 Photo by Andrea Canter Chill 7 has been turning heads lately,
from the Dakota where the quartet made a limited release live
recording last year to the 2005 Hot Summer Jazz Festival bandstand in
Mears Park, to their “home” stages at The Wine Bar in Mankato and
Lowertown St. Paul’s new French Press Café. Proclaimed by
the Dakota as “the future of Twin Cities jazz,” Chill 7 melds
modern jazz with funk and jam band music, blending “the
improvisation of Coltrane and Miles with the pulse of P-Funk and
Soulive” (French Press Jazz Café). I was impressed when I
first heard Chill 7 this past spring, enjoying their fresh
interpretations of jazz standards and high energy original
compositions. With a repertoire of funky renditions of Herbie
Hancock’s “Canteloupe Island,” electrified (yet sanctified)
ballads such as “My One and Only Love,” swinging standards such
as “All of Me,” and their own humor-infused creations, they were
indeed “fresh, hip, and on the move” (The Dakota). Reaching for a
new level of artistry that will appeal to a wide audience, this
weekend Chill 7 will celebrate the release of a new, self-produced
recording dubbed Probable Cause. The fun starts Friday at the
French Press Jazz Café, 8:30 pm-midnight.
Who is Chill 7, and why is it “7”
when there are only four musicians? Bandleader/tenor saxman Josh
Brinkman’s only explanation is that at one time or another, the
group has gone through 7 drummers. While he and guitarist Michael
Burand formed Chill 7 in 2001 and appeared together on the group’s
first recording, Big Fish Eat Little Fish (Aquarium Records,
2002), there has been turnover in the bass and drum chairs and the
group has appeared with (and recorded with) keyboards as well. Today
the quartet includes bassist Jason Swanson and drummer Andy Artz
along with Brinkman and Burand. Artz also served as designer,
mixmaster, and recording engineer for Probable Cause.
The Musicians
With 16 years experience on alto and
tenor sax, Josh Brinkman played with various jazz and
funk bands in the Washington, DC area before moving to the Twin
Cities. Trained in jazz theory and performance at Virginia Tech,
Brinkman has played with the funk band Slydeboots, the cover band The
Junction, and Luckytown, a Minneapolis rock band.
Guitarist Michael Burand
studied at the University of Minnesota–Duluth with regional artist
Billy Barnard. Around Minnesota, he’s worked with jazz and blues
bands, including the UMD guitar ensemble and The Junction; he’s
also an accomplished banjoist.
Bassist Jason Swanson
studied music at the University of Idaho and University of Minnesota.
An accomplished classical bassist as well, Swanson plays both upright
and electric bass, and works with area classical orchestras as well
as Chill 7 and other small ensembles.
Drummer and Pittsburgh native Andy
Artz grew up in Apple Valley, MN. He’s won numerous awards
for composition and performance, including the Outstanding Soloist
award (and accompanying scholarship) from the International
Association of Jazz Educators at the 1995 Head of the Lakes Jazz
Festival in Duluth. After graduation from Carnegie Mellon in
Pittsburgh, he served as Music Director and drummer for Celebrity
Cruises. Artz teaches young students and adults, and plays in a wide
range of area bands including the Stan Bann Big Band.
Probable Cause
As noted in their liner notes, Chill
7’s new recoding marks a transition from emulating their heroes
(particularly Miles and Coltrane) to going their own way. While their
foundation has been modern jazz standards, their future may lie in
the more “danceable and groovy” meadow between jazz and funk.
Both ends of their self-ascribed spectrum are represented on this
release, which was recorded live in June at their home away from
home, the French Press Jazz Café in St. Paul’s Lowertown.
For a low budget project (as Artz says, “a poor
man’s 4-track recording” on borrowed equipment), put together
from primarily one live gig, this set has all the intimacy and energy
of being there with the enhanced quality of post gig mastering.
Their previous recording, Big Fish
Eat Little Fish, contained “cool bop stuff with rock energy”
(Mankato Free Press); the new recording might be described as
hot post bop with funk energy. All tunes are from the pens of Burand
and/or Brinkman, except the last track (“Artz Nova" from Adam
Wait). The new CD offers some repeats from the earlier play
list—Brinkman’s “Red’s Bed” and “Hanger Man,” and
Burand’s “Adult Lounge,” giving the listener the opportunity to
hear how the music and band have evolved. Simply put, these are
maturing musicians who have made a transition from a good house band
to rising star status in four short years. And while the Chill 7
musicians state that their current direction is more toward funk
grooves than modern mainstream jazz, the arrangement of tracks seems
to suggest a different aesthetic framework—one moving from youthful
funk and R&B toward sophisticated structures that more clearly
celebrate their roots in Coltrane and Miles, but from a 21st
century perspective. Certainly, there is a very danceable vibe
throughout the recording, but beyond the delightful rhythms exuding
Latin and Middle Eastern flavors is an edgier core of creative
improvisation and an undercurrent of the great jazz bands of the 60s
and 70s.
The first two tracks (“Funk in the
Forrest” and “The Bluebelt”) indeed seem headed for Funkytown
and beg for a dance floor. Swanson gives the former its hip hoppy
groove while Burand’s bubbling guitar and Artz’ clicky vamp
enlighten the latter. Brinkman particularly stands out on “The
Bluebelt,” jumping in with a honky buzzing improvisation before
joining Swanson with two-bar repetitions, ending with an even buzzier
line.
One of my favorites is Burand’s
“Adult Lounge,” with Brinkman laying out with a more post bop
flavored melody and intricate line. More for toe tapping than dancing shoes, this rendition has a Kenny Garrett groove and, overall,
makes for much stronger input from all than on the same track of
their earlier recording. This time out, they have more to say and say
it in a tighter timeframe (by about 30 seconds). Burand sets the
guitar afire over Swanson’s running bassline, and one can imagine a
B-3 stepping in (and there was a keyboard on the 2002 track). Artz
gets a chance to demonstrate his command of the trapset, with more
interesting rhythms than did the drummer on the earlier disc. In
stating the melody, Burand and Brinkman combine much like two horns.
“Brin’s Mesa” is Brinkman’s
Latin-tinged tribute to “a little place” where he proposed
marriage. Following a sturdy bass and guitar montuno, Brinkman
launches into the melody like the CD as a whole, somewhere between
funk and bop. Rhythmic hesitations and repeating phrases from
Brinkman keep the tension alive until Burand jumps in with his own
story line. Brinkman returns with a buzzier melody over the
bubbling vamp from the guitar, again hinting at the sound of the B-3.
Brinkman’s “Red’s Bed” starts
out with a great bassline from Swanson, moves to a train-like vibe
from Burand, and then Brinkman comes in swirling. “Kari’s Crystal
Fish” finds Burand’s catchy melody presented by the tenor sax,
the chord structure like a syncopated “My Favorite Things.” The
guitar adds a gurgling yet sweet improvisation, playing the role of
“diffractometer” as describe in the liner notes—a gadget to
analyze the crystal fish of the title; and Burand plays that role in
diffracting the theme into jewel-like facets. Brinkman comes back
with his own analysis, slowing it down briefly as if to crank up his
ax just to take another swing. Artz maintains a crystalline sheen
throughout the track.
Brinkman’s “Breakfast with Cheese”
is a short track and the most straight-ahead tune of the set. Swanson
provides some marvelous basslines beneath some dexterous pickings
from Burand, and the quartet manages to pack a lot into 2 ½
minutes. Brinkman’s lines slide along like silk over coarse
mesh—he’s definitely one of the most interesting tenor players in
town.
Brinkman’s “Hanger Man” is the
edgiest and perhaps most interesting track of the set, the composer
at his most introspective and experimental. With a heavy steady pulse
from Artz and bubbling lava from Swanson, Brinkman displays his debt
to Coltrane. Meanwhile Burand provides a global flavor, with
tones from some corner of the Middle East seeping into his phrases
almost as if his instrument has taken on some of the eastern
qualities of ancient strings, as do the groaning sighs that come from
either the bass or sliding sticks on the drum skins. Relative to the
rendition on their earlier recording with an organ, the overall feel
is more of subtle drama than funky groove.
The closing track, Adam Waite’s “Artz
Nova” is (not surprisingly) built around Artz’ punctuations and
exclamations. Unison lines from Brinkman and Burand morph into
rapid-fire solo lines from the guitar over equally fleet basslines
and continuous figures from Artz. Burand adds some popping stops
and starts from the bottom of the box; the sax returns with some
throaty segments over the nervous energy of the drumkit, Artz
throwing out a solo of pepper spray and rim shots. Sax and guitar
return to their unisonic melody but Artz gets the last word—it is
his nova!
Gigs
Chill 7 will be chilling out at the
French Press Jazz Café on Friday night, September 2, 8:30
pm-midnight. Is there a better way to start the long Labor Day
weekend than an evening of funky grooves spliced around post-bop
sophistication? Bring your dancing shoes if you are so inclined, the
floor space at the French Press can probably handle it! And bring
your keen ears and tune into the more subtle undercurrents of the
workings of this band of innovators, hipsters, and… above all,
talented musicians.
More
about Chill 7 and the new recording can be found on the band’s
website at www.chill7.com. The French Press Jazz Café is
located in St. Paul’s Lowertown at 213 4th Street East, across the
street from Union Depot. For complete calendar and more information,
visit www.fpjazz.com
or call (651) 224-2732. And later this month (September 23), outstate
jazzers can catch Chill 7 for their “monthly mambo” at The Wine
Café in Mankato, 9 pm-midnight, 301 N. Riverfront Dr.,
www.winecafebar.com<.
Chill 7 plans another live recording, in Mankato, to be released in
November.
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