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Live From New York: Four Dimensions, Maqueque & Asaf Yuria

Roulette
March 13, 2018
Four Dimensions is a quartet that brings together a partly unlikely grouping, with bassist

William Parker
bassb.1952

Hamid Drake
drumsb.1955

Elliott Sharp
guitar, electricb.1951
The programme may well have been composed, but improvising structures were in place, at least in terms of laying out the performer permutations of the two sets, dividing up into sections where perhaps a chosen duo would interact, or a given player would be directed to take a solo. The overall character suggested improvised music, despite such advance illustration. The acoustic first half presented "Joy Of Flying," whilst the electric second portion revealed "Exceeding 2," both of these being premieres.
Throughout the gig, JHK and Sharp formed a close union, as the guitarist appeared set on manifesting the bluesy aspects of Korean twang'n'slide tradition. Or was it that JHK was particularly mirroring Sharp's bottleneck clatters? We don't often get the chance to hear the Korean avant blues. They met on the borders, both of them penetrating to the other sides of the globe, both of them using a hard-attacking slide device on their robust strings. Except that Sharp broke one of his, soon into the first set, carrying on, unperturbed. As might be expected, Parker and Drake soon got into one of their springy, taut, almost-funk hook-ups, but they were just as easily inclined towards sudden bouts of abstraction.
JHK played completely solo for a while, highlighting her heavy string-action, struck quite powerfully with her large wooden spatula. Brooklyn's Roulette venue has further added to its array of acoustic baffles on the ceiling, as well as enhancing its speaker system, resulting in a particularly warm, deep resonance to the various twangings and sharp strikes. Sharp hurled in every trick in his vocabulary, using both hands on the upper neck, deploying slide, metal rod and e-bow, all in swift succession. Parker picked up his West African douso n'goni (like a small kora), and Drake moved to sit stage-front, with his North African bendir frame drum. This was turning into quite a fusion of traditions!
It was rewarding to hear three out of four of this band being gently goaded into a softer, more meditational sonic place, influenced by the home roost of Korean tradition. There was much less of improvisation's more violent tendencies. Although, the second set featured JHK on amplified geomungo, a different axe, plugged into a MIDI-system, and played using a wah-wah pedal. Sharp switched to electric guitar, also with wah-wah. This was like early-1970s Miles In Korea! Parker wafted shakuhachi Japanese flute into the mix, and the geomungo was sent towards Roulette's rear-wall speakers, creating an electroacoustic spatial adventure. JHK bowed, whilst Parker fiddled with an electronic knob-box, and Sharp stuck a thin stick through his neck, Parker swapping to a double-reed flute, from either the Indian or North African traditions. Amidst all of this highly successful melding, and transcendental genre-transfusion, it didn't really matter...
Jane Bunnett & Maqueque
Birdland
March 13, 2018
Around an hour later, at Birdland, a short skip from Times Square, the Canadian soprano saxophonist and flautist

Jane Bunnett
saxophone, sopranob.1955
The Asaf Yuria Sextet
Smalls
March 15, 2018
If uncut bebop (or hard bop, or post-bop) is desired, the real deal can usually be found in Greenwich Village basement club Smalls. Your scribe spontaneously descended, to catch an unfamiliar artist, and as is frequently the case in such a Smalls situation, emerged two hours or more later, suitably impressed.

Asaf Yuria
saxophoneb.1985

Josh Evans
trumpetMark Williams
guitar, electricb.1953

David Bryant
pianoBen Meigners
bass
Mark Whitfield, Jr.
drumsPhotograph: Maurice D. Robertson
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