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Dewey Redman / Cecil Taylor / Elvin Jones: Momentum Space
ByThree established veterans at the top of their games. An essential disc for Cecil Taylor fans.
Dewey Redman
saxophone, tenorb.1931

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004
Taylor was 70 at the time. Jones was in his early 70s and saxman Redman was in his late 60s. Taylor was widely considered a genius of free jazz, or a madman who was going out there on the bandstand and jiving usthe same things that were said about alto saxophonist

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Keith Jarrett
pianob.1945
Given the trio's played-with/recorded-with pedigrees, fireworks could be expected. They were delivered. The opener, "Nine," written by Redman, is wild. It could serve as a soundtrack to the shenanigans that went down in the Capitol on January 6, 2020. Redman blows with determined ferocity. Jones pounds out a dense, free-swinging ruckus; and Cecil Taylor is, well, Cecil Taylor, flying all over the place, spewing clusters and interludes of "glass chandelier in a tornado" explosions. It is hard to say what the audience for these three players' collaboration expected, but what they got was three established veterans at the top of their games.
"Bekei," an ominous four-minute Elvin Jones drum solo, follows the opener. "Spoonin,'" another Redman tune, is a drums/saxophone duet, and "Life As" is Cecil Taylor going solo, in an uncharacteristically pensive mood in the piece's opening, before the energy level gradually grows while still maintaining a beautiful structure. "It" is a darkly-rollicking Taylor/Jones teaming.
"Is," a 21-minute trio workout, is the masterpiece herea Taylor tune that is as inspired as anything he ever recorded. Taylor is crazy; Redman shoots flames and Jones sets up a thick jumble of a percussion assault. What is clear hereand in any number of Taylor performancesis that the pianist's madness always seems to have a method to it. This is not some medium-talent artist flailing at the 88s for the sake of flailing; this is a genius at work.
The album wraps up with A 49-second, hollow-sounding, shamanistic Redman soloa chance for the listener to consider what he/she has just heard.
Reconsidering Momentum Space, perhaps its lackluster reception in some quarters was due to the solo/trio/ duet/ aspect of the outing, a method that has the potential to break the thematic cohesion of the set. That is not the case here. The pieces fit together; the players were inspired, and major late-career statements were made by all involved.
An essential disc for Cecil Taylor fans. ">
Track Listing
Nine; Bakei; Spoonin'; Life As; It; Is; Dew.
Personnel
Album information
Title: Momentum Space | Year Released: 1999 | Record Label: Verve Music Group
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