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The Fully Celebrated | Drunk on the Blood of the Holy Ones

AUM Fidelity (2009)
By JON GARELICK  |  May 18, 2009
3.5 3.5 Stars

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After two albums with cornettist Taylor Ho Bynum, and now dropping "Orchestra" from their name, this venerable Boston avant-garde street band are again a trio — and they're still a virtuoso ensemble. Over a loping beat from bassist Timo Shanko and drummer Django Carranza, alto-sax Jim Hobbs enters on "Moose and Grizzly Bear's Ville" as the sad clown (Moose or Bear?), all bent notes and aw-shucks shuffle, before peeling off a solo of Ornette-like aphorisms. That's as close as he gets to impersonation, though.

There's no one with a more individual sound and conception than Hobbs — strangled and crying one minute, soft and bluesy the next, or just plain Johnny Hodges purdy. The other similarity he shares with Ornette is a vocal attack — avant-saxist shrieks and squawks, yes, but also a vocal approach to phrasing and timbre, so that on, for example, "Brothers of Heliopolis," the notes take on the character of individual syllables and words. The Fully Celebrated are noted for their world-music jazz fusions, and here they add a bit of dub echo to their slow-groove reggae-noir title track.

"Conotocarius" is a frantic-themed free-jazz scorcher; "Pearl's Blues (Your What Hurts?)" takes in every sound in Hobbs's bag without breaking mood; "Dew of May" is a slow drone — one long, sustained invented melody, solitary and mournful. For good measure, the CD includes the band's 2005 Tony Hawk mash-up video "Can You Do the Mackie Burnett?"

THE FULLY CELEBRATED | Ryles, 212 Hampshire St, Cambridge | May 29 at 9 pm | $10 | 617.876.9330 orwww.ryles.com

Related: Teachers and students, Erik Deutsch | Hush Money, Budding groves, More more >
  Topics: CD Reviews , Entertainment, Music, Music Reviews,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY JON GARELICK
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  •   GETTING THE STORY  |  December 01, 2009
    Full-length written histories of jazz can be a slog. Especially since "the story of jazz" (as critic Marshall Stearns titled his 1956 tome) only gets longer and more complicated. Personally, on these prose-narrative trips along the New Orleans–New York axis of musical development, I usually bog down somewhere outside Chicago.
  •   MISS TESS | DARLING, OH DARLING  |  December 02, 2009
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    Having played in projects from jam bands to jazz and as a singer-songwriter accompanist, keyboardist Erik Deutsch led an acoustic jazz album for his debut.
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    Film noir has been a running theme in composer/pianist Ran Blake's work since the beginning of his career — his very first album, The Newest Sound Around (RCA, 1962), with singer Jeanne Lee, began with David Raskin's theme to Otto Preminger's Laura .
  •   LIVE AND ON RECORD  |  November 04, 2009
    To call Darius Jones’s music avant-garde seems almost beside the point. In its way, it’s older than old — it’s ancient.

 See all articles by: JON GARELICK

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