 Pat Mallinger © Andrea Canter "The daring of Mallinger's
compositions, ingenuity of his arrangements, and ferocity of his
solos are startling to hear” -- Chicago Tribune
A
good wind blows through the Windy City this fall as Chicago resident
and alto saxman Pat Mallinger and his quartet are featured on
Wednesday nights at Andy’s. Last fall, Mallinger released Moorean
Moon, recorded live at the 2000 North Sea Jazz Festival,
following the highly regarded Monday Prayer to
Tunkashila. Of his first recording, which the Chicago Tribune
dubbed “a stunning debut by any measure,” Saxophone
Journal noted, "Not only do his solos exhibit a thorough
understanding of America's art form, but his knowledge becomes
especially visible through his exceptional writing and arranging
skills. Each Mallinger composition shows remarkable craftmanship!"
As
a youngster in St. Paul, Pat Mallinger was inspired by
the Grass Junior High Jazz Band and recordings of Paul Desmond, and
decided jazz rather than dentistry was his destiny. He played in the
Sibley High School band, studied with his uncle Tommy Bauer and Brian
Grivna, and often heard the great Eddie Berger perform around town.
In addition to Desmond, Pat cites such early
jazz influences as Charlie Parker, Sonny Rollins, John Coltrane,
Dexter Gordon, and Miles Davis. After high
school, Mallinger earned a
degree in jazz studies from North Texas State (where he was part of
the famed One O’Clock Jazz Band) and, in 1986, moved to Boston
where he played with the Artie Shaw Orchestra and the Matt Wilson
Quartet. Relocating to his current home in Chicago in 1990, Mallinger
has played with Joe Williams, Nancy Wilson, Stevie Wonder, Herbie
Hancock, Harry Connick, and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.; he’s
toured with Charles Earland, Woody Herman, and Cab Calloway, and
appears in concerts and festivals around the world. In Chicago, he
regularly performs with the Chicago Jazz Ensemble, Kurt Elling,
Howard Levy, and the 911 Mambo Orchestra; he co-leads the ensemble
Sabertooth which performs regularly at the Green Mill. Pat is also a
committed jazz educator whose efforts include inspiring inner city
students to pursue jazz as a member of the Ravinia Jazz Mentors
Sextet. He also teaches at Columbia College and in the Chicago Public
Schools.
(Click here for an
exclusive Jazz Police interview with Pat Mallinger.)
Moorean
Moon. On July 14, 2000, Pat Mallinger and his
quartet performed at the 25th North Sea Jazz Festival in
The Hague. Blue Jack Records Chairman Irv Rochlin attended the set,
and five years later contacted Mallinger and festival officials for
permission to release the tapes of the live session. The result is
Moorean Moon, and it was well worth the wait. Mallinger’s
straight-ahead, hard swinging sax is captured with all the verve and
invention that marks live performances, and his then-Chicago-based
quartet (Jim Ryan on piano, Jeff Stitely on drums, and the late
Thomas Kini on bass) is a sympathetic a crew of collaborators. And
collaboration is the bottom line here, as this is truly a group
effort. With six of seven tracks running in excess of eight minutes,
everyone stretches out and every tune benefits from the unhurried
evolution of creative partnership. The playlist is a divergent buffet
of two Mallinger originals and covers of Jerome Kern, Jerry Garcia,
Kenny Barron, Claudio Roditi, Jimmy Heath, and Jackie McLean.
At Andy’s
For the fall run at Andy’s, Pat is
joined by long-time collaborators Ron Perrillo on piano, Dennis
Carroll on bass, and George Fludas on drums. Perrillo is
a native New Yorker who spent his teen years in Florida, playing
trumpet and baritone as well as keyboards. He cites Duke Ellington,
Bud Powell, Steely Dan and Jaco Pastorius as major influences,
spending time with the latter who taught him “hip voicings.”
Moving to Chicago in 1990, Perrillo performed with Brad Goode and Von
Freeman; he performs and records with his own trio. Dennis
Carroll has been busy performing in the Chicago area with
Perrillo, Bobby Broom, and the Chicago Jazz Orchestra. Similarly,
George Fludas is a highly-sought drummer in Chicago and
beyond, heard frequently at The Jazz Showcase, Green Mill, and Pete
Miller's, often in the company of Mallinger, Perrillo and The Chicago
Jazz Orchestra. Part of the late Ray Brown’s trio in 2000-2001, he
has performed with Johnny Griffin, Cedar Walton, Hank Jones, Tommy
Flanagan, Frank Wess, Bobby Hutcherson, Eric Alexander and Diana
Krall.
The Pat Mallinger Quartet performs
every Wednesday night in September and October, 5-8:30 pm, at Andy’s,
11 E. Hubbard Street, Chicago; (312)
642-6805. More on Pat Mallinger at
www.chicagojazz.com/v2/Main/FeaturedArtists/Homepage.asp?Artist=PatMallinger |