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The State of The Saxophone Trio: Dan Moretti, Domenic Landolf, Jacob Duncan

By
C. MICHAEL BAILEY,
C. Michael Bailey

C. Michael Bailey

Senior Contributor since 1997

...wants to know if Gene Harris is playing "Summertime" in Heaven...

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Published: August 16, 2010

There is something Baroque about jazz ensembles lacking a piano or guitar as a harmony instrument . Their absence frees previously occupied sonic space for other uses. The format also sets up a more pronounced contrapuntal interplay between the remaining players. The saxophone trio has become quite mainstream since Sonny RollinsSonny Rollins Sonny Rollins
b.1930
saxophone
blew into the Village Vanguard in 1957 and set New York on its ear. Here are three recent offerings showing just how far the saxophone trio has evolved since evolved.

Dan Moretti
Tres Muse
Foundations Jazz Records
2009

Berklee College of Music brainiac saxophonist Dan MorettiDan Moretti Dan Moretti
, produces a New Orleans-flavored tenor trio recording that shows how far the format has come. Tres Muse is tightly arranged, featuring precision unison playing between the three operatives and the harmony underpinnings to allow soloists broad latitude. Rather than freedom increasing entropy, Moretti specializes in a more controlled chaos.

Moretti composed all of the 11 tunes on the disc. These are mostly air pieces in spite of their regimented structure featuring Marty BallouMarty Ballou Marty Ballou
often strumming electric bass chords among his harmony-rhythm duties. Drummer Marty Richards is always close in the mix, following Ballou. Moretti's landscape includes the razor staccato of "Cajun The Squirel" and the sharp R&B of "Mumbo Jumbo" where he summons enough Hank CrawfordHank Crawford Hank Crawford
1934 - 2009
sax, alto
for bona fide funk. Moretti's tenor tone is slightly raspy, more Ben WebsterBen Webster Ben Webster
1909 - 1973
sax, tenor
than Stan GetzStan Getz Stan Getz
1927 - 1991
sax, tenor
.

Ballou proves melody minded on his bass solo in "Invoke" and Richard sets up some island drumming on Moretti's equivalent to Rollins' "St. Thomas"—"Guacamaya." The allusion is apt and comparison there. The most free piece on the disc is appropriately named "Ready Set Free" and channels the gentle spirit of Jimmy GiuffreJimmy Giuffre Jimmy Giuffre
1921 - 2008
clarinet
's "Free Fall." Moretti is a solidly grounded saxophonist and composer set to do greater things.

Visit Dan Moretti on the web.

Jacob Duncan/John Goldsby/Jason Tiemann
The Innkeeper's Gun
Bass Lion Music
2010

Alto saxophonist Jacob Duncan has got a wilder hair driving him that Dan Moretti. Duncan likes sharp edges and acute bends in his music. "Legeti Split" honors the spirit of Hungarian composer Gyorgy Ligeti (1923-2006) with an ill-behaved, John ColtraneJohn Coltrane John Coltrane
1926 - 1967
saxophone
-sque romp through a cacophonous solo section where Duncan, bassist John GoldsbyJohn Goldsby John Goldsby
b.1958
bass
and drummer Jason Tienmann all go their separate ways musically. This spirit of release and freedom characterizes the disc.

The singe cover is Lady Gaga's "Paparazzi," which is great melodic fun, but is merely a vehicle for musical mayhem, as "My Favorite Things" was for Coltrane. Duncan's tone is tighter than that of Moretti, partially because of the tonal difference between the two saxophones and also because Duncan favors a more focused tone. Duncan also favors the saxophone-drums showdown that Coltrane liked to have with Elvin JonesElvin Jones Elvin Jones
1927 - 2004
drums
. This is reflected most in "Never Come Back to Me" and even affords Goldsby a Paul ChambersPaul Chambers Paul Chambers
1935 - 1969
bass, acoustic
-like arco solo.

Duncan's sax trio offering is compelling though not necessarily ground breaking. But there is plenty of post bop to still be mined, and he has gotten a good start. The Innkeeper's Gun is a respectable addition to this newer tradition.

Visit Jacob Duncan, John Goldsby and Jason Tiemann on the web.

Domenic Landolf
New Brighton
Pirouet Records
2010

Munich-based Pirouet Records is trying to carve out a place between fellow citizens Winter & Winter and ECM Records. Things are getting crowded in town. Pirouet may well be the most jazz-oriented of the three, ECM living on an etheral sonic reputation well earned, and Winter & Winter specializing in all manners of progressive musical expression. Swiss reedsman Domenic Landolf plants his flag halfway between the two labels and Dan Moretti and Jacob Duncan.

Like Moretti, Landolf likes tightly scripted arrangements, but not at the expense of space and his bandmates, bassist Patrice Moret and drummer Dejan TerzicDejan Terzic Dejan Terzic
, who share in the composing credits for the disc's 12 originals. When not playing tenor saxophone, Landolf plays the mellowest of instruments, the bass clarinet, which he does sweetly and thoughtfully on the ensemble piece "Storm Chaser" and Moret's "Fjord." He switches to alto flute for the plaintive "W.E." and "Kululeka."

The sole standard is a brief "My Old Flame," played on tenor barely tethered to the rhythm section. Landolf is as tender as Coltrane with a ballad, which is to say not at all, but the piece works as a sonic cab driving down urban back streets at night. That is the kind of music Landolf makes.

Visit Domenic Landolf on the web.


Tracks and Personnel

Tres Muse

Tracks: Off The One; Cajun the Squirel; Mumbo Jumbo; Fais Do-do; The Whisper; Invoke; Guacamaya; The Corner; Walk The Talk; Ready Set Free; Leelander.

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