The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
Big Hurt  |  CD Reviews  |  Classical  |  Jazz  |  Live Reviews  |  Music Features
Best2012Vote-1000x50

Slow hand

Jeremy Udden’s rocky jazz path
By JON GARELICK  |  October 21, 2009

0910_udden_ain
IDENTITY CRISIS: Jeremy Udden’s role models for his first album were Joe Henderson and Joe Lovano — but he was listening to Beck and Wilco.

In his Village Voice review of Jeremy Udden’s Plainville (Fresh Sound New Talent), Jim Macnie recalled how a friend of his tried to file it as “jazz for Wilco fans.” As Macnie explained, that’s not the whole story with Udden or Plainville, but it’s not a bad starting point.

The 31-year-old Udden, who comes to the House of Blues Foundation Room on November 4, has been taking the path of a lot of younger jazz musicians these days — from Aaron Parks and Brian Blade to Julian Lage and Jim Black. That is, their influences are as much folk or rock as jazz. And instead of covering contemporary pop, they’re writing originals based on the pop they’re listening to. When Udden — a New England Conservatory master’s-program graduate and former member of Boston’s Either/Orchestra — released his solo debut, Torch Songs, in 2006, he told me that his models were classic modern jazz albums: Joe Henderson’s Lush Life (Verve) and Joe Lovano’s Rush Hour (Blue Note). They were his idea of jazz concept albums. But the records he was actually listening to were Wilco’s Yankee Hotel Foxtrot (Nonesuch) and Beck’s Sea Change (Interscope).

Torch Songs did split the difference. “Marin” amounted to a duet between Udden and one of his NEC teachers, the great trombonist and composer Bob Brookmeyer. In its time feel and its harmonies, it was as jazz as you can get. But other tunes, like “Fish Lake,” were folk-like in their chord progressions. And though “Fish Lake” included solos, Udden himself didn’t take one.

With Plainville, his immersion in pop and folk is total. The opening title tune begins with the sound of churchy pump organ and follows with a plinky-plink banjo and Udden’s plaintive alto melody before shifting into more of a trotting clip-clop rhythm. The acoustic-guitar strum of “Christmas Song” suggests a Leonard Cohen waltz. “Red Coat Lane” is another waltz, this one introduced by alto accented with a stiff-legged thump before Brandon Seabrook’s banjo takes the melody “out” over gently wheezing pump organ. And “Curbs” and “Big Licks” lift off with heavy beats and skronky electric guitar. Despite these outbursts, the mood tends toward the pastoral and elegiac. (The album is named for Udden’s home town in southern Massachusetts; it even sports a sepia-toned photo of the local general store on the cover.)

The arrangements throughout are beautifully balanced, with a natural flow in changing textures, and some brilliant improvisations — whether it’s the electric guitars of Ben Monder and Seabrook or Seabrook’s banjo and Udden’s sax. In “Big Licks,” everyone drops out as Udden builds lines in a mix of short and long phrases, climbing, diving, darting, jazz-like in feints into adjacent keys while bassist Eivind Opsvik holds the loose groove beside him, and then everyone else comes in for another rave-up.

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
Related: Slow hand, Photos: Pixies at the Wang Theatre, Ghost stories, More more >
  Topics: Jazz , Entertainment, Music, Pixies,  More more >
| More

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 02/10 ]   David Spade  @ Wilbur Theatre
[ 02/10 ]   Die Antwoord + Glass T33th  @ Paradise Rock Club
[ 02/10 ]   Stephen Petronio Company  @ Institute of Contemporary Art
ARTICLES BY JON GARELICK
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   CAN THE CHARLES RIVER ESPLANADE BE TRANSFORMED INTO THE WORLD'S BEST PARK?  |  February 08, 2012
    What if — in place of the current three-story Museum of Science parking garage overlooking the Charles River — there loomed a giant Ferris wheel, on the order of the London Eye?
  •   TIM BERNE COMPOSES HIMSELF  |  February 07, 2012
    It's been almost exactly four years since Tim Berne's last visit to Boston— March 2008, to be precise, with jazz-prog guitarist David Torn's band Prezens.
  •   JASON MORAN AT JORDAN HALL  |  February 03, 2012
    I have to admit, I was not sanguine at the beginning of this highly anticipated concert by pianist and composer Jason Moran.
  •   MARISSA AND CHARLES LICATA AT SCULLERS  |  February 02, 2012
    I can't remember the last time I saw a costume change in the middle of a jazz show — if ever — but violinist Marissa Licata's performance with her father, saxophonist Charles Licata, and their band held all kinds of surprises.
  •   NEW VISION FOR THE ESPLANADE  |  February 01, 2012
    On February 9, Boston is due to get an eye-popping new look at one of the city's oldest, most beloved public spaces — the Charles River Esplanade.

 See all articles by: JON GARELICK

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed