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“I
titled this album Present Tense
because it captures where I am right now,” says Carter, who plays a trinity of
saxophones (soprano, tenor and baritone), flute and bass clarinet. “This is
what appeals to me right now. I’ve always had eclectic tastes, so the styles of
these pieces are diverse. But I’m also dealing with more lyricism on this
album, and I’m making more concise statements in the music versus playing out
for 10 or 11 minutes. Some of the tunes here are in the four-minute range.” For
the recording Carter enlisted a top-drawer support group, including the core
quartet of trumpeter Dwight Adams, pianist D.D. Jackson, bassist James Genus
and drummer Victor Lewis, with guest appearances by guitarist Rodney Jones and
percussionist Eli Fountain. The band swings with gusto, takes flight with
exuberance and ease, and cools the proceedings down with balladic hush. In
his first time working with Carter, Cuscuna says that he wanted to showcase
“the totality of who he is,” which he felt had yet to be revealed. “In going
through James’ entire output prior to recording Present Tense, it struck me that many of his albums were ingenious
concepts. As successful as each was, none of them captured the breadth of
James’ mastery of this music. When you see him live, he can reach for any
decade in this music’s history as easily as he can reach for any reed sitting
around him on the bandstand. We wanted to bring that to the fore on this
album.” Carter
says that Cuscuna’s wisdom also helped to turn him on to a wealth of music to
consider for Present Tense. “Michael
was instrumental in helping to bring new light to my heroes,” he says. One of
the pieces Cuscuna sent him to consider was “Rapid Shave,” an uptempo tune that
Stanley Turrentine played with razor-sharp intensity on tenor saxophone. “I
loved the piece but I knew I couldn’t play tenor on it, because Stanley owned
it. So I gave it a different light by playing baritone.” Similarly, Carter knew
that jazz aficionados would know that Sonny Rollins played tenor on “Song of
Delilah,” which prompted him to deliver it by using a variety of his
instruments in addition to putting a groove into the piece. Another
bow to jazz roots comes with his bass clarinet rendition of Jimmy Jones’
“Shadowy Sands” that Duke Ellington used for training the spotlight on his
orchestra member Harry Carney, who set aside his baritone saxophone to play a
bass clarinet solo. “That was one of the rare times he got to solo on bass
clarinet with Duke,” Carter says. “This song is the perfect straight-ahead
vehicle to do that.” Another bow to the past is Carter’s balladic take on
Django Reinhardt’s “Pour Ma Vie Demeure,” a tune that the composer never
recorded. Carter heard it on a 1956 radio broadcast recording performed by one
of his rhythm guitarists. “This is a slow-building melody that has a juiciness
to it,” says Carter. “Other people have played it before, but I heard something
different in it.” Other
recreations of tunes include the flute-led sprightly spring through Dodo
Marmarosa’s “Dodo’s Bounce” with muted trumpet colors, a bari-charged launch
through Gigi Gryce’s “Hymn of the Orient” with a bridge of cascading horns, and
a gorgeous bari-muted trumpet rendition of the classic ballad “Tenderly.” Carter’s
originals include his homage to Eric Dolphy, “Bro Dolphy,” that begins and ends
with bass clarinet exuberance that sandwiches a soulful middle section, and the
low-lights, slow-dance “Sussa Nita” that was inspired by a sepia-tone dream in
2005 where Billie Holiday in an after-hours club gave him the first phrases of
a melody. “Billie was sitting on a high stool and said, ‘James, how ya doin’?
Do you need a piece?’” Carter recalls. “So she starts messing around and then
says, ‘That’s all I’m giving you.’ I woke up and thankfully I had manuscript
paper right there. I used Billie’s phrases as a catalyst, started experimenting
with a vibe and came up with a Cuban bolero feel.” Carter adds that whenever he
plays that tune live, the audience gives him a standing ovation. Present Tense, Carter’s first album in three years,
adds a dynamic new chapter in the Detroit-born, New York-based saxophonist’s
story, which took root in the early ‘90s, first as a sideman with such mentors
as Lester Bowie and as a leader in his own right. Carter
spent his youthful days taking saxophone lessons, studying the classics of the
masters broadcast on several Detroit public radio jazz shows, and voraciously
listening to any records that came into his possession. Around the house Carter
discovered the two-album Duke Ellington 70th
Birthday Concert and The
Quintessential Billie Holiday, Volume 8. “That record covered Billie’s
development as a singer in the late '30s and early '40s,” he recalls. “That's
where I heard Harry Sweets Edison and Lester Young for the first time. The
first two records I bought were Eddie Harris' Playin' With Myself and Basie
Jam No. 3, an impromptu session with Given
his love of classic jazz, Carter was erroneously grouped into that ‘90s
catchall category of young jazz lions. But instead of expressing jazz
neoconservatism, he was in motion, breaking new ground with his
trad-meets-avant style of propulsion and his dazzling displays of reeds
pyrotechnics as well as his heartfelt romanticism. Carter
launched his solo career with two superb DIW/Columbia discs. Recorded in 1993
and 1994 respectively, JC on the Set
and Jurassic Classics, were initially
released in Japan and then issued in the U.S. Both were huge successes that
prompted the All Music Guide to Jazz
to proclaim, “James Carter has unlimited potential, and he seems destined to be
one of the giants of jazz.” Soon he was being dubbed the Motor City Madman,
based on his distinctive and oftentimes thrilling style. In
1994, Carter signed with Atlantic Jazz and recorded a series of superb albums,
beginning with his all-ballads gem, The
Real Quietstorm, inspired by the B-side of Charlie Parker’s Bird Symbols LP. In 1995, Rolling Stone hailed the charismatic
Carter as an up-and-comer to watch, and a few years later the magazine gave him
high scores for the two CDs he simultaneously released in 2000 (his final releases
on Atlantic, which soon dissolved its jazz division): the funky-vibed Layin’ in the Cut (his first album with
an all-electric band, featuring among others guitarist Marc Ribot) and the
Django Reinhardt-inspired Chasin’ the
Gypsy (which included his cousin Regina Carter on violin and Romero Lubambo
on guitar). The doubleheader was well-received in both pop and jazz circles. Rolling Stone wrote that “...saxophonist James Carter is as near as
jazz gets nowadays to a Young Turk—not some ironically avant-post-rock
experimentalist but a cocky scene stealer with...a knack for coming up with
noticeable records.” When
his former producer Yves Beauvais moved from Atlantic to Columbia, Carter
followed in 2002 and a year later recorded a new album of ballads with strings,
titled Gardenias for Lady Day. Also
in 2002 Carter garnered rave reviews for his appearance with the Detroit
Symphony Orchestra in the Concerto for
Saxophones and Orchestra written specifically for him by composer Roberto
Sierra. In 2004 Carter received the Dr. Alaine Locke Award, given annually to
individuals who have provided exemplary service and leadership in the promotion
of African-American culture. The
winner of several DownBeat critics
and readers polls, Carter today continues to tour with his organ trio and often
subs in the World Saxophone Quartet. Carter recorded his trio in 2005 for the
Half Note release, Out of Nowhere,
and in 2006 recorded Gold Sounds
(Brown Brothers Recordings) with pianist Cyrus Chestnut, bassist Reginald Veal
and drummer Ali Jackson in a collaborative outing of covers of songs by the pop
band Pavement. When Carter arrived on
the jazz scene in the ‘90s, he was viewed as a brash youngster chomping at the
bit to burst out of the gate with his saxophones. A couple of years ago when
asked if his life as a soloist and bandleader had changed since he was in his
thirties, he replied, “Well, I still feel the same way, but I’m able to use all
the different shapes and forms in my playing better.” He paused, then added
with a mélange of metaphors: “I can ping pong with someone just as well as
throw the shot put. And I can do everything else in between. There are more
than just a couple of events in a decathlon. I want to play a piece differently
every time. That’s a hell of a tightrope walk. But when you have different
attacks in your arsenal, it’s a much easier balancing act.” |
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