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Darrell Katz and the JCA Orchestra: Rats Live on No Evil Star
ByFor the benefit of those who may be perplexed by what they are hearing, it should be noted at the outset that Katz and his colleagues have a plan and know what they are about; it may simply be uncoupled from some listeners' normal frame of reference. In other words, this is jazz but not the kind one generally associates with such canonical big bands as, say, Basie, Herman or even Ellington. There is melody and harmony, coexisting with what many listeners unfamiliar with the framework might reasonably impugn as dissonance. And they wouldn't be far from the mark, even though it is cacophony with a purpose. No matter how anyone gauges the result of his endeavor, the fact remains that Katz is a topnotch musicianif not, he couldn't have taught for nearly three decades at Boston's well-respected Berklee School of Music. When composing the songs for Rats Live on No Evil Star, Katz wasn't simply pulling notes out of a hat. No, the notes, phrases and themes were well-chosen; let the responses to them fall as they may.
The title song, which opens the album, is one of two "concertos" for violin, marimba and jazz orchestra, and was commissioned in 1987 for George Schuller's big band. The marimba and violin share the introduction, joined by Rebecca Shrimpton's wordless voice, before the orchestra makes its appearance. By Katz's standards this is a rather conventional motif, although the nearly fourteen-minute running time far eclipses its welcome. The second "concerto of sorts" (Katz's words), How to Clean a Sewer, follows, once more featuring marimba, violin and voice in its three disparate movements ("Three or Four Kinds of Blues," "Windfall Lemons," "Attention"). The second movement is the musical restatement of a poem, "How to Clean a Sewer," by Katz's late wife, Paula Tatarunis, to whom the album is dedicated. "To an Angel," he writes, "is for those who care for and nurture us, even as their own lives are in disarray." The orchestra is amplified on that tune by the Strings Theory Trio.
Perhaps the most "orthodox" numbers on the album are the last two, "Red Dog Blues" and "Red Sea," the first of which features vocalist Alizon Lissance, the second co-author Shrimpton (with Lissance on piano). Although the lyrics to "Red Sea" defy plausible comment, any blues that includes the pronouncement "Donald Trump is a vicious punk with a big mouth full of lies and a soul full of junk," as "Red Dog Blues" does, should be music to many listeners' ears (albeit equally dissuasive to others). There's not much more than can or need be said, save to repeat that Katz and the JCA Orchestra clearly believe in what they are doing, and Rats Live on No Evil Star is well-planned and well-performed. Even though it's nowhere near our orbit, respectable marks for that.
Track Listing
Rats Live On No Evil Star; How To Clean a Sewer: Three Or Four Kinds Of Blues / Winndfall Lemons / Attention; To An Angel; Prelude / Hiro Runs The Devil Down; The Red Dog Blues; Red Sea.
Personnel
Darrell Katz
composer / conductorDarrell Katz: composer, conductor, arranger, guitar (8); Helen Sherrah-Davies, Mimi Rabson: 5-string violin (5); Vessela Stoyanova: marimba, vibraphone; Rebecca Shrimpton: voice; Hiro Honshoku: flute, piccolo, EWI; Rick Stone: alto sax, clarinet; Ken Field: alto sax; Phil Scarff: tenor sax, soprano sax, sopranino sax, clarinet; Melanie Howell-Brooks: baritone sax, bass clarinet; Jeff Classen, Paul Meneghini, Water Platt: trumpet; Jim Mosher: French horn; Bob Pilkington, David Harris, trombone; Bill Lowe: tuba, bass trombone; Mike Conner: drums; John Funkhauser: bass; Norm Zocher: guitar; Ricardo Monzon: percussion; Hey Rim Jeon: piano; Alizon Lissance: voice (7), piano (8); Ralph Rosen: blues harp (7); Juno Fujiwara: cello (5).
Album information
Title: Rats Live on No Evil Star | Year Released: 2018 | Record Label: JCA Recordings
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About Darrell Katz
Instrument: Composer / conductor
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