Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Mark Dresser Seven: Sedimental You
Mark Dresser Seven: Sedimental You
ByAnthony Braxton
woodwindsb.1945

Marilyn Crispell
pianob.1947

Gerry Hemingway
drumsb.1955
The septet includes flautist

Nicole Mitchell
fluteb.1967

Hamid Drake
drumsb.1955

Joëlle Léandre
bassb.1951

Rob Mazurek
trumpetb.1965

Marty Ehrlich
woodwindsb.1955

Andrew Cyrille
drumsb.1939

Jim Black
drums
Chris Speed
saxophone
Brad Shepik
guitar
Michael Dessen
tromboneb.1967

Yusef Lateef
woodwinds1920 - 2013

George Lewis
tromboneb.1952

Anthony Davis
pianob.1951

Dan Weiss
drumsLess known are the remaining members of the "Seven" as Dresser's group is named. Pianist Joshua White impressed at the 2011

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

David Binney
saxophone, altob.1961

Damion Reid
drums
Christian McBride
bassb.1972

Ambrose Akinmusire
trumpetb.1982
Some, though not all, inspirations for Dresser's compositions on this album, are rooted in quirky and/or darker life experiences. "Hobby Lobby Horse" is inspired by a craft chain store that risked legal repercussions by refusing to comply with President Obama's Affordable Care Act. A start-and-stop swing with interstitial solos from Mitchell, Dresser, Dessen and Boroff land the piece on an intentionally precarious platform held together by Dresser's bass. "Sedimental You" is a play on the

Tommy Dorsey
trombone1905 - 1956
The most reflective compositions are "Will Well (for Roswell Rudd)" and "I Can Smell You Listening (for Alexandra Montano)." The Rudd dedication was composed at a time when the trombonist was battling a serious illness and features an initial duet from Dresser and White and later solos from all but Black. The Montano tribute is seated in a performance from the late vocalist and Dresser on the day after the September 11 attacks. Equally steeped in a tragic event is "Newtown Char" which, obviously, refers to the mass shooting of school children and teachers in that Connecticut town. It is poignantly played out by Ehrlich's mournful clarinet and the anguished violin of Boroff. The final composition, "Two Handfuls of Peace," is another dedication, this one for the late saxophonist and pianist Daniel Jackson. As Dresser relates in his liner notes, his former mentor was in hospice, near the end of his life when Dresser called to ask if there was something he needed. Jackson answered, ..."two handfuls of peace."
While Dresser takes his share of solos, he is understated in his overall role as a player. In creative music, the best of leaders cut through the pandemonium and offer a path for others to follow. Dresser has the gift for decoding the root of a vision, collecting insight from those players around him, and rallying the group to his way of seeing and hearing. He is a thoughtful artist but persistently prepared for something different. Sedimental You is that something and it both moves and is moving. ">
Track Listing
Hobby Lobby Horse; Sedimental You; Trumpinputinstoopin; Will Well (For Roswell Rudd); I Can Smell You Listening (For Alexandra Montano); Newtown Char; Two Handfuls Of Peace (For Daniel Jackson).
Personnel
Mark Dresser
bass, acousticMark Dresser: contrabass; Nicole Mitchell: soprano and alto flutes; Marty Ehrlich: clarinet and bass clarinet; David Morales Boroff: violin; Michael Dessen: trombone; Joshua White: piano; Jim Black: drums and percussion.
Album information
Title: Sedimental You | Year Released: 2016 | Record Label: Clean Feed Records
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Mark Dresser Concerts
Jones Jones
Dialograum Kreuzung An St. HelenaBonn, Germany
Support All About Jazz
