On
this debut recording of his FOCUS Trio, pianist
Marc Cary brings into sharp focus his many
influences - from deep-feeling indigenous world
rhythms to bop to classical lyricism. Cary's
imaginative key-work, well known from his gigs
with Stefon Harris, Betty Carter, Abbey Lincoln,
Roy Hargrove, and Wynton Marsalis, among
others, gained him a recent nod from Down
Beat as one of the four "most multi-dimensional" keyboard
players on the scene today. His new release,
FOCUS (June 27 Release, Motema Music) reveals
those multi-dimensions in sensual living
color.
Lounging in the Parlor
floor of the Langston Hughes house in Harlem,
pianist and composer Marc Cary is as cool
and collected as they come. The brownstone
once inhabited by the renowned poet is
currently being transformed into a studio
and performance space. Taking his inspiration
from Abbey Lincoln, with whom Cary played
with for many years, he plans to transform
the Parlor level into a refuge for artists
and musicians. In the meanwhile the FOCUS
Trio featuring Marc Cary will release their
debut album, FOCUS, on the Motema label.
Cary anticipates it with calm earnestness; "With
this trio I'm really trying to focus all
energy into swinging and expressing myself
in the best way possible."
The FOCUS Trio consists of Sameer Gupta
on drums and tabla and David Ewell on bass.
The three musicians met about five years
ago on the Left coast. Cary was introduced
to Sameer Gupta through close associate and
jazz impresario Charles Brack, whom Cary
met while playing with trumpeter Russell
Gunn at the San Francisco Jazz Festival.
Marc Cary coming from a traditional jazz
background lays the musical foundation, incorporating
his Native American roots. However, Gupta
and Ewell also season the sonic landscape
with their Indian and Chinese roots. Gupta
incorporates classical Indian rhythmic and
melodic concepts. With David Ewell's bass
playing you can hear tonal centers that are
based around scales you may hear in traditional
Chinese music. The FOCUS project is one that
seeks to cross-pollinate.
The attractive part
of working with these particular musicians
is that they bring something to jazz rather
than assimilating into the idiom. Cary
doesn't advocate abandoning one's own culture
to learn jazz. "To me, if
you're going to learn jazz, you should have
something to bring. Cats don't think about
bringing much, the just want to see what
they can get from the music. It's a two way
street." For Cary it's the Go-Go contribution
he brought to acoustic jazz back in the early
90s.
Cary is more receptive
to a trio now in his career because it
offers more space and freedom. "The more people you have in
an ensemble the more structured it tends
to be. The trio just leaves more room for
expression for me," Cary explains. Seemingly
Cary has a penchant for trios: his Trillium
record released in 2000 was a trio setting
and was critically acclaimed.
With the FOCUS CD,
there are re-imagined musical concepts
that Cary revisits. The song "So Gracefully" was recorded
in 1995 and included on Cary's debut record,
Cary On. A trio as opposed to a septet performs
this newly re-recorded version. Although
it uses its original, timing, the arrangement
is different. "I was able to expand
more on the song and express myself differently.
It's very reminiscent of one of Coltrane's
versions of 'My Favorite Things,'" explains
Cary.
There's a reworked
version of Jackie McLean's bop classic, "Appointment in Ghana." Cary,
an admirer of the late McLean, played with
the master alto saxophonist in the past and
had anticipated McLean hearing the new version.
With re-arrangement of "Appointment
in Ghana," Cary sought to do something
that reflected the virtuosity of the writing. "When
I hear his songs, I hear so many other elements
and spaces where I can fit in," notes
Cary. "I re-arranged to show the freedom
Jackie offers in his compositions." What
Cary did was instead of playing the original
melody and then improvising, the trio played
the first 8 bars of the melody, improvised;
played the next 8 bars, improvised; played
the melody of the bridge and improvised an
finally played the last 8 bars of the melody
and finished the piece.
There's a piece on
the FOCUS record penned by Sameer
Gupta entitled "Taiwa." The
song pays homage to Moses Taiwa Molelekwa,
a young South African pianist and composer
who was found murdered in 2001 in his Johannesburg
apartment alongside his wife who had also
been strangled.
"A Long Walk Home" is a tune that
is expressive of the more pensive moments
in life. "It's like you had a lot on
your mind, you took the long walk home, checked
out some other things," notes Cary.
This tune was inspired by a particular time
where Cary stepped back and evaluated what
he wanted to do musically, and what he wanted
to record and how he'd present himself next
time around. "Often times instead of
sitting in the house thinking about what
to do, I take a long walk."
Marc Cary stands on an unshakable reputation
as pianist dedicated to the craft. The Grammy-nominated
pianist possesses an expansive vocabulary.
Take the seminal masterwork, Rhodes Ahead
Vol 1., released in 2000, is considered by
many to be a classic; the Fender Rhodes-laden
record signifies 70s free jazz, where the
electric piano was oft-times the sonic weapon
of choice. 1995's Cary On, 1997's Listen
and 1998's The Antidote, have also been each
received with critical acclaim.
Cary has played and recorded with an impressive
roster of musicians: Me'Shell NdegeOcello,
Dizzy Gillespie, Betty Carter, Arthur Taylor,
Abbey Lincoln, Erykah Badu, Jackie McLean,
Clifford Jordan, Carmen McCray, Milt Jackson,
Curtis Fuller, Eddie Henderson, Arthur Taylor,
Frank Foster, Max Roach, Shirley Horn, Ani
DiFranco, the list goes on. He is often sought
out by Wynton Marsalis, among others, for
key accompaniment.
"Listening to us on the FOCUS record
is one thing, but seeing us play is another," Cary
insists. The live show will expand on the
concepts developed since the recording. "The
recording is the seed and the performance
is when the plant grows."
"The concept of FOCUS Trio is a collaboration
of the three cultures," defines Cary
as he sits in the afternoon sunlight. "Aside
from that, playing our asses off the in the
tradition of the great Duke Ellington, Max
Roach and Paul Chambers, is the focus."
 |
Saturday Night
- September 20, 2008 / 8:00, 9:30
and 11:00pm |
 |
Coffee House Gallery |
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