 |
|
Source: Los Angeles Times
A GIFT OF SAX AND QUARTET
A slighty belated but much appreclated Christmas
present to fans of straight-ahead jazz teruned up at Spazio in Sherman
Oaks on Thusday in the performance of saxophonist Garry Foster with
the David Sills quartet.
Foster is a veteran whose extraordinary talents tend to be applied
more often to his work as a studio player than to his sterling skills
as an improvising jazz musician. It was good, under any circumstances,
to hear him in action, playing something more provocative than feature
film cues.
As it turned out, the circumstances were first-rate, sice Foster
was surrounded by a fine ensemble. Sills is a gifted young tenor
saxophonist, the inimitable Tom Rainer was at the piano, and two
lesser known players - bassist John Crooks and drummer Dean Koba
- provided solid rhythm-section support.
The most immediate reference points in the set recalled the fast-paced
two-saxophone team of Lee Konitz and Wame Marsh. In the 50s. Playing
Marsh's "Background - Music" (based on the chords of "All
of Me") and Sills'"Sharkey" (on the chords of "Cherokee"),
Foster and Sills dashed through the rapidly twisting and turning
melody lines, diving into solos balancing rhythmic swing with melodically
intriguing improvisational explorations.
Rainer took the spotlight with a solo opening chorus of 'My Foolish
Heart," framing the familiar melody In spare but emotionally
potent harmonies. And "Friends again,” yet anothere revision
of a standard tune ("Just Friends," in this case) climaxed
the set with a brightly exuberant example of propulsive bebop.
Call the program a comfortably reassuring holiday gift: no probing
avant-garde sounds, no probing avant-garde sounds, no edgy envelope-stretching;
just imaginative, engaging, timeless jazz at its finest.
~ Don Heckman
Do you have comments or found interesting quote
about David Sills?, let us know by sending an email |
|