Best
known for his work in the celebrated cooperative trio Minsarah (which he
founded with Florian Weber and Ziv Ravitz) and his seven-year tenure in the Lee
Konitz New Quartet, bassist and composer Jeff Denson has also led a highly
regarded quartet featuring Weber, Ralph Alessi, and Dan Weiss. Now
Denson is preparing to showcase other aspects of his virtuosity and exquisite
musicality with the April 15 release, by the San Diego-based pfMENTUM label, of
two very different duo albums, I'll Fly Away and Two. The discs provide a
fascinating window into Denson's vast range as an improviser.
A
singular collaboration with the powerhouse San Diego pianist Joshua White, I'll
Fly Away is an emotionally charged project devoted to hymns and spirituals. Two
is a melodically rich free improv session with the remarkable Swiss clarinet
virtuoso Claudio Puntin. In many ways the projects couldn't be more dissimilar,
but they're united by Denson's insistence that the bass can play any musical
role. "I
don't want to be tied down to being a function player," he says. "I
don't want to have to only play the role of the bass as a supportive root
function instrument. I love doing that, but I don't want to always have to do
that. Even in more straight-ahead situations I find ways to play melodies. I
want to be able to play textures. In a duo setting, there's a great deal of
freedom."
It's a
context perfectly suited to his interactive sensibility. "When you play in
duo you have 50 percent of the responsibility and you need to be 100 percent
committed to what you're doing if the music is going to travel and work and
move places," Denson says. "You're either connecting directly with
them or not. Everything they play, you must notice. But there are so many
options. Deciding not to go with them can be really exciting too."
The
sacred music project with White grew out of several hymns that Denson performed
at funerals for his father and his maternal grandmother who helped raise him,
including the title track, performed in three divergent renditions, and the
breathtaking solo arco version of "Amazing Grace." The session was
recorded in one day and all but one track is a first take, "a really good
demonstration of how we share and communicate and share musical aesthetics. We
are both really adventurous and take a lot of risks. I just wanted to do what
we do."
The
collaboration with Puntin had a very different genesis. It began, Denson writes
in his succinct notes for Two, "in Cologne, Germany in 2008, and ended two
years later on a rainy day in Berlin: two musicians, from two continents, two
years apart, on two different days, in two different cities, met and recorded
this music without discussion or plan . . . . " Investigating a wide array
of moods and textures, the music can be playful or threatening, innocent or
carnal. "We didn't talk about anything beforehand," says Denson.
"We turned the mics on and just played. The music is completely
improvised; the chord changes that appear are all spontaneous."
Jeff
Denson, 37, was born and raised in the Washington, DC area. He attended Berklee
(where Minsarah was formed), earned his Master's in jazz studies at Florida
State University, and relocated to Southern California to pursue his doctorate
(at UC San Diego) in contemporary music performance with an emphasis in
composition. Based since 2011 in the East Bay, he is a full professor at the
California Jazz Conservatory (formerly the Jazzschool Institute) and has forged
ties with some of the Bay Area's top players, including bassoonist Paul Hanson
and guitarist Mimi Fox.
A
prolific composer and arranger, Denson has written music for an array of jazz settings,
from big band to trio, as well as for string ensembles, solo bass, and a
chamber opera (which he plans to premiere in 2015). While New York City offered
a bustling life as a freelancer, Denson has found musical fulfillment on the
West Coast. "I
can make my living playing everybody else's music being a supportive player,
but I wasn't so interested in that," Denson says. "I'm most
interested in doing something unique musically by pushing my own work. And I
love teaching. So I can inspire people, and focus on what I want to do."
Joshua White and Jeff Denson Denson will be
working with his trio featuring Joshua White (far left) and drummer Jon Arkin
at the following West Coast CD release shows: 5/31 Red Poppy Art House, San
Francisco; 6/2 SOhO Restaurant and Music Club, Santa Barbara; 6/3 Jazz at the
CAP, Los Angeles; 6/4 The Loft at University of California San Diego, La Jolla;
6/7 Café Stritch, San Jose; 6/8 Duende, Oakland; and 7/25-26 Moody's Bistro,
Bar & Beats, Truckee. He'll also be performing with the Joshua White
Quintet 6/5 at the Del Mar (CA) Foundation.
Jeff
Denson's Secret World European Tour 2014, featuring trumpeter Cuong Vu, pianist
Alex Conde, and drummer Jon Arkin, is now being finalized for late October. The
quartet will be appearing in Heilbronn, Cologne, Osnabrük, and Dortmund,
Germany, among other cities. A European CD Release Tour for Denson's trio is
being scheduled for January 2015.