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Marc Ribot Trio: Live At The Village Vanguard
ByIn this case, it's particularly notable because of three ingredients: the setting (already mentioned), the artists, and, number three, the repertoire. A combination of covers performed by three mutually reinforcing spirits, guitarist

Marc Ribot
guitarb.1954

Henry Grimes
bass, acoustic1935 - 2020

Chad Taylor
drumsb.1973
Beginning with the first of two

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
Recorded in 2012 but released in the spring of this year Live At The Village Vanguard highlights Ribot's hillbilly, rockabilly sensibility as he lead his cohorts through

Albert Ayler
saxophone, tenor1936 - 1970
Another Ayler tune follows (a flamboyant, typically folksy, periodically manic 19-minute "Bells"), but first it's time to swerve into the first of the set's two standards, standards that hold the tension that surrounds them even as they go totally agains type in this trio's hands. "Old Man River" takes it nice and slow, just like its inspiration. A showcase for Ribot, it's the refinement of all that has already been played, the music a thing of beauty even Jerome and Oscar might find some delight in. And here is what is so lovable about this set: its sheer musical unpredictability. In fact, it is that melding, clashing, swimming series of alterations between different forms of ecstasy, from so-called traditional to wildly experimental that keeps this listener engaged, never really sure. The "Bells" sandwich also includes a tender rendition of "I'm Confessin' (That I Love You)," again with a pace that's slow, with a meandering gait as lost as any backwoods swamp you might imagine, the three strolling and lazily swinging their collective way through the tune's oh-so-sweet melody. It's jazz minus the chops.
That Live At The Village Vanguard ends with Coltrane's "Sun Ship" makes eloquent sense, especially when the trio, once again, shift gears, giving you the impression that "Sun Ship" (a late-Coltrane recording with his classic quartet still in tow) was ready-made for the elastic machinactions this band provides. Its rhythmically jerky sawed-off theme is recognizably stated, but then they go off into another alternatively seductive rhythmic universe, where up-tempo swing's the thing. That is, until they start fraying the music again, in perhaps this trio's best expression of itself, another deft, rough-and-ready Taylor drum solo a highlight. (The crowd once again wowed.)
The romantic standards have lasting value here, but it is the splintering amidst those sweet, sweet melodies that might just leave you going in two directions at once. ">
Track Listing
Dearly Beloved; The Wizard; Old Man River; Bells; I’m Confessin’ (That I Love You); Sun Ship.
Personnel
Marc Ribot
guitarHenry Grimes: bass, violin; Marc Ribot: guitar; Chad Taylor: drums.
Album information
Title: Live At The Village Vanguard | Year Released: 2014 | Record Label: Pi Recordings
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