. The set closing "I Want a Little Girl" may be a jazz standard, but it too benefited from Charette and Young's contemporary focus and was made all the better as a result.
Following an introductory gambit for the second set that found Charette's smorgaboard of timbres including what sounded like a plane taking off and pitch bending sinewaves akin to the 70s soundtracks of composer Gil Melle, the pair settled in for the classy "Excellent Taste," a waltz-tempo number voiced with piano lead. Spurred on by Charette, Young offered his own solo statement organically developed over repeated riffs that then gave way to a more emphatic beat before gently cooling down for the melodic reprise.
One of the better known tunes by the great

Larry Young
organ, Hammond B31940 - 1978
Photo Credit: C. Andrew Hovan
Tags
Live Reviews
Jordan Young
C. Andrew Hovan
United States
Ohio
Cleveland
Brian Charette
Ben Monder
Larry Young
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