Recorded in 2021, one of late New York bassist Mario Pavone's final studio albums sees the composer extending his Direct Trio of pianist Matt Mitchell and drummer Tyshawn Sorey with trumpeter Dave Ballou, a longtime collaborator who brings an additional level of lyrical excitement and sophistication to the group's work, in 9 substantial compositions and collective works.
Label: Out Of Your Head Records Catalog ID: OOYH 010 Squidco Product Code: 31226
Format: CD Condition: New Released: 2021 Country: USA Packaging: Cardboard Gatefold Recorded at Samurai Hotel Studio, in Astoria, Queens, New York, on March 25th and 26th, 2021, by Dave Stollar.
"I would like to thank the musicians Matt Mitchell and Tyshawn Sorey for their brilliant sensory delivery of these compositions and for their warm personal support; and Dave Ballou who also played brilliantly and who rendered these dynamic arrangements. Thank you to Dave Stoller, Ed Tetreault and Michael MacDonald for capturing the sound. And Adam Hopkins, thank you for your enthusiasm, expediency and support that brought this album to completion in record time. Finally, thank you to my wife Mary for her enduring love and guidance in this project.
Blue Vertical is to be the final recording by the legendary bassist and composer Mario Pavone, who passed on May 15 2021. Though in the final stages of a 17-year battle with cancer, Pavone pushed throughout April 2021 to make sure this music would be a part of his recorded legacy. On March 25 and 26 2021 he gathered his Dialect Trio with Matt Mitchell and Tyshawn Sorey (an active group since 2014), and the addition of his longtime collaborator Dave Ballou on trumpet, to record the music that has become Blue Vertical.
Blue Vertical is releasing simultaneously with the album Isabella on Clean Feed Records. In the interview "Mario Pavone Makes His Final Statement" by journalist Kevin Whitehead (recently featured in Downbeat Magazine), Pavone said: "I'm just happy to get these two releases done. It took every bit of energy, and the music is what got me through. I've had a great life and I'm so appreciative of all the players who jumped in and generously contributed, from the heart. I'm grateful, happy, satisfied with my life, ready to move to this next cycle." "-Out Of Your Head
"Blue Vertical is a posthumous release from bassist, Mario Pavone (1940-2021) and his Dialect Trio + 1. The +1 here is trumpeter, Dave Ballou joining the trio of Pavone, Matt Mitchell (piano), and Tyshawn Sorey (drums).
Dialect Trio has been working together since 2014 and that history is apparent in their playing, as the group has developed a distinct musical dialect that is most apparent in their concept of time (periodic/in-tempo and aperiodic/free). They have a beguiling way of eliding into and out of a unified tempo into free playing or multiple, simultaneous tempi. They do this so smoothly, so fluidly, that the development is often unnoticeable; at moments the listener is left unsure of what is in-tempo and what is free, not to mention what is in between. The album's final track, 'Face Music,' showcases the organic nature of the group's approach to time, with very patient free playing, polytemporal playing, and moments of in-time playing from two or three members converging to a single tempo...or perhaps that is an assessment of hindsight and it's just four great musicians improvising together at the highest of levels.
Six of the tracks on this record use the traditional jazz form of head/solos/head as their basic structure. The opening track, 'Twardzik' is a clear example of this, where the constrained playing of an angular, composed melody abruptly drops into beautifully organic improvising led by Pavone's low, rich bass lines. The track concludes with a restatement of the melody following an open drum solo. 'Philosophy Series' utilizes the same form and features a churning bass line worthy of mention.
The second track, 'OKWA' is a fine example of this group's ability to move almost indistinguishably from composed material to improvised material and from a single tempo into free playing and back again with ease and total continuity.
The final two tracks on the album, 'Legacy Stories' and 'Face Music' appear to be freely improvised with no composed elements. 'Legacy Stories' starts free and develops into medium-up swing with interruptions of free playing and ultimately resolves into a medium swing groove that dissolves back into free playing. 'Face Music' presents as ballad-like, becomes pointalistic and then briefly develops into one of the most rhythmically dense textures on the album.
'Blue Poles' is unique on the album with its very short composed melody (three bars of 4/4 or six seconds in length) played in unison by all four players that is stated once at the beginning of the track and never restated. This track also demonstrates Pavone's playful and tricky use of rhythmic displacement audible within the first few seconds of in-time improvisation after the short melodic statement.
It must be noted that the sound quality of this album is superb. The audio capture, mixing, and mastering is excellent, making it a pleasure to return to for repeated listenings.
Ultimately, this is a fascinating and highly enjoyable record, finely created, from the audio production to the compositions, arrangements, and especially the improvising. It is another high quality release from Out of Your Head Records, which showcases striking artwork on each album it releases-Blue Vertical is no exception. The beauty of this record is the ensemble playing, which is creative music making of careful listening, empathy, and deft reflexivity. Listening to this record is like eavesdropping on a casual conversation between old friends where there is much more than just the words heard-there is a deep history and understanding there too.
For listeners that may be new to Pavone's work, this is the kind of album that will compel them to search out more of his recordings, as well as more work from the Dialect Trio and Dave Ballou. This is also the kind of album that will seduce those unfamiliar with creative music to fall in love with it."-Ron Coulter, The Free Jazz Collective