
October 16, 2012
SOMETHING ELSE BLOG
'LIFT' REVIEW
By Pico
That drummer
Scott Amendola must like a lot of the same kind of music that
I do, because his name comes up in the credits list of plenty
of records that I enjoy. A lot of that has to do with his close
association with Nels
Cline and being the drummer for the Nels
Cline Singers, but he also added his talents to previously
reviewed records by David
Witham and Sarah
Wilson. I can't leave out his participation in that ridiculously
underrated and ubercool funk-jazz supergroup of the 90s, T.J.
Kirk, either.
Guys that I keep stumbling across that many times on good records
really deserve their own damned articles, and the upcoming
release next Tuesday of the Scott Amendola Trio's newest album, Lift,
provides the excuse for doing that for Mr. Amendola.
Lift is Amendola's fifth overall record as a leader,
but the first one by his Scott Amendola Trio. Prior records
have been officially by "The Scott Amendola Band" and those
groups have included Cline and the superb violinist Jenny Scheinman.
The Trio is completed by John Shifflett on bass and Jeff Parker
on guitar. Shifflett is very steady, but it isn't beyond the
realm of his style to toss in a welcome change up or surprise
once in a while. Parker's name has popped up a few times on
this space, too, as a member of Chicago post-rockers Tortoise and
accompanying the late Fred
Anderson on a memorable gig of whack jazz bliss. No matter
what Parker does, he will always favor how something sounds
over what is the most technically difficult, preferring to
create meaningful shapes and paint the right tonal colors.
That also describes the style of his old Berklee classmate
of the late 80s, Amendola.
Amendola for his part doesn't make this a "drummer's" record,
only soloing briefly at the beginning of the first tune, "Tudo
De Bom," and then settles into his signature style of dispersing
his energy across the entire kit instead of going hard at one
part of it. The end result is that he fills up a lot of sonic
space, but in a light way. The easy, Latin groove of "Tudo" is
a great example of this, and you can find cushions of space
between Parker's pulsating guitar and Shifflett's melody-defining
bass lines. Amendola also likes to fiddle with electronics,
and they are introduced on the start-stop "Cascade," but they
play a secondary role in the whole makeup of the trio, adding
a little creepy element to certain songs, like this one. "Blues
For Istanbul" is a real gem, with everyone playing beautifully:
Amendola's gently circular drumming, Shifflett's in the pocket
bass improvising at the beginning, and Parker's soft tones
sounding like chimes.
"Death By Flower" is another standout track, not because it's
whack jazz (ok, maybe that has a little to do with
it being outstanding), but because it demonstrates so well
the chemistry among the three even when there is little melody
to work with. Amendola not only traces and reacts well to Parker's
moves during the parts where the unmetered theme is played,
but also during the rambunctious, skronk-storm in the middle
when Parker's fuzz guitar and thick electronic effects fill
up the void. The laid back, folk-ish title song is the perfect
contrast in demeanor, but like "Flower," the chords flow without
a care for timekeeping, affording Amendola a chance to play
brushes to provide accents instead. While none of the songs
fall firmly into the jazz category---it's called jazz almost
by default because there's no clear category for it---"The
Knife" could qualify as a bonafide rocker, and Shifflett invents
strong, booming bass lines for coming from an acoustic bass.
After hearing Scott Amendola provide intelligent and sophisticated
percussion on so many good records, I would be shocked if he
didn't make a good record on his own. After taking in Lift and
the eight Amendola compositions it contains, I remained unshocked.
.
<- BACK
|