Long story
The Either/Orchestra comes of age
by Jon Garelick
14-year history of the Either/Orchestra probably won't
be surprised to discover that its most ambitious new work -- a modal jazz epic
with complex time signatures that plays anywhere from 30 to 40 minutes in
concert -- is adapted from an album called Ethiopian Groove: The Golden
'70s. The E/Os have always drawn from disparate sources. In earlier years
they not only played the usual Ellington chestnuts but also arranged jazz takes
on Bob Dylan's "Lay Lady Lay" and King Crimson's "Red." What's more, they
turned the pieces into real jazz. The whole universe of jazz and pop, it
seemed, lived in the E/O book -- mainstream postbop legend Benny Golson
alongside avant-garde pioneer Julius Hemphill, Dylan with Monk, '70s electric
Miles with vintage Duke. At one show in the mid '80s, E/O leader Russ Gershon
introduced an original piece as "a cross between `Africa Brass' and the theme
from Mannix." Even the old chestnuts got surprisingly twisted
arrangements. Eventually, the band copped a Grammy nomination for a piece that
married ancient Benny Moten swing to Mingus '60s abstract expressionism.
The E/O's new More Beautiful Than Death (Accurate) comes four years
after its last CD -- the longest break between releases in the group's history.
In fact, after a marathon four-hour 10th-anniversary concert at the Somerville
Theatre in 1995 and the subsequent release of the anniversary double-CD
anthology Across the Omniverse, the E/O all but broke up. Key members
had moved to New York City, and it had become harder and harder to rehearse and
work as unit. In the meantime, Gershon's wife, Alessandra, had given birth to
their son Luca.
So More Beautiful Than Death represents the E/O's rebirth. When Gershon
decided to regroup, he held open auditions for the first time rather than
relying on the jazz tradition of working from recommendations and connections
-- with the result that several of the new members are in their early 20s (as
Gershon likes to point out, three of them were in second grade when the E/O was
founded, back in 1985). In its own way, though, this is the most diverse crew.
Trumpeter Tom Halter played the first E/O gig at the Cambridge Public Library
in December 1985; saxophonist Charlie Kohlhase (an important local bandleader
in his own right) joined in 1987. In the "new" Either/Orchestra, Vincente
Lebron, a middle-aged Dominican conguero, has become key to the band's new
authority with Latin-based tunes, especially in conjunction with Surinam-born
drummer Harvey Wirht. (Gershon calls Lebron and Wirht a "band within the
band.")
In typical E/O fashion the material on More Beautiful Than Death
stretches the band's identity while maintaining its coherence. The three
sections of "The Ethiopian Suite," as Gershon calls it ("Thank you, Duke!" he
says with a laugh), have been broken up -- one opening the album, one as a
fulcrum midpoint, and one near the end. African, Latin, and funk grooves
predominate throughout. Aside from the Ethiopian tunes (Ethiopian Groove
was a gift to Gershon from his friend, the late Morphine leader Mark Sandman),
there are none of the oddball "covers." The arrangement of the suite was
arrived at collectively by the band in rehearsals, but whereas in the past
other writers (trombonist Curtis Hasselbring and bassist Bob Nieske, in
particular) have contributed, here everything else is a Gershon original.
"My original idea was no old music at all," Gershon explains at his Inman
Square studio. "All new new new! But I scrapped that idea because I couldn't
write fast enough. That black file cabinet over there is full of old music --
there's hundreds of charts. So I started selecting stuff that I thought would
sound good for the new band, and also that we could play with a missing
trombone part, because we have six horns now instead of seven. There are a lot
of precisely written charts, like ones that I've done, or Curtis Hasselbring
tunes and Nieske tunes. A lot of them are really carefully written, so that if
you take away one trombone part, it screws up the whole balance. So we can't
just randomly pick anything and do it without the second trombone."
What's remarkable is that despite the move toward groove and funk and a renewed
emphasis on the rhythm section, the horn parts are as complex and beautifully
poised as ever. Gershon still relies on the band's "little big band" heft,
pitting swirling lines of reeds and brass against each other, setting off
soloists with elegantly written background choruses, making the most of the
possibilities in the Ethiopian tunes for twined counterlines. In some cases,
old tunes like "Breaktime for Dougo" are revivals that are getting an
authoritative second life.
"I wrote that in about 1989," says Gershon. "And because it's a real Latin
tune, we were never really able to play it that well. I mean, we played it
okay, but finally with this edition of the band we can do it for real. So that
was one from the catalogue that found itself."
Even though this album leans toward that '90s buzzword "groove," the
Either/Orchestra is still a jazz band. Dance or "groove" rhythms get orchestral
embellishments that show off the strengths of the new soloists, and the pieces
tend to push the 10-minute mark that favors the kind of narrative unfolding
that's been a hallmark from the beginning. The long-lined minor-ish melody of
"Number Three" rides on a springy bass ostinato (from a period in 1998 when the
group was using two bassists) and is itself transformed as it leaves room for a
solo by trombonist Joel Yennior that's by turns muscular and ruminative. At
midpoint, the basses take off at top speed and Miguel Zennon builds an alto
solo of increasing intensity; then the tune winds down to trombone for a
restatement of the theme. The E/O used to create this kind of narrative trip
with surprising, often tongue-in-cheek juxtapositions like Thelonious Monk's
"Nutty" and Bobbie Gentry's "Ode to Billy Joe."
Of the album's more "traditional" numbers, the title tune is a lovely
waltz-time piece with unison choral passages for horns and a repeated, catching
stop-time tag. "All Those SOB's" ("provoked by all the people I've met in the
music business who don't pay their bills," says Gershon) is a kind of swinging
blues that harks back to Ellington and Basie, with Dan Kaufman's piano going
from a Red Garland feel to Monkish out stride, and a strong trumpet solo from
Tom Halter. But the highlight remains the Ethiopian "Amiak Abet Abet," with its
opening full-horn-section melody followed by two long convoluted counterlines
from muted brass accompanied by Lebron's clattering percussion. They're snaky
lines with a cobra charmer's nasal-horn feel.
"On the original, that long melody line is sung by these two women in almost
perfect unison, with these crazy-sounding, vibrating, nasal voices," explains
Gershon. "They're singing words, but I have no idea what it's about. I've been
meaning to go down to the Ethiopian restaurant in Central Square where the guy
is really nice and ask if he minds listening."
If Gershon's attitude sounds more pop than ethnomusicologist "proper," that
would only make sense. In the early '80s, after graduating from Harvard with a
philosophy BA, he joined the local new-wave punk band the Sex Execs. "That was
like my graduate job. People graduate, go to work for a consulting firm, and
then go back for a graduate degree. The Sex Execs were my McKenzie and
Company."
Gershon hadn't even played with the Harvard Jazz Band ("I couldn't have made
that band at that point -- I couldn't read music well enough or play saxophone
well enough"), but by '84 he was at Berklee, studying the core curriculum. And
at a certain point, as his writing skills caught up with his ear, he felt the
need to get a rehearsal band together to try his arrangements. "I don't have
enough of an inner ear to spend years writing pieces and seeing them only on
paper -- I want the instant gratification."
A Monday-night rehearsal band developed around a group of Berklee and New
England Conservatory players, some of them quite a bit more experienced than
Gershon. "You couldn't ask for a better way to learn how to write," he says,
recalling the examples of Ellington and other bandleaders who enjoyed the
luxury of having a working ensemble to test pieces on. Although he says the
more experienced players were never "didactic" with him, "on a sort of
musical/emotional level they showed me what was right and what was wrong."
The trial-and-error of a live band was invaluable. "You start by thinking of an
idea and throwing it against the band, and then you adjust it just enough to
make it sound right but still leave in most of the eccentricity. I think if you
learn without hearing it, you're learning by the book, and you learn all the
rules so that you can make it sound totally right from the beginning, but then
you've short-circuited your eccentricity. Whereas I had this nice opportunity
to figure out how to change it just enough so that it was listenable -- or at
least some people would think it was marginally listenable -- and still leave
in most of the weird stuff that they wouldn't let you do if you were at
school."
In the early E/O gigs, Gershon also showed a flair for pop-marketing
strategies, touting "Tevee Night," "Summer Fashion Preview," and "Bill Walton
Night" with appropriate intermission features. In fact, the then Cambridge
resident and Celtic star Walton surprised everyone by actually coming to "Bill
Walton Night." And Gershon and his pals were serious enough jazzbos that they
wanted to get the music right. They had the open ears and the sense of humor to
hear connections between Monk and Bobbie Gentry, and the chops to play it
straight.
The E/O appeared at punk headquarters like the Rat as well as jazz clubs like
Ryles; it barnstormed the country on brutal tours, and on its way to a Grammy
nomination it even got an admiring review from jazz-critic doyen Leonard
Feather. Gershon now jokes that the E/O follows the Republican "big tent" model
of inclusiveness. "I feel like there are certain poles in our musical universe
that have to be respected: the Ellington/big-band pole, the free-jazz pole, the
groove pole, any number of others. Even though we're leaning now toward the
South American/African groove stuff, I think it's still important not to
whittle ourselves down but to keep a wide net."
Gershon has watched the band's style shift with the personnel over the years,
and the re-formation gave him a chance to determine the new sound from scratch.
"I wanted that bigger rhythm-section-to-horn proportion when I reconfigured the
band. I wanted to get groovier again, because I felt like we lost some of what
we had in the '80s when we had a four-piece rhythm section with John Dirac
playing guitar and Mike Rivard playing bass and Jerry Deupree on drums -- who
were all a bit more groove-oriented. Then we switched to Matt Wilson and Bob
Nieske, who were like a total jazz rhythm section -- jazz jazz jazz." It was
music Gershon loved playing -- and he, Hasselbring, and Nieske had written some
great, "compositional" charts. But when he brought the band back, he felt "we
needed the pendulum to swing the other way," to the point that they even
experimented with the two-bass idea.
The balance on the new album is remarkable, and no one is going to mistake the
new Either/Orchestra for the Greyboy All-Stars. "Basically our sound is what it
is, and we're not going to start sounding like an ABBA cover band, or even Deep
Banana Blackout, whatever they sound like." What's more, from his years on the
rock scene, and from his friendship with Sandman, Gershon knows what works with
different audiences and how to keep a rock audience from fleeing: no "swing"
jazz time ("ching-chinga-ding-chinga-ding"), no ballads with brushes, and, as
Sandman told him (here Gershon drops to Sandman's flat baritone), "one solo per
song."
Over its now close-to-15-year history, the Either/Orchestra has become its own
little scene. "Stars" like John Medeski and Matt Wilson have passed through its
ranks. Sandman was a regular visitor to gigs, even being featured on the E/O's
version of the Bing Crosby vehicle "Temptation." (Gershon is currently touring
with both the E/O and Orchestra Morphine.) The anniversary concert was a
stunning array of local and, now, national jazz talent. Meanwhile, Gershon's
record label, Accurate, released early albums by Medeski Martin & Wood and
Morphine and more recently Asa Brebner's new CD and the late Caleb Sampson's
soundtrack to Errol Morris's film Mr. Death.
And now, Gershon finds himself leading a band with at least two distinct
generations. "You know, these young guys in the band, their skills and their
command of the jazz language are so good for that age, and that's part of the
Wynton Marsalis `young lions' jazz-education world they've grown up in. Whereas
Charlie and Tom and me were more like stoners listening to records and
thinking, `Wow, that's great music,' and then it slowly occurred to us, `I want
to play that music' and having this burning, sort of revolutionary urge
that eventually had to find a vehicle." It's a dichotomy that's led to
interesting band discussions about music and politics -- the political
importance of personal choices. In a way, Gershon says, the different elements
of the band have influenced each other -- since it's always been the case that
"I feel like the band should have people teaching each other what they're good
at."
It will be interesting to see how this most heterogeneous of E/O collections --
generationally, musically, even ethnically -- unfolds over the next few
years.
"It's a funny thing," says Gershon. "It's so hard to find anybody who
can play in the band who is willing to commit to this crazy, eclectic,
low-paying gig that involves touring and getting severely close to losing your
day job -- if you have one -- when you go on the road. So I'm just really happy
to find anybody that's the musician and person to do it."
The Either/Orchestra plays the Central Square VFW Post, 288B Green Street in
Central Square, next Friday, March 31, at 9 and 11. Call 876-4600.