The
influence of the late playwright and educator Donald Evans has always loomed
large over the Captain Black Big Band. Pianist and bandleader Orrin Evans named
the band for his father’s brand of pipe tobacco, the aroma of which always
announced his father’s presence in the house. The big band’s third album,
Presence, is a celebration of the warmth and spirit of the elder Evans, but
more importantly it’s quite simply a celebration – an approach to not only
music but life that Evans inherited directly from his parents.
Presence,
due out September 21 via Smoke Sessions Records, features a scaled-down
11-piece version of Evans’ long-running big band, recorded live at a pair of
venues in his hometown of Philadelphia: Chris’ Jazz CafĂ© (where the band made
its debut in late 2008) and South Jazz Parlor. The line-up features a core
group of collaborators that the pianist tends to refer to as “a family” or “a
village” more than a band. Most of the musicians on this recording have played
with Captain Black for years, while many of them have contributed compositions
and arrangements to the ensemble’s ever-growing book.
The album’s
cover art, drawn by a close friend, depicts the face of Donald Evans gazing
upon the band, his enlivening spirit embodied by the diversity and raucous
sense of joy that Captain Black always brings to the stage. “There was always a
party in my household,” Evans says. “I always looked forward to events at the
house, where guests would gather around the piano in our living room. That
leads into how I approach the Captain Black Big Band. I try to create that
party and to have people in the band that are fun seekers.”
That
pervasive sense of familial camaraderie shines through the music on Presence,
especially in the band’s smaller, tighter incarnation. The band’s downsizing
can be explained in part by practical considerations: it makes an easier fit
for their long-running stint on the intimate stage of Smoke Jazz & Supper
Club, for one. It’s also been easier to manage as Evans’ schedule has become more
crowded since joining The Bad Plus in January.
But the
11-piece band also represents a distillation of the larger ensemble, pared down
to a close-knit core of players that know each other very well, can navigate
the music with the spontaneity of a small band, and simply enjoy the experience
of sharing the stage together.
“I look for
something different in the Captain Black Big Band,” Evans says. “I look for the
ability and desire to be part of a family. I actually get disappointed
sometimes when other people don’t see the appeal of that. You have to be ready
and down to be a part of this. That all stems from what I saw growing up in my
household.”
The Captain
Black Big Band’s taut, boisterous energy bursts out of the gate with trombonist
David Gibson’s aptly-named “The Scythe.” The tune’s keen-edged theme evokes a
ferocious round of soloing from the composer as well as saxophonist Troy
Roberts, trumpeter Josh Lawrence and the leader, recently name “Rising Star
Pianist” in the 2018 DownBeat Critics’ Poll.
Robert’s
vigorous tenor leads the way into Eric Revis’ bracing “Question,” originally
recorded by Tarbaby, the collective trio that Revis and Evans share with
drummer Nasheet Waits. Evans opens John Raymond’s “Onward” with a meditative
intro that lends a spiritual overtone to the piece’s sense of inspirational
uplift, answered by the composer’s swelling trumpet solo, which soars ever
higher as it draws strength from the band’s powerful backing.
Evans’ own
“When It Comes” finds the band teasing out its raw edges, enjoying a playfully
tempestuous give and take. Raymond’s blustery solo rides the avalanche of Anwar
Marshall’s roiling rhythms, while Evans adds incisive interjections. Another
Evans original, the spring-loaded “Flip the Script” prompts a spirited dialogue
between Roberts and alto saxophonist Caleb Curtis. The surging groove of
Roberts’ “Trams” is established with an audience participation clap-along,
parrying the roaring horn thrusts of the tune.
Evans
tenderly establishes the mood for his own “The Answer,” while Lawrence’s
explosive title track, originally recorded on his own album Color Theory with
Evans in the band, ends the set on a characteristically vibrant note. All
that’s left is a brief, ramshackle reprise of “When It Comes” that sends
listeners off with the band’s rambunctious clamor in their ears.
“In all the
bands I lead, my concept is allowing for the unknown to happen,” Evans
concludes. “This is a real, raw and honest representation of what happened on
stage on those nights.”
Orrin Evans
and the Captain Black Big Band · Presence
Smoke
Sessions Records · Release Date: September 21, 2018
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