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Wallace Roney: Understanding
ByFrom turntablist

DJ Logic
turntable
Rashaan Carter
bass, acoustic
Val Jeanty
electronics
Kush Abadey
drums
Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990

Tony Williams
drums1945 - 1997

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
But Understanding is different. For the first time since joining the HighNote roster, Roney plays with an entirely young, unseasoned group. Previous recordings included his brother, saxophonist Antoine, as well as already established players like pianist

Geri Allen
piano1957 - 2017

Don Byron
clarinetb.1958

Adam Holzman
keyboards
Robert Irving III
keyboardsb.1953

Daryl Johns
bass"They come to me," Roney says, chuckling, "because they really want to."
Understanding is also Roney's first record in over a decade not to use some form of electric instrument, whether it's turntables, Fender Rhodes or electric bass, but that doesn't mean there's any kind of paradigm shift going on; it's just how things turned out this time. "I don't look at instruments as whether they're electric or acoustic," Roney says, emphatically. "It seems like everybody else has a problem with that. The music can work with or without certain instruments; sometimes I use electric instruments for color, but as soon as I put electric piano on it, people want to call it funk or fusion. It's the same music, I'm playin,' regardless. I never understood it; well, I do understand it, but I wish they would stop putting labels on it. I don't mind the word "jazz"innovative jazz or whateverbut when you're always trying to put the music in a certain place you limit it, commercially and artistically."
Looking back at Roney's career, even before he signed with HighNote, it's clear that he's always been working the same innovative continuum, the same overall premise, but one that's steadily evolving, year after year, album after album, gig after gig. "You need a more expansive way of looking at things," says Roney. "You're not trying to go back in time; you're trying to take what was great then and express it in today's format. There's always a bunch young cats around, but I use specific young cats. Everybody plays in a generic way now; they have 'generic chops.' But I don't want generic chops; I want the chops that everybody's afraid of, that everybody runs from. Nobody's trying to clone anybody; you try and take the best people and see how they can express the music their own way. The more you express it, the more the notes will start to change your way, and the more your feelings will start to come through."
What's also crystal clear from Understanding's openera smoking look at
Roy Brooks
drumsb.1938
Ben Solomon
saxophone, tenor
Victor Gould
pianoBut if the majority of Understanding's eight tunes are coversin addition to the title track, two from pianist Duke Pearson (the incendiary swinger "Is That So" and more relaxed "Gaslight") and two from pianist

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020
Still, these are young and hungry firebrands, so it's no surprise that "they were all going, 'We want to bring our tunes!' 'So you're all ready to be a band are ya?'" Roney recalls asking them, chuckling. So, bookended by the cover material come one tune each from alto saxophonist
Arnold Lee
saxophone, altoAnd it's a shame, because the group definitely has chemistry, even while everyone is on the road to finding their own voices. But it's Roney's own experiences being mentored that facilitate taking such young players of considerable promise and dropping them into a context where, sink or swim, they can really learn and grow.
"I tell you how it works going to the next level," Roney continues. "You get a bunch of young cats that are open-minded; they've got creativity and they won't fight you when you have an idea about how to do something. Guys my age will go, 'Oh man, why?' These young guys will go 'OK,' and they won't question it. My imagination can go where it wants and they're open to it. They don't even know what it's going to sound like because there's no preconceived anything. Everything is open. Whereas guys my age, they challenge it and fight it. I had a drummer in my band once, and I wanted to try this complicated thing. He says, 'Why? And I said, 'Because it's never been done before.'"
As Roney continues to groom up-and-coming musicians for the road ahead, his own path, his own ideas about himself remain clear as he demonstrates a strong respect for what's come before, even as he looks ahead to what comes after. At a time when some artists feel the only way forward is to reject tradition, it's that very repudiation that Roney steadfastly rejects.
"I do know what's different," he concludes. "I know what I'm trying to do is listen to the music that a lot of cats were playing. What I'm doing is based on my knowledge of and having been associated with all these great musicians when they were at their best, at their most fertile. The way they look at things, I try to use a lot of that too; maybe that's not happening in a lot of peoples' music, but that's my experience, so I'm bringing my experience to the music, what I like to the music. What I seem to feel is the key to opening up the universe with what the music is."
Liner Notes copyright ? 2025 John Kelman.
Understanding can be purchased here.
Contact John Kelman at All About Jazz.
With the realization that there will always be more music coming at him than he can keep up with, John wonders why anyone would think that jazz is dead or dying.
Track Listing
Understanding; Is That So?; Search For Peace; Gaslight; Red Lantern; Kotra; Combustible; You Taught My Heart To Sing?
Personnel
Wallace Roney
trumpetArnold Lee
saxophone, altoDaryl Johns
bassKush Abadey
drumsEdin Laden
pianoVictor Gould
pianoBen Solomon
saxophone, tenorAlbum information
Title: Understanding | Year Released: 2013 | Record Label: HighNote Records
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