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Marcus Strickland Quartets: Twi-Life
ByThe clear delineation between the discs is more by design than due to the capabilities of any specific player. A look at the collective resume of the six artists reveals a spectrum ranging from the modern post bop of veteran drummer Roy Haynes' quintet to the gritty R&B of Don Byron's Junior Walker tribute and electronica tinge of Dave Douglas' Keystone group. While everyone possesses individual strengths and personality, Strickland could easily interchange any member of one group for the other; the premise of each group is the real differentiator.
The first disc opens with a piano-less trio look at Wayne Shorter's "Oriental Folk Song, though it's not until the closing bars that the familiar melody finally breaks through in its entirety. It's an auspicious beginning. Strickland's robust tenor reflects some of Shorter's economy and thoughtful consideration, but also a paradoxically visceral litheness that's supported by Archer's strummed chords and EJ's roiling maelstrom.
The balance of the disc consists of Strickland originals. On the lyrical "The Beast Within Beauty, Strickland's soprano avoids the more nasal quality inherent in Shorter and Coltrane's playing, before he switches to tenor for its solo section. Glasper's playing is outstanding, suggesting that Blue Note's exposure of the pianist to the spotlight may have been premature. Whether the material is metrically challenging, harmonically complex or swinging with fire, Glasper's playing manifests a pervasive confidence and rich inventiveness that surpasses his own solid Canvas (Blue Note, 2006).
Strickland's quartet on disc one stretches out considerably more than his Twi-Life group, where Lund's warm, mostly clean hollowbody tone contrasts sharply with Jones' brighter edge. The guitar may not have the piano's range, but Lund's voicings create a refreshing openendedness, a harmonic ambiguity that is anchored by EJ's in-the-pocket groove-centricity. The writingagain all by Marcus, with the exception of EJ's dark, brush-driven "In Faith is more rhythmically complex and posits a different kind of dynamic than the other quartet.
Throughout Strickland demonstrates why he's become such an in-demand player in such a short time. Though he has indisputable chops, he also understands the value of space and the power of tone. Twi-Life delivers on the promise of his earlier Fresh Sound New Talent releases and suggests a bright future for this fine saxophonist, composer and bandleader.
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Track Listing
CD1: Oriental Folk Song; The Beast Within Beauty; Thump & Cadence; An Oasis of Bronze; Sesame Street; Smoothie; Brooklyn Street Fair; The Whole Page. CD2: Majesty; Shift; Haile Selassie; In Faith; The Nottage Cottage; Moon Ruler; Glitch; Paradigm; Twi-Life.
Personnel
Marcus Strickland
clarinet, bassMarcus Strickland: tenor and soprano saxophones, reeds; Robert Glasper: piano; Vicente Archer: acoustic bass; Lage Lund: guitar; Brad Jones: electric bass; E.J. Strickland: drums.
Album information
Title: Twi-Life | Year Released: 2006 | Record Label: Strick Muzik
Comments
About Marcus Strickland
Instrument: Clarinet, bass
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