Freddie Bryant Dreamscape GJK Sounds #0011 |
Guitarist Freddie Bryant has released a new album that is as much a celebration of his
fine guitar virtuosity as it is a dedication to his Mother, the great operatic soprano
Beatrice Rippy Hollister, who passed away in 2012. A picture of Bryant’s parents grace the inside sleeve of the album
in soft sepia tone. Mrs. Hollister toured
around the world with her husband the pianist Carroll Hollister before dedicating
her life to education at the Third Street Music Settlement, the Henry Street Music
Settlement and the Harlem School of the Arts. She was known for her effortless
lyricism in such memorable performances as Serena in a touring production of Gershwin’s
Porgy and Bess, as Mimi in La Boheme and as Nedda in I Pagliacci. With such a formidable musical legacy it
is no wonder that the apple has not fallen far from the tree.
Dreamscape is a
delightful album that is lyrical, moving and interesting. Armed with an array
of guitars that include an acoustic nylon six-string, a twelve-string, an arch top
and a solid-bodied electric guitar, plus the talent to explore the nuances of
each, Mr. Bryant presents a tour de force of tasteful musical expression
with a style that blurs the lines of classical, Flamenco, Brazilian, Middle Eastern music, blues and jazz.
Joined by the impeccable talents of multi-reedist Chris
Potter and bassist Scott Coley, Bryant opens the album with his evocative composition
“Dreamscape.” The song features a finger-picked
twelve-string vamp over which Potter plays the most gorgeously light soprano solo
musings that I’ve heard in a long time. Bryant overdubs a probing electric guitar
solo as Colley lays down big plump bass lines in deft accompaniment.
On “Vignette #1” bassist Colley finds simpatico with Bryant’s sensitive nylon
guitar work, using both arco and pizzicato techniques in this Bryant composition, a song reminiscent of the work Pat Metheny did with bassist Charlie Haden on Missouri Sky. “Vignette #2” is a more
upbeat duo with Colley, with Bryant on electric guitar. The two trade rapidly
developing musical ideas while maintaining an inherent swing.
The trio re-enters on Bryant’s “Songs” with Potter taking up
the bellowing tones of the bass clarinet and Bryant on arch top guitar. The
composition leads off with a blues-based riff that then morphs into a hymn-based melody
that could easily be heard as part of a Sunday service. Potter explores the
timbres of the woody bass clarinet on his heartfelt solo, as Bryant and Colley
provide the subtle rhythmic core upon which he builds.
Bryant and Potter work as a duo on the traditional spiritual
“I’m Going to Tell God All My Troubles.” Potter continues with the bass clarinet for this heartfelt
rendition arranged by Bryant. Bryant
employs the soft sensitive sound of his nylon string guitar to play a nuanced
rhythm, over which Potter plays a stirring solo. Potter’s work is warm and reverent,
showing just how soulful this usually powerhouse of a player can be when given
inspired material. This is an emotionally charged song for Bryant, as the same
song is rendered by Bryant’s mother and father from their 1974 appearance at
Alice Tully Hall as the closing track of the album.
The trio takes on Bryant’s shifting “Every Day is the End
and the Beginning of Life Beautiful…” which features Potter on his more
familiar driving tenor and Bryant on electric guitar. The group negotiates the changes
with precision and aplomb.
Freddie Bryant photo by Elmar Lermes |
Despite the brilliant interplay throughout the album it is
Bryant’s solo work that showcases the artist’s prodigious talent. Bryant’s solo
guitar is inventive and pristine on such classic songs like Monk’s “Ask Me Now”
and Mingus’s “Goodbye Pork Pie Hat.” The guitarist demonstrates his affinity
for the self-accompanied solo guitar genre most identified with the great Joe
Pass’s album Virtuoso from 1973. In
many respects this is Bryant’s virtuoso performance. His styles are diverse and
accomplished. He explores a Flamenco style on Bruno Martino’s “Estate” and on
Sammy Fain’s “Secret Love” Bryant employs loops to play against himself. On his
own composition “Serenade” Bryant’s nylon strings ring with warmth and
sensitivity as he demonstrates his ability to accompany himself with a vibrato lead
that hovers over his rhythm like a hummingbird’s wing’s over a flower. Bryant
shows his funkier side on Herbie Hancock’s “Watermelon Man,” but this man’s
strength is in lyricism and beauty. “Fantasia
on a Theme by Charlie Haden for Turiya” and Haden’s “Silence” are beautifully
rendered in a Spanish style that is evocative of red-tiled roofs and stucco
walled haciendas.
Dreamscape is a celebration of virtuosity and lyricism as well as a dedication to the spirit of a mother’s musicality, from a son who was inspired to find his own musical voice.
While not from this album here is a sample of Freddie's playing :
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