This is one of the few dates led by the late Air/
Henry Threadgill bassist
Fred Hopkins, who was a founding member of the AACM in Chicago. With cellist
Diedre Murray, guitarist
Brandon Ross (
Cassandra Wilson), and
Newman Baker on drums, this set of
Murray compositions is a knotty, steamy, smoky ride through the various entanglements associated with a jazz ensemble whose principals are all string players. For starters, there's the spattered, elongated melodic patter in "Eureka," with its shape-shifting time signatures and tonal incongruities that have
Hopkins creating a contrapuntal melody from a rock rhythm figure while
Murray stops and starts, sputters, falters, and then careens in a different lyric idea against the grain of the rhythm section. Perhaps the most beautiful composition on the disc is "Doo-Wop II," a medium-tempo snaky river with eerie changes and a guitar break by
Ross that reveals the depth of his melodicism. Elsewhere, on "Song for the Lost People"
Hopkins gets a chance to slip into his soul groove roots for a while, carrying a Memphis harmonic figure through the middle of a minor-key shuffle that opens up in the middle to reveal a complex, sophisticated sense of syncopation and chromatic elegance. The compositions here may be by
Murray, and her cello is everywhere, but the depth of feeling and closeness of the ensemble are evidenced here by the gigantic presence of
Hopkins, a musician who believed that what made music go from one person to the next was the simple transference of emotion. This is a most welcome reissue.
–
Thom Jurek, Rovi