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“Jazz is music made
awake, with open eyes and ears.” –Geoffrey Keezer, July 2005
 Photo by Andrea Canter
On September 12, 2004, Eau Claire, WI
native son Geoffrey Keezer and his new trio performed three sets at
the Dakota in downtown Minneapolis, recording live for the MaxJazz
label. Over the course of the evening, the pianist and his ensemble
treated the audience to 21st century sophistication
anchored in 20th century accessibility, timeless
musicality, and incendiary inspiration. The results of this
incredible evening (Wildcrafted: Live at the Dakota) will be
unveiled when the Geoffrey Keezer Trio takes a break from their fall
tour with David Sanborn to perform at the Village Vanguard in New
York City (October 18-23) and “back home” at the Dakota (October
24-25).
Click
here for an
exclusive Jazz Police Interview with Geoffrey Keezer.
About Geoffrey Keezer
While hinting at a fantasy blend of Bud
Powell, Bill Evans, Herbie Hancock, and McCoy Tyner, Keezer has
evolved a singular style of intellectually abstract lyricism woven
over exotically complex rhythms and harmonies. Barely into his mid
30s, his highly regarded discography, unique compositions, and
acclaimed performances in a variety of configurations command the
attention typically reserved for the living legends of jazz.
A child prodigy, Geoffrey Keezer grew
up surrounded by musicians and music educators (father Ron Keezer
headed the jazz band program at the University of Wisconsin–Eau
Claire), and first performed at the Dakota when he was only 16, three
years before his stint with Art Blakey’s last edition of the Jazz
Messengers. He has since forged an amazing career at such an early
age, including 9 previous recordings as leader, touring as a very
young collaborator with James Williams, Mulgrew Miller, Donald Brown,
and Harold Mabern in the Contemporary Piano Ensemble in the early
1990s, and recent tours and recordings in the company of such heavy
hitters as the late Ray Brown, Christian McBride, and Jim Hall. For
this live recording, he harnessed the energy and virtuosity of two
rising comets on the jazz sky, acoustic bassist Matt Clohesy and
drummer Terreon Gulley.
 Photo by Andrea Canter
Crafting Wildcrafted
That a major label such as MaxJazz
chose the Dakota for a live recording of an established performer
like Keezer was a coup for owners Lowell Pickett and Richard
Erickson, but hardly far fetched, given the acoustics, the “hometown”
crowd, and the club’s reputation as a magnet for the best in the
genre. If anything, this venue was overdue for a series of “Live”
releases. Keezer, too, was due for a live recording, 12 years
following his only other in vivo effort, at Toronto’s Montreal
Bistro in 1993 (Trio, Sackville, a leaderless collaboration
with vibist Steve Nelson and bassist Neil Swainson). Notes Keezer
regarding Wildcrafted, “I'm happy that I've been able to
capture some good live playing again, with more life experience
informing my playing. Maybe a little more grown up.”
Of all of his working groups, this new
trio may prove to be Keezer’s most empathetic partners. As an
ensemble, they create a multi-layered sonic feast, a rich stew that
simmers, hits a rolling boil, steeps and steams, or slowly bubbles as
the creative flame directs the heat. Gulley is one of
the most dynamically versatile drummers of a generation packed with
virtuoso timekeepers (Matt Wilson, Nasheet Waits, Eric Harland, Ari
Honig, Brian Blade…it’s a long list!). Equally effective with
sticks, mallets, or brushes, he creates shimmering backdrops,
well-placed cherry bombs, rumbling echoes, and clattering rimshots,
whether weaving a heavily textured netting around the melody or
blowing holes in the improvisational fabric, all with the drive of
the Energizer Bunny. Australian native Clohesy has a
big tone and frenetic fingers, easily matching Gulley’s fire and
durability, whether walking, running, or fleetly popping.
 Mike Pope, Photo by Andrea Canter
Wildcrafted: Live at the Dakota,
may be the most energetic and cohesive recording of Keezer’s
already distinguished career. The unusual title seems fitting when
considering its origin, described in MaxJazz’s promotional material
as “harvested from nature in a conscious, ethical and sustainable
way.” Keezer further describes the sense of “wildcrafted”:
“Imagine walking in the forest and encountering a jazz trio playing
among the trees…leaving notes to resonate throughout the woods for
future generations…wildcrafted live music.” In this context,
Wildcrafted indeed meets its promise, an elegantly organic
offering to the present and future listener.
The Music
The playlist offers a combination of
new compositions and arrangements as well as a few tunes Keezer
previously recorded, the latter providing an opportunity to briefly
examine the evolution of his work. The opening track, “Stomping at
the Savoy,” appeared on Keezer’s Turn Up the Quiet (1997,
Columbia). On the earlier arrangement, the melody was presented up
front via Joshua Redman’s tenor sax, providing a more abstract
interpretation than did Keezer’s piano. Eight years later with the
new trio, Keezer totally deconstructs the melody, which is all but
unrecognizable until the final segment; his fingers swat the keyboard
as if chasing a big gnat with hand-over-hand runs. Gulley provides
the most over-the-top drum sequence of the set—renaming the tune
“Stomping at the Dakota.”
Another interesting tune that Keezer
has previously recorded (on Zone One), Bjork’s “Venus As a
Boy” features a celestial introduction from Keezer’s Fender
Rhodes coupled with lyrical piano line, shifting to two-handed piano
chords and an off-kilter waltzing rhythm supported by sharp
percussive accents and a deep bass vamp. The earlier recording (using
only acoustic piano) has less of the futuristic vibe, while
the new trio rendition with Fender Rhodes has more of the atmospheric
elements of the original, but as an interplanetary fantasy more than
a bubbling rock hit.
Ellington’s “Black and Tan Fantasy”
is a Keezer favorite, first recorded in trio format on his 1992
release, World Music (DIW Columbia), and later on the
much-praised solo effort, Zone One (Dreyfus, 1999). On the
earlier recording, the piano was front and center, with more swing,
more spacious allegiance to Tatum and Peterson—more true to
Ellington’s early recordings; the solo recording reflects Keezer’s
evolving development of more complex lines and harmonies, more
substantial filling of space, with the effect of multiple voices
despite the solo instrument, and more reminiscent of Powell and
Tyner. Now on Wildcrafted, the trio arrangement maintains the
underlying blues elements, but with more abstract embellishments a
decade later, Keezer filling very nook and cranny as he carries the
melody with the left hand and fills space with the right. Clohesy’s
bass solo is a heavy-footed walking and note-bending interlude, while
Gulley rips the air with his solo attack. Overall, the merging of
blues, stride, and post bop abstraction make “Black and Tan
Fantasy” one of the more engaging acts of session.
 Terron Gulley, Photo by Andrea Canter
One more reworking is Keezer’s own
tune, “Mirrim,” recorded on his first MaxJazz release, the
mesmerizing Falling Up. Without the vibes of the earlier CD,
the initial melodic line is presented here by Clohesy’s bass.
Gulley is a non-stop percussion machine, nearly matched in intensity
by Clohesy, and the trio’s mutual empathy is never stronger.
The rest of the recording is filled
with varied delights from Keezer’s unrecorded playbook and recent
creations: Keezer’s “Tea and Watercolors,” a bell-like melody
with edgy accents from Gulley’s rimshots and chime-like interplay
between piano and bass; a revived composition that Keezer dedicates
to his late mentor James Williams, “The Kindest Soul,” with
Keezer’s soloing here reminiscent of Brubeck or McPartland; another
new Keezer effort, “The Ghost in the Photograph,” featuring a
robust and ominously melodic bass solo supported by a subtle
underlayment of percussion.
On many of his compositions and
arrangements in recent years, Keezer pays homage to the folk melodies
and harmonies of Japan, where he spends part of the year as a second
home. For Wildcrafted, the trio tackles “Kikugari Bushi,”
described by Keezer as a love song or song about lost love, richly
introduced with an orchestral motif from the Fender Rhodes that soars
above the bandstand. The closing track, Keezer’s “Breath of the
Volcano,” is intended to capture the scene of the steam vents at
the mouth of a Japanese volcano. Using both Fender Rhodes and piano,
Keezer indeed creates the sensation of steam rising from the crater,
while Gulley’s drums cite the rumbling thunder within, and
Clohesy’s bass provides an ample meter of seismic activity.
In closing the session at the Dakota
last fall, Keezer remarked on the importance of music in a world of
uncertainty. “Good music,” he said, “it’s something to live
for.” Further, in his running journal on his website, Keezer notes,
“I think playing music helps to heal the world, little by little,
in teeny steps.” Fortunately for anyone who seeks such salvation in
jazz, the creative inspiration of the inventive compositions and
deconstructions of Geoffrey Keezer and company has been beautifully
captured as rendered on that September night at the Dakota.
The Geoffrey Keezer Trio (with Mike
Pope on bass in place of Matt Clohesy) will celebrate the release of
Wildcrafted: Live at the Dakota at the Village Vanguard in New
York, October 18-23, sets at 9 and 11 pm. You can now reserve tickets
online at
www.villagevanguard.com.
In Minneapolis, the celebration will take place over two nights at
the Dakota, October 24-25, sets at 7 and 9 pm. Reservations are
recommended—call 612-332-1010 or reserve online at
www.dakotacooks.com.
For more information and samples of music, visit
www.geoffkeezer.com.
Wildcrafted is scheduled for public release on October 25th.
Portions of this article were published in September 2004 on the Jazz
Police website,
www.jazzpolice.com
and online by the Twin Cities Jazz Society in Coda, October
2005. |