Rashied
Ali Quintet - Judgment Day Vol. 2
Survival SR. 122 ***
Ali (d), Lawrence Clark (ts), Jummaane Smith (t), Greg Murphy (p) and Joris
Teepe (b). Rec. New York, 2005
Note the use of ’Quintet. The word is invariably favoured by ensembles of a hard bop persuasion and those are indeed the colours that Ali nails to his mast on this session that may well surprise a few who would define the legendary drummer uniquely in the free jazz arena. Judgement Day is a rip-roaringly hard swinging album that has the kind of tricky gymnastic heads and charged solos that Blakey’s most aggressive line-ups all juggled so well. In the likes of Clark and Smith Ali has superb frontline players who can sustain intensity over countless choruses, pumping out swirling harmonic and rhythmic ideas with both fluency and forward drive. The momentum, the surge of the music is very strong. As for Teepe and the impressive Murphy they push their comping to high levels of creativity with the latter getting Pullenesque in his percussive attack on tonality. Ali is rhythm incarnate, a constantly shifting canvas of colours around the kit that perfectly complements his grip on time throughout the lengthy workouts and, as one would expect from a musician of his calibre, his touch is deft on the album’s ballads. A reprise of Don Cherry’s ’Multi-Culti’sadds a pleasing twist to the choice of covers that also includes the standards ’Lush Life’ and ’Round Midnight’. Proof positive that Ali, as was seen at his recent stunning gig at the Pizza On The Park, is a complete musician, one who shows that mainstream vocabulary is not beyond the reach of a master of the avant-garde.
- By Kevin Le Gendre
This review is from Jazzwise Issue #113 (October 2007)
Judgment Day, Volume 1
Rashied Ali Quintet | Survival Records (2007)
- By Erik R. Quick
Rashied Ali is most commonly associated with his short tenure
as John Coltrane’s drummer on Interstellar Space (Impulse!, 1967). His
significant participation in the New York loft-jazz movement by opening ”Ali’s
Alley” in 1973 is also frequently cited. His most recent collaborations
with saxophonist Sonny Fortune continue the conception of Ali as an explosive
participant in free improvisation. Nevertheless, Ali’s Judgment Day, Volume
1 is a strictly mainstream outing where he focuses his efforts as a teacher
to those relatively uninitiated in the jazz world.
Ali did not compose any of the nine tracks, which range from six to nine minutes
in duration. Rather, established Dutch-born, New York-based bassist Joris Teepe
wrote two of the compositions, tenor saxophonist Lawrence Clark penned the title
track, and trumpeter Jumaane Smith wrote the hard driving ”Shied Indeed.”
These efforts by band members display a remarkable hard bop style facility.
Teepe is perhaps the most recognized name in the group, having played with Ali
for some time, and on the drummer’s forthcoming record Raw Fish (Knitting
Factory Records). His anchoring sonority is, at times, quite dominant and certainly
reminiscent of bassist Stafford James.
Smith, originally from Seattle, studied with Warren Vache and performed with
the Julliard Jazz Orchestra. His playing, however, is more akin to Freddie Hubbard␁s
hard expressivity than Vache’s gentle lyricism. Clark’s role is often
that of a supporting character. Pianist Greg Murphy studied with Ellis Marsalis,
and has played with Ali for many years. His style displays an integrity to the
genre, and contributes tastefully.
Several of the selections demand particular attention. Wayne Shorter’s
rarely performed ”The Big Push,” from The Soothsayer (Blue Note, 1965),
is played with style and honesty in celebration of the original. Jaco Pastorius’
”Dania,” a tribute to a Florida beach, is a frenzy. Don Cherry’s
quirky ”Multi Culti” closes the session as an effervescent celebration
of the art of improvisation. Ali’s deft cymbal tinting and rambunctious
style, not surprisingly, illustrate that the role of a talented and original
percussionist is not that of time keeper. Rather, tone painting and forceful
phrasing are dominant expressive forms to Ali.
Judgment Day, Volume 1 is an effective display of Ali’s straight-ahead
chops and his ability to organize a group of relatively younger musicians. Volume
Two has already been released. Look for another thoroughly enjoyable record.
August 07, 2007 AllaboutJazz
Judgment Day, Vol.
Two
Rashied Ali Quintet | Survival Records (2007)
- By Russ Musto
Although rightfully revered as one of the fathers of avant-garde drumming for his role in John Coltrane’s last band, Rashied Ali grew up in Philadelphia during the heyday of hard bop, so it should come as no surprise to find him at the helm of a group that reflects the influence of Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers and the Max Roach-Clifford Brown Quintet, as much as that of the freer music that flowed from the font of Coltrane. This second volume of Judgment Day (for his recently revived Survival label) shows off Ali’s deeply rooted rhythmatism as he drives his talented sidemen through a program of their own fine compositions, original arrangements of “Lush Life” and “‘Round Midnight,” and rousing readings of two rarely heard pieces: James Blood Ulmer’s “Thing for Joe” and Don Cherry’s “Multi-Culti.” [sic]
Pianist Greg Murphy’s mood setting opener, “Skane’s Refrain,” begins as a Messenger-like anthem and then moves into a modal mood reminiscent of Trane’s “Impressions,” propelled by Joris Teepe’s insistent walking bass and the leader’s irrepressible drumming. In trumpeter Jumaane Smith and tenor man Lawrence Clark, Ali has found two unusually strong young horn players who meet the difficult demands of the music with admirable assurance. Each also proves to be a capable composer—the former with the multifarious “Yesterday (J-Man) Tomorrow” and the latter on the Eastern-tinged title track. Teepe too shows off his writing chops with the enigmatically moody “Flight #643.” But this is primarily a fine blowing date with intelligently composed charts built around Ali’s uniquely cliché-free personal style.
Track listing: Skane's Refrain; Lush Life; Thing for Joe; Judgment Day; Flight # 643; Round Midnight; Yesterday (J Man) Tomorrow; Multi-Culti.
Personnel: Rashied Ali: drums; Jumaane Smith: trumpet; Lawrence Clark: tenor saxophone; Greg Murphy: piano; Joris Teepe: bass.
All About Jazz.com Published: May 16, 2007
WINNING SPINS
- By George Kanzler
Judgment Day Vol.1, a Survival Records
release by the Rashied Ali quintet, is propelled by the leader’s forward-leaning
beat in a program of hard-bop and slower tunes, plus a finale that ventures
into the avant-garde turf Ali explored during the 60s and 70s. His quintet features
all players a generation or more younger than their leader, with two comparative
veterans – bassist Joris Teepe and pianist Greg Murphy – in the
rhythm section, and the fiery youngsters – trumpeter Jumaane Smith and
tenor saxophonist Lawrence Clark – out front.
Teepe and Ali are a perfect combine, as both lean into the beat with perfervid
enthusiasm and drive. With their example, the band is ferocious as it barrels
through a program highlighted by fast burners leavened by ballads and blues.
This is a record that affirms jazz traditions by doing what’s considered
quite familiar, really, with verve and drive that makes it special again.
February 2007, Hot House Magazine
Judgment Day Vol.
1
Rashied Ali (Survival)
- By Jeff Stockton
Rashied Ali has always been unfairly typecast as the guy who usurped Elvin Jones
from Coltrane’s Classic Quartet, the dividing line between A Love Supreme
and Trane’s final phase when the leader became all dissonant and difficult.
Trane knew better then us, of course, but Ali’s career after Trane didn’t
do much to change the perception that he was strictly a free jazzer thanks to
first-rate duet work with the late Frank Lowe, stellar performances in trios
led by Peter Brotzmann, Ivo Perelman and Charles Gayle and by leading Prima
Materia, a band that assayed the work of Coltrane and Albert Ayler. So it comes
as a bit of a surprise that the music on Judgment Day is much more inside than
out, carrying echoes of the sound of the spiritually questing Coltrane before
Ali joined, the introspectiveness of mid’60s Wayne Shorter and the hard
bop of the Jazz Messengers.
Ali puts himself in Art Blakey’s role of the elder statesman to the young
horn men Lawrence Clark on tenor and Jumaane Smith on trumpet, both who play
with fiery conviction and the technical virtuosity of seasoned veterans, blaring
their instruments in unison so that the peaks are frequent and each tune is
rendered as a high point. As it should be with drummer-led quintets, the rhythms
are key: swaggering on Shorter’s “The Big Push,” laid back
and swinging on Lowe’s “Sidewalks in Motion” and hard-driving
on Jaco’s “Dania.” Nothing burns hotter than the title track,
though, when young Clark meets Coltrane head on and pianist Greg Murphy drops
clusters of notes like propaganda bombs.
February 2007, ALLABOUTJAZZ-NEW YORK
KFJC On-Line Reviews
What KFJC has added to their library and why...
Ali, Rashied Quintet - “Judgment Day Vol. 1” - [Survival]
Very solid effort from this NYC quintet
led by the Art Blakey of our day. Drummer Ali has played with the likes of Coltrane
(John and Alice), Pharaoh Sanders, Sonny Fortune and James Blood Ulmer, but
he is also known for nurturing young upcoming talent. This disc features great
blowing by Jumaane Smith (trumpet) and Lawrence Clark (tenor) along with the
very McCoy Tyneresque tinkling of Greg Murphy (piano).
Hard bop is the subject at hand. And much of this disc sounds like it could
have been recorded in 1957, which is entirely a good thing. A lot of hard blowing
swinging jazz came out of that period, right around when the avant-garde was
starting to bubble and burst forth from the be-bop scene.
Standout tracks are:
4. Judgment Day (8:17) Middle Eastern sounding theme, fast hard swinging be-bop.
6. Raw Fish (5:58) Slow, quirky, dissonant, but nicely held together by harmonic
horns.
9. Multi Culti (6:28) Gorgeous take on a multi-tempo Don Cherry composition.
–Jawbone January 24, 2007
OPENING CHORUS
Overdue Ovation
- By Chris Kelsey
Rashied Ali
SOUND JUDGEMENT
John Coltrane knew a thing
or two about drummers. During his apprenticeship with Miles Davis, he played
with Philly Joe Jones, who surely whetted his appetite for the percussive petulance
– so much so, that when it came time for Coltrane to form his own group,
the saxophonist one-upped his former boss and hired Elvin Jones, maybe the only
drummer of the era who could out-ass-kick Philly Joe. When Elvin couldn’t
make it, another fire-breather, Roy Haynes, took his place. But Elvin usually
made it. He stayed with Trane until the saxophonist needed something else from
a drummer. When that time came, Coltrane turned to his fellow Philadelphian-turned-New
Yorker, Rashied Ali.
Ali gave him that “something else.”
From the time he joined Coltrane in late 1965 until the saxophonist’s
death in July 1967, Ali helped enable Trane’s final, most radical break
with convention. The drummer’s skittering, high-energy playing fractured
the pulse into tiny shards, which he reassembled, mosaic like, into something
quite different. Ali staked out new areas of rhythmic independence and sound
exploration.
On late Coltrane recordings such as Live at the Village Vanguard Again! and
Interstellar Space, Ali’s splintering of time paralleled the asymmetrical
note groupings and convoluted phasing that the saxophonist explored in full
late in his career. Ali’s primary role was not to provide a rhythmic context,
but to freely interact, to shadow and challenge Coltrane’s every turn
of phrase.
Rashied Ali is one of the fathers of free-jazz drumming. Every free-jazz drummer
(and to an extent, every free-jazz musician) who followed owes him a debt.
After Coltrane’s passing, Ali became one of the leading figures on the
New York avant-jazz scene, a position he holds to this day. In the ‘70’s,
he founded his own record label, survival, for which he’s recorded a string
of raw and risky albums featuring such prominent avant-gardists as the late
saxophonist Frank Lowe, violinist Leroy Jenkins and guitarist James “Blood”
Ulmer. For several years he ran his own club in downtown Manhattan, Ali’s
Alley, which was a major venue during the loft-jazz era of the ‘70s. He’s
led innumerable bands and played with everyone who’s anyone in the free-jazz
community.
Today Ali’s an elder statesman, yet he’s playing better than ever.
And he’s still capable of surprising us, as proven by his latest releases
on survival, Judgment Day Vol.1 & Vol. 2. This is not the formally open,
structurally abstract free jazz for which he’s best known. There’s
plenty of blowing room, to be sure, but the tunes themselves are meticulously
composed and arranged. It swings in a way guaranteed to make the Lincoln Center
cats swallow hard and take notice. At times it’s nearly straight ahead,
yet unlikely latter-day hard bop, it is music of the here and now--with hints
of jazz to come.
“If you really listen to it, I’m trying really hard not to just
play time,” says Ali. It’s true. He’s playing “out”
and “in” simultaneously, generating enough energy to light the East
Coast. “You can hear that the drums are breaking it up a lot,” he
says. “It’s not like I’m playing really straight-head drums.
It might sound like that on the surface, but underneath you’ll hear a
lot of stuff that says I’m really an avant-garde player,” albeit
one who studied with Art Blakey and Philly Joe and therefore knows modern jazz
in all its manifestations.
With his quintet, the 71-year-old free-jazz vet puts to shame drummers half
his age--incessantly driving and creating, sidestepping clichés at every
turn. And Ali hasn’t forsaken freedom, not by a long stretch. Even when
playing straight-ahead, there are times in mid-performance when an abandonment
of form and structure is the logical next step. Less intrepid musicians skid
to a stop, jam into reverse and head home. Ali and his band make the leap without
hesitation. Theirs is jazz without borders, an example of what a group can do
if they’ve the will and discipline to embrace a full range of possibilities.
“It does have that kind of catchy thing, where anybody can listen to the
music and appreciate it-avant-garde people, straight-ahead people, whatever,”
says Ali, “They can all hear something in there. I’m glad it works
that way, because that’s the kinda stuff I want to be doing right now.”
Ali talks about his band like a proud papa, and for good reason. “I’m
playing with kids who are damn near young enough to be my grandkids!”
he laughs. The group-trumpeter Jumaane Smith, tenor saxophonist Lawrence Clark,
pianist Greg Murphy, bassist Joris Teepe-has been together for almost four years.
The Ali-Murphy alliance dates back almost two decades. “Greg’s been
in just about every band I’ve had since we met in the 80s,” Ali
says. “Jumaane I just met by chance. I’ve been knowing him since
he was about 19. He’s 25 now. He first saw me when I played a concert
with the New Art Quartet in his hometown of Seattle. Then he came out here to
attend the New School and Julliard. I met him when he was at the New School.”
Ali first heard Clark playing at Cleopatra’s Needle on upper Broadway.
“When Frank Lowe passed, I was really looking for a saxophone player,”
says Ali. “I invited Lawrence to come down and check us out. He’s
a dynamite young player, playing a lot more stuff now than he ever has. And
I’d met Joris through Frank Lowe.” They’re all as comfortable
playing changes as they are playing free. “When you play with me, you
better be able to do it all,” Ali says.
Repertoire is one of the band’s strengths. All the sidemen write. “I
do most of the arrangements and pick most of the tunes,” says Ali. “I
haven’t written for the band as of yet, but we’re playing a lot
of stuff by the guys. Jumaane’s written a lot of the stuff, and Lawrence
is writing a lot, and so is Joris and so is Greg. We’re playing a lot
of original music.” All that might go for naught if no one heard it. Fortunately,
the band’s getting gigs. “We just got back from London, a week ago
or two ago. We got really good reviews over there,” says Ali. “People
seem to dig it. I’m having very good feedback from just about everybody.
The quintet is his main focus, but Ali keeps irons in other fires, as well.
“I’m doing a duo record with Borah Bergman for Soul Note or Black
Saint. I played this last Vision festival with Borah, William Parker and Louis
Belogenis. That was pretty cool.” Another project is By Any Means, his
trio with bassist Parker and saxophonist Charles Gayle. The band recorded the
critically acclaimed Touchin’ on Trane in the early ‘90s, but until
recently had not performed together in almost a decade. “We’ve just
started getting back together. We played the Vision Festival,” Ali says.
We’re a heavy avant-garde band, because we don’t play any melodies
at all, it’s all improvised. We just start and stop. We haven’t
been into the studio yet, but we plan to this year.”
Between the quintet and his other projects, Ali’s working more than ever.
While he’ll always be known for this time with Coltrane, the world’s
getting hip to the nearly four-decades-worth of beautiful music he’s made
since. “I think it’s the longevity. I’ve been here long enough
for people to think, ‘Hey man, maybe this cat really do have something!”
he laughs. “It’s just all coming together. In a way, it’s
a drag, that now that I’ve become a super-senior-citizen that I got to
do all this traveling now, but it’s cool, because I’m in shape and
ready and-willing to play. I wish I could’ve been doing this when I was
35, but that’s alright. It’s just an awesome experience for me right
now. I’m really having fun with this stuff.
“I couldn’t ask for anything more, except maybe more money and recognition,”
he continues, “but that doesn’t really matter to me; what matters
mostly is the music, and I’m definitely in pursuance of the music. I feel
really good about what’s happened to me. I mean, I’ve been able
to have a wife and a couple of kids and send my kids to college. I was able
to own my own place. I’m pretty stable and secure, like a senior citizen
should be. The only thing I ever did in my whole life is play drums, man. I
never had another job. I played drums my whole life, and that’s, like,
a miracle.”
© JazzTimes November 2006
Excellent! (5 Stars)
I was fortunate to see this same group at Sweet Rhythm in NYC, 12/9/06. I'd gone to see the great Rashied Ali. What I got was much more. This is one of the best working groups anywhere, any place. I bought both Volume I and Volume 2 at the gig. Since then I've ordered copies from CD Baby for friends. I cannot recommend these two volumes highly enough. Not just because I was at the show. But rather because they are some of the best recordings by one of the best groups to come along in a very, very long time. This band smokes.....and it's led by a true legend, Rashied Ali. These are not the easiest CD's to locate. CD Baby's got them, and you should have them as well.
- Mike Thompson
Austin, Texas
Electric fire music of the finest sort (5 Stars)
The Rashied Ali Quintet is electric fire music of the finest sort. In 1984 I saw a man in NYC at the 125th St. subway stop holding up a sign that read: "Judgment Day Is Coming. Are you ready?" Now I know what he was talking about. Buy this disc. Listen to this disc. It is music that will be felt and heard. Rashied is Rashied is Rashied. Twas ever thus...
- Glenn Weyant
RASHIED ALI
Judgement Day, Vol. 1 & 2 (Survival)
For the past 20 years Rashied
Ali has been operating like an Art Blakey figure in terms of discovering and
nurturing new talent. His current working quintet is another cross-generational
affair featuring veterans Greg Murphy (piano) and Joris Teepe (bass) and two
new firebrands in Lawrence Clark on tenor sax and Jumaane Smith on trumpet.
Together this tightly knit group swings in fairly conventional postbop fashion
on rarely covered tunes like Frank Lowe’s “Sidewalks in Motion,”
Jaco Pastorius’ uptempo blazer “Dania,” Wayne Shorter’s
“The Big Push” and James Blood Ulmer’s “M.O.”
Teepe, a powerful, deep-toned bassist in the Paul Chambers tradition, contributes
the moving ballad “You’re Reading My Mind,” while saxophonist
Clark, who blows heroically throughout these two discs, offers the exhilarating
title track, a modal workout with distinctly Middle Eastern touches that has
pianist Murphy dipping deeply into his McCoy Tyner bag. Other highlights in
these two energized sets include Murphy’s burning “Skane’s
Refrain” and Smith’s frantically swinging “Yesterday (J-Man)
Tomorrow,” along with dynamic readings of Billy Strayhorn’s “Lush
Life,” Thelonious Monk’s “’Round Midnight” and
Don Cherry’s “Multi-Culti.” Though this band rarely plays
outside of New York City, this is one of the more potent working quintets in
jazz today.
- Bill Milkowski
"Drum Beat" May 2006
©1999-2006 JazzTimes, Inc. All rights reserved
Dusted Reviews
Artist: Rashied Ali
Album: Judgment Day, Vols. I & II
Label: Survival
Review date: Feb. 26, 2006
These two new quintet dates
confirm what I have long believed, that Rashied Ali is one of the most underrated
drummers to emerge from the turbulently exploratory 1960s. Only one aspect of
his multicolored playing has gotten anything even close to the examination and
discussion it deserves, and anyone reading this knows of the fire, brimstone
and thunder he brought to Coltrane’s final period. Yet, listen to the
subtlety, introspection and sublimated magic of his brushwork on a track like
“Ogunde” from Expression, or to Marion Brown’s second ESP
date, and you will have some idea of what else to expect in these more recent
ventures.
All of the tunes on Judgment Day are either acknowledged classics or homage’s
to established masters. Steve Dalachinsky’s unerringly perceptive liners
quote Ali as saying “If they can play Beethoven, why not Coltrane?”
While Coltrane is not represented here – Ali’s Prima Materia project
paid him beautiful respect – the quotation is apt in that the music of
such undeniably influential figures as Monk, Shorter and Strayhorn are rendered
with faithfulness and fluent unpredictability. “Round Midnight,”
from Vol. II, is a stunning case in point. The familiar introduction is treated
here with just a hint of the “free” playing associated with Ali’s
early recordings, bassist Joris Teepe’s tasty interjections being particularly
noteworthy. Trumpet and sax use vibrato to great effect, a signifier that, in
tandem with Greg Murphy’s slyly intuitive incorporation of Monk’s
pianisms, invokes the “swing” at the heart of Monk’s rhetoric
and rhythm. Lawrence Clark’s tenor tone is lush and full, enhancing the
allusion. Just as the tune is about to end, Ali breaks into a funky Latin-tinged
groove, the quintet sound turning lush and sumptuous all at once. It’s
a gesture of which Monk would certainly have approved, given his ear for all
manner of shifts in arrangement.
Both volumes abound with small but revelatory surprises of that nature. Trumpeter
Jumaane Smith’s “Shied Indeed” – one for the leader
– sports one of the hippest stop-time unison breaks I’ve heard in
quite a while. It jumps right out of the middle of a simple but effectively
modal head, broadsiding the unsuspecting listener with a brick-textured chunk
of hard-edged compositional prowess. As with the Monk treatment, Dalachinsky
is right to point out the temporally multifarious aesthetic of the playing;
roots and branches of the creative music tree are often apparent in one sweeping
gesture.
Nowhere is the fluidity of temporal perception more evident than in Ali’s
drumming. Ali has expressed repeatedly his preoccupation with the expansion
of time, of his constant development of time elasticity. The Jaco Pastorias
tune “Dania,” from the first volume, has one of the briefest but
most powerful solos I’ve ever heard from him, and much of its interest
is generated by its architecture. Ali breezes effortlessly through some of the
most intense circumlocutions and syncopations imaginable, only to return to
a steady four, as if he’d never left. Throughout these temporal juxtapositions,
his ear is constantly on timbre, key rhythmic moments warranting bullets and
bombs from his multivalent arsenal of snare attacks.
The quintet, diverse in age and background, manages to sound unified without
any player losing individuality, and part of this is due to the skill with which
the albums were recorded and mixed in Ali’s Survival Studios. The sound
is direct without being overbearing, just as the playing is referential without
being idiosyncratic or maudlin. These are fantastic discs that exist inside
the tradition while offering repeated opportunities for its fresh appraisal.
- Marc Medwin
©2002-2005 Dusted Magazine. All Rights Reserved.