Thursday, May 3, 2018

Jeff Williams - Another Time

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:31
Size: 120,7 MB
Art: Front

(6:23)  1. Search Me
(7:49)  2. She Can't Be a Spy
(5:05)  3. Double Life
(8:02)  4. Purple, Blue and Red
(7:20)  5. Fez
(5:29)  6. Under the Radar
(6:42)  7. Go Where You're Watching
(5:38)  8. Another Time

The catch-all term "playing time" is often used as a descriptor for drummers that find a steady, supportive pattern and play it ad infinitum, whether to the benefit or detriment of a band, but that definition has always been limiting. Drummer Jeff Williams, for example, has and plays impeccable time, but he paints around the lines and shifts patterns to accent and highlight what's happening in the music at any given moment. He's the rare drummer who understands and conceptualizes time as something beyond the standard "spang-a-lang" status quo, and this ideal comes to the fore with Another Time. While Williams has been an important voice on the jazz scene for four decades, he's always managed to stay slightly under the radar because his credits have often marked him as a supporting player rather than a leader. Williams secured his place in jazz history as a founding member of the far-reaching band Lookout Farm in the early '70s, and racked up an impressive list of sideman credits in the decades that followed. He has constantly been called upon to provide backing for left-leaning artists-in-the-know, like fellow Lookout Farm members Dave Liebman and Richie Beirach, pianist Richard Sussman, the legendary Lee Konitz, and saxophonist Bill McHenry, but Williams has only stepped out on his own on relatively few occasions over the past two decades. For this, the first record released under his name in the new millennium, Williams brought together a piano-less quartet that occasionally leans on the sound of early Ornette Coleman ("Search Me"), but isn't handcuffed to any single influence. 

Williams penned five of the eight pieces on the album, with each of his band mates contributing one song each to round out the program, and he brings different artistic elements into the mix on each number. "Fez" marries Coleman's ideals with Middle Eastern sounds a la John Zorn's Masada and the title track begins without drums, with some buzzing arco work from bassist John Hébert underscoring the horn lines of trumpeter Duane Eubanks and alto saxophonist John O'Gallagher. Elsewhere, Williams shifts the sands of time from slow and dirge-like to spirited and snappy ("Purple, Blue And Red"), shines a spotlight on Hébert sans band ("She Can't Be A Spy"), and gives plenty of solo space to the fine horn players he employs. While Another Time is another clear indicator of Williams' drumming talents, it also serves as a fine display of his skills as a composer. One can only hope that he doesn't wait so long to release his next disc. ~ Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/another-time-jeff-williams-whirlwind-recordings-ltd-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php

Personnel: Jeff Williams: drums; Duane Eubanks: trumpet; John O'Gallagher: alto saxophone; John Hébert: bass.

Another Time

3 comments:

  1. Hello (again!) Giullia. I have just discovered this second album by Jeff Williams, and although I am prohibited from requesting more than one re-up at a time, would it be possible to also renew the links to this album, please please. If it isn't, I will request it again in a few days time. Best wishes to you.

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  2. To say thank you doesn't seem enough, but it is all I can do. Music in general and jazz in particular seems to be a very harmonising force across the world at a time when the planet is in such a turbulent place. Silky denims plays an important part for many of us in uniting kindred spirits. May you continue for many many decades. :-)

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