Guitarist John Scofield celebrates the music of his friend
and mentor Steve Swallow in an outgoing and spirited recording, made in an
afternoon in New York City in March 2019 - "old school" style as
Scofield says, acknowledging that more than forty years of preparation led up
to it. John was a 20-year-old student at Berklee when he first met and played
with bassist Swallow, and they have continued ever since, in many different
contexts.
"I love these songs", says Scofield of the
selection of Swallow compositions explored here – a broad range including tunes
that have become standards, as well as some lesser-known works. The rapport
between Scofield and Swallow is evident in every moment. John: "Sometimes
when we play it's like one big guitar, the bass part and my part
together."
Behind the drum kit, Bill Stewart is alert to all the
implications of the interaction. "What Bill does is more than ‘playing the
drums,'" Scofield says. "He's a melodic voice in the music, playing
counterpoint, and comping, while also swinging really hard." The guitarist
himself plays with fire and invention throughout: "These two giants bring
out the best in me."
Swallow's compositions, John notes, "make perfect
vehicles for improvisation. The changes are always interesting – but not too
interesting! They're grounded in reality with cadences that make sense. They're
never just intellectual exercises, and they're so melodic. They're all songs,
rather than ‘pieces'. They could all be sung."
Swallow Tales opens with "She Was Young", a tune
introduced on Steve Swallow's ECM album Home, in 1979, where it was indeed
sung, by Sheila Jordan. A number of the tunes addressed here – including
"Falling Grace", "Portsmouth Figurations", and
"Eiderdown" – belonged to the 1960s repertoire of Gary Burton's
groups. Scofield, who had admired them from the outset, studied them with
Burton and the composer in the early 1970s, by which point Swallow had made the
transition from double bass to bass guitar, creating a new voice for himself on
the electric instrument. When Scofield launched his own recording career,
Swallow was in his trio (with Adam Nussbaum on drums). Touring widely the
guitarist and the bassist fine-tuned their musical understanding, a process
continued in many other configurations over the years. Scofield appeared on
Steve's XtraWatt album Swallow in 1991, for instance, and Swallow is on
numerous Scofield recordings - including the recent Country For Old Men, which also
featured Bill Stewart. A close associate since the early 1990s, drummer Stewart
had played in John's quartet with Joe Lovano, and gone on to join the guitarist
in many journeys over varied musical terrain.
John Scofield has recorded for jazz labels including
Impulse, Blue Note, Verve, Emarcy and Gramavision. ECM appearances to date have
been infrequent but distinguished; they include two albums with Marc Johnson's
Bass Desires group – Bass Desires (recorded 1985) and Second Sight (1987) - in
which the guitarist shared frontline duties with Bill Frisell. On Shades of
Jade (2004), a third Marc Johnson album, Scofield is heard alongside frequent
colleague Joe Lovano. The live double album Saudades (recorded in 2004),
meanwhile, features Scofield as a member of Trio Beyond, alongside Jack
DeJohnette and Larry Goldings, reassessing the songbook of Tony Williams'
Lifetime. Swallow Tales is the first of his ECM recordings to feature the
guitarist as bandleader.
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