| By now it
should be apparent that Charlie Hunter's career has long legs. The 32-year-old
eight-string guitarist has not only been churning out an album per year
since signing with Blue Note Records in 1995, but he has also consistently
thrown change ups into the mix of each outing-thereby insuring that each
recording has a freshness and vitality of approach that is the hallmark
of a successful artist. Based on past offerings, you can't accuse Hunter
of drifting into a zone of jazz stasis. With
his latest Blue Note release, self-titled, Hunter continues to explore
a breadth of expression-from funky dance floor grooves teeming with percussion
to stop-you-in-your-tracks balladry in a solo setting. He's invited some
old friends as well as new partners. It's his sixth recording for the
label and seventh overall as a leader. So what's new with Charlie this
time out? "This is the first record I've made without a steady band
and the first where I didn't adhere to the same concept all the way through,"
he says, while noting that this is also the first time he's been stumped
by a title. "I've been keeping self-titled as a backup all these
years just in case I couldn't come up with something good for my other
albums."
As in previous recordings,
Hunter tweaks the personnel list on this self-titled release. Returning
in fine form is the brilliant drummer Leon Parker who collaborated with
the guitarist on his Duo album (1999). The leader also enlisted two percussionists,
Robert Perkins and Stephen Chopek, and for several songs calls on the
services of trombonist Josh Roseman and tenor saxophonist Peter Apfelbaum
(the latter, like Hunter, an ex-San Francisco Bay Area noteworthy who
now lives in Brooklyn). This is first appearance of horns on a Hunter
album since 1997's Natty Dread, the re-envisioning of Bob Marley's classic
recording in the Blue Note Covers Series.
While in the planning
stages of the new disc, Hunter listened to his old albums. "What
I liked about them was that they all adhered to a strict concept,"
he says. "That was good because the listener wasn't subjected to
a mishmash effect. But this time out I decided to try a bunch of different
looks." The quick-witted Hunter, always ready to launch into an impromptu
metaphor to explain himself, talks hoop: "It's like a basketball
team coming down the court and running the same play everytime. It gets
pretty predictable. But if you structure your offense around your different
players-running a play for the center, then the next time focusing on
your shooting guard-then you've got a game."
Translated into jazz
lingo: Hunter played to the strength of his studio-forged band. What's
the difference between that and a mishmash? "You know, when you're
younger and you make your first record, you think it will be the only
album you'll ever make," Hunter says. "So, the temptation is
to try to fit everything you love into that one record. Even though I
made Untitled without a band per se, I still approached each song with
a band concept in mind."
Hunter has been one
of Blue Note's most popular artists since breaking in with 1995's Bing
Bing Bing!, a tenor saxophone-drum trio. He added an alto saxophone to
the mix for his next two recordings, Ready...Set...Shango! and the Bob
Marley cover project Natty Dread. He then threw a curve ball with The
Return of the Candyman (1998) when he retired the horn section and enlisted
vibes player Stefon Harris and percussionist John Santos to join him and
longtime drummer Scott Amendola in a new quartet called Pound For Pound.
Last year's Duo found Hunter scaling back to the rhythm basics with Parker.
(In addition to his own projects, Hunter found the time to contribute
to other albums, most notably pop star D'Angelo whose recently-released
Voodoo CD features Hunter on three tracks, two of which he shares co-writing
credit.)
Parker appears on
nearly every tune of self-titled which makes for a ready-made rhythm section
thanks to Hunter's eight-string ax, which allows him to play bass and
lead simultaneously. "Leon and I have played for a long time together,
so we have a continuity," says Hunter. "So the two of us provide
the pencil sketchings of the pieces so that the other players can come
in and apply shading and color."
Hunter opted for a
double barrage of percussion to give him a little distance from the drum
kit. "After playing with Leon and then Adam Cruz on tour, I didn't
know where to turn to find a drummer who was as special as both those
guys. So I decided to explore the wall-of-percussion possibilities to
get that big, wide-open sound with a lot of groove." As for the horn
players, Hunter says, "They played their asses off. All I had to
do was write out melody charts and they hit the tunes hard."
The album opens with
the catchy and very percussive number "Rendezvous Avec La Verité,"
a Hunter original that speaks of the truth. "This is something Adam
and I worked on while on the road. It's got a strong 6/8 groove."
As for its title, Hunter first chose "A Little 6/8," then went
with "One Outside the Deal" before finally settling on the French
title. "I was watching cable TV one night late," he explains,
"and I saw this show on Haitian Pentecostalism called 'Rendezvous
Avec La Verité.' I loved the name so I gave it to this number."
The horns get introduced
on the jaunty, upbeat "Two for Bleu," a tune Hunter wrote for
a friend who died last year of an aneurysm. That's followed by "Al
Green," a soulful muse on the soul man. "This tune reminds me
of Al Green. It has a slow groove that he could sing over. This is Leon
and me just playing in the studio and coming up with a tune from nowhere."
The tenor sax and
trombone take center stage again on the cooker "Nothin' But Trouble,"
that Hunter calls a "power tune for dancing and listening...that's
a straight up, stinky, gutbucket Texas shuffle." After the dance
groove ends, the intriguing number "Cloud Splitter" tip-toes
in. With its muted guitar notes and muted trombone lines, the tune comes
off as a hip, cool pop number. Apfelbaum, Hunter notes, likened the piece
to a giant green caterpillar.
Thelonious Monk's
classic tune "Epistrophy" is spiced with a percolating Latin
beat (it's another tune Hunter and Cruz arranged while on tour), a Hunter
original "Flau Flau" catches a blues groove and sails (the guitarist
says it reminds him of a "straight-up New Orleans funeral with a
little Albert King and a little funky gravestone tremolo") and "Dersu"
(first recorded as a ballad in 5/4 time on Hunter's 1996 Ready...Set...Shango
CD) is rendered in a funky vein by Hunter and Parker with the former soloing
over the latter's rhythms.
The album closes with
a striking solo guitar take on the Donny Hathaway pop classic "Someday
We'll All Be Free." It's a transcendent moment on the disc. Hunter,
best known for his groove jazz, proves again that his ballad playing is
one of jazz's best kept secrets (check out his stunning take on "You
Don't Know What Love Is" on Duo).
"Lately I've
been playing around with more solo guitar stuff," says Hunter. Does
this presage a future project? He's mum on the subject for now, but don't
count that out. There are many more surprising new turns ahead for Hunter,
who once again shows on self-titled that being plugged in creatively makes
for some mighty fine music.
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