Tag: Brian Blade Fellowship

  • Not Enough Sugar to Make It Addictive

    Brian Blade Fellowship
    Seasons of Change
    Verve
    Release date: April 1, 2008

    Blade’s ensemble seems heavily
    influenced by his membership in Wayne Shorter’s magnificent but overtly
    cerebral quartet, which isn’t always a good thing. The frequently
    lethargic pace and finely crafted harmonic and melodic nuances occasionally
    feel like music that must be listened to for your own good, like a meal
    fortified with fiber but not very tasty. Praise be, then, to bust-outs
    like Melvin Butler’s gnarly tenor saxophone solo on "Return of the
    Prodigal Son," which also benefits from guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel,
    whose tone and groove are reminiscent of Skunk Baxter on "Reeling
    In The Years." Like the rest of the disc, the title track is a hit-and-miss
    magnum opus, which does take advantage of Blade’s masterful ability
    to turn the temperature up and down as a timekeeper. There are some
    things here I’ll want to revisit: Myron Walden’s bass clarinet
    on "Rubylou’s Lullaby;" the way "Most Precious One (Prodigy)"
    apes The Bad Plus, of all people; the found-beauty of "Improvisation,"
    with its pump organ undertow; and the slow build and crescendo of the
    closer, "Omni." But there’s not enough sugar or caffeine to make
    it addictive in the slightest.

    ** 1/2 (Two and a half out of five stars)