| home | biography | recordings | concert schedule | R.U.B. | press | contact | sounds Latest Release! Sync's 3rd CD (with very special guests Mark Feldman, violin and Erik Friedlander, cello) Inner Diaspora on Tzadik!
"the music was flat-out gorgeous" Stephen Brookes, Washington Post 3/26/06
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Click on photo to download hi-rez version (1.38 mb TIFF) Check other Sync cds on the recordings page |
In Sync (NOT to be confused with any silly boy bands) Rothenberg is joined by Jerome Harris, acoustic guitar/acoustic bass guitar and Samir Chatterjee, tabla and percussion. Bob Blumenthal gave a nice basic sketch of the band in a Boston Globe review: "Sync might be envisioned as a modified sax/bass/drum
trio, where the bassist has been replaced by Jerome Harris on either acoustic
guitar or acoustic bass guitar, and where the drummers role is taken
by Samir Chatterjee on tabla and dumbek. With Rothenberg moving among
alto sax, clarinet, bass clarinet, and the Japanese shakuhachi and composing
looping ribbons of melody with odd rhythmic contours, the trio has found
a most palatable merger of jazz and Asian music. The uncommon instrumentation is enhanced by a shared sense of purpose that gives Sync its winning character. Each player displays both the techniques and the sensitivity required to function as both soloist and accompanist, allowing Sync to maintain its three-way conversations after Rothenberg has finished soloing. This is not simply a matter of the leaders ability to sustain extended melodic and rhythmic variations at lower volumes through circular breathing; it also results from the assurance that allows Harris to sustain a pronounced rhythmic underpinning in his guitar work and rare melodic fluency on bass. Chatterjee, who can sing and then play back the most complex patterns in the manner of the great tabla masters, also senses how to highlight more compact, swing-oriented parts through shifts in accents and dynamics." Rothenberg's picture of the band is outlined in his notes to the group's Intuition release, "Port of Entry" (Buy Port of Entry at Amazon) : Sync could perhaps be compared to a trio of chefs,
experienced in varying degrees in the different musical cuisines of the
world. I have the role of leader and imagine the meal that will be prepared.
I look for meals to which we can each contribute, sometimes combining
ideas in each dish served and sometimes letting individually prepared
dishes compliment each other on the plate. I avoid using strictly traditional
combinations or going entirely 'nouvelle' (we want to satisfy your appetite,
after all), rather looking to combine spices and staple ingredients in
ways which while often novel and exotic, also have a sense of familiarity
without exact reference. In this kitchen, we want to challenge the palate
but not the digestive track. In addition, each dish should have a distinct idiomatic
sense without strictly adhering to any particular style. There should
be variety, but not at the expense of focus. A restaurant that has vindaloo,
sushi and barbecue on the same menu would probably be a jack of
all trades, master of none. But if informed sense of aromatic spice,
appreciation of raw simplicity and willingness to get messy but tasty
were all combined in meals that worked together, I think there would be
a line around the block. The key to all this (we all know the danger of too
many chefs) is band chemistry. (Here Ill leave behind the food analogies).
I saw an article where guitarist Pat Metheny had a great answer when asked
how to improve as a musician. It was something like get in a group
where you are the worst player and learn to keep up. I would add,
however, that the experienced player can lend a freshness of approach
when he tries to negotiate music outside the styles in which he was schooled.
In Sync, there are modes in which each of us is
the worst and the best player in the group. From
the first time we jammed together weve all felt a continuing learning
process in the improvising. I try to build on this in the composition
with the aim being to use our individual strengths to constantly challenge
each other. Samir brings the skills of a world-class player of tabla,
a fluent swimmer in the deep waters of North Indian classical music. But,
equally important, he brings an open mind, willing to accept the challenge
of trying to negotiate jazz forms and learn rhythmic structures explicated
in western notation systems which are quite foreign to him. Jerome is
extremely well-versed in the song forms and rhythms we use that are based
in the African-American tradition. On the other hand, in Lost in
a Blue Forest, I asked him to play the acoustic bass guitar with
a bottleneck and a pick, something he had never tried, in a very open
musical form. The result was a wonderful surprise to all of us. As the
leader, I have a leg up because Ive generated so many of these compositions
in musical language which is germane to my solo work and the instruments
I play. However, because of the depth of musical fluency of my two partners
I am often the one trying to keep up. Im tremendously excited about this band, happy with the pieces presented on this CD and looking forward to the music that well make in the future. NR |
| Check Samir's site http://www.tabla.org for information on all sorts of great goings-on in the world of Indian Classical Music. |