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Scenes: Trapeze
ByScenes
band / ensemble / orchestra
John Bishop
drumsb.1959

John Stowell
guitar, electric
Jeff Johnson
bassb.1954

Rick Mandyck
saxophoneThe quartet wouldn't get around to record until 2001, releasing Scenes on the Origin Records label Bishop had created with drummer

Matt Jorgensen
drumsb.1972

Hans Teuber
saxophoneFor their seventh release, Scenes once again becomes a quartet, with Mandyck returning to form after a long hiatus. He contributes five original compositions, all much like Johnson's, enabling his mates to recreate at their whim. Mandyck's distinct sound, very much lifted from the John Coltrane tradition, has a clarity and dynamic sense very much his own. With the addition of two of Johnson's pieces, and the title track penned by Claudine Francois, Trapeze (Origin, 2020) reaches out towards the edge and defines itself within the risks and rewards the free spirit indulges.
Two of Mandycks's pieces, "House of Ra, " and the angular "The Reckoning," produce the most open-ended playing on the album, particularly from guitarist Stowell. Long known for his colorfully melodic voicings, and precision playing, he spools out his solos to great melodic, spatial lengths. Johnson's soloing incorporates fleet single note passages with exploding chordal clusters, all refined by his elegant vibrato. One of the true originals of the double bass, Johnson, in tandem with Bishop, possesses the unique ability to interpret time in the moment, and obliterate linear expectations. Intertwined with Stowell's sparse comping, the harmonic and rhythmic firmament is fertile ground for Mandyck to play strong, rich, melodic passages in the open space.
Johnson's "Highwaymen" swings ever so gently, while his "Pause" elicits a gorgeous interpretation of the tender melody from Mandyck. Both tunes draw strong reference to Johnson's resume as a composer, with melody fragments that seem to be suspended in time. Every note Mandyck plays on "Pause" could be referred to as "the melody." Much like Coltrane's "Naima," the melody itself is so spiritually bound, that any interpretation must in itself possess an essence of beauty that can rival that of the source. Mandyck's playing fits that description perfectly.
The tandem of Johnson and Bishop has been well established in the groundbreaking trios of

Hal Galper
piano1938 - 2025

Jessica Williams
piano1948 - 2022

Chano Dominguez
pianob.1960
Over the course of 30 years of friendship and of playing music together, much is revealed. Scenes, always seems to find a new and unique destination every time in the studio. It as well translates night to night on the bandstand. The addition of Mandyck is in fact, no addition at all. That sound has always been in the air.
"That was the sound that we always envisioned ourselves being. We just went through 20 years of wandering off in some other directions, doing different things. I think that connection with Rick just feels like home," says Bishop. ">
Track Listing
All Day Pass; Anomaly; Highwaymen; The Bridge; Pause; House of Ra; The Reckoning; Trapeze
Personnel
Scenes
band / ensemble / orchestraRick Mandyck
saxophoneJohn Stowell
guitar, electricJeff Johnson
bassJohn Bishop
drumsAlbum information
Title: Trapeze | Year Released: 2020 | Record Label: Origin Records
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Instrument: Band / ensemble / orchestra
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