- Glenn Siegel
- 19 minutes ago
There are artists content to make a life in music by mastering one particular sound or approach, and working it. Others - like Ches Smith, who brought his latest project, Clone Row, to the big barn at the Institute For the Musical Arts in Goshen, MA on October 4 - are explorers, always on the lookout for new musical challenges.
Featuring Mary Halvorson and Liberty Ellman (guitars), Nick Dunston (bass, electronics) and Smith (drums, vibraphone, electronics), Clone Row has enough current to conjure Ornette Coleman’s Prime Time, or the orbits of Jimi Hendrix and Sonny Sharrock. But because Ches Smith has such wide vision and ambition, this band has its own sound.
Marc Ribot, who wrote the liner notes for the new record, remarks that Smith’s latest endeavor is a composer’s project, and indeed the level of coordinated intricacy in the writing is remarkable. Electric instruments don’t need to breathe, and the sound world they created was dense, filled with non-stop vibrations. Smith sometimes provided two simultaneous rhythm streams: drum kit or vibes, alongside electronic beats. When the guitars shimmered and twined, and Dunston added additional electronic washes, the air became saturated with sound. We left dazzled and spent. Then, after a concert with little space between notes, we entered the October silence of a Goshen night.
Just as on the record, the concert bolted from the gate with “Ready Beat”, a driving fusillade that began and ended with some very tasty programming from Smith, and we were off and running. While the multi-threaded complexity of the music was sometimes staggering, the composer’s knack for writing ear-capturing melody and rhythm, the superb sound separation in the room, and the prodigious talent on stage, produced a deeply satisfying musical experience. We were witnessing something impressive and newly made.
Clone Row is Ches Smith’s latest project of distinction. His previous recording, Laugh Ash, is an extraordinary amalgam of contemporary classical, electronic and improvised elements, written for large ensemble. We All Break (2021), highlights Smith’s 20-year immersion in the music of Haitian Vodou. His trio, with newly minted MacArthur Fellow Craig Taborn and violist Mat Maneri (who was in town last week with Lucian Ban), has produced two “chamber-jazz” masterpieces on ECM and Pyroclastic. Then there is his long-running solo project which highlights his enduring interest in electronics and vibes. That's not to mention his singular contribution to Marc Ribot’s Ceramic Dog, Tim Berne’s Snakeoil and Secret Chiefs 3. Smith is as busy and productive as one person can be. He’ll be at the Iron Horse with Anna Webber’s Nonet in January and back in the Valley in May with Ralph Alessi’s Quartet.
Speaking of ambition, Smith put together a packed two week tour in support of the self-titled album, including performances at Edgefest (Ann Arbor), Earshot (Seattle), SF Jazz, Angel City Jazz (LA), and stops in Vancouver, Denver, Chicago, Portland and Minneapolis. Saturday’s western Massachusetts gig was second on their itinerary.
Ches Smith first met Halvorson in 1998 in Trevor Dunn’s Trio Convulsant, and the drummer knew Ellman from the Bay area, but despite their mutual admiration, the two guitarists had not worked together. Smith’s intuition to pair Ellman’s more conventional, R&B approach with Halvorson’s awkward bentness was prescient, producing streams of charged interaction.
Ellman, perhaps best known for his long tenure in Henry Threadgill’s Zooid, has made music with Myra Melford, Wadada Leo Smith, Butch Morris, Steve Lehman, Somi, Nicole Mitchell, Ledisi and Michele Rosewoman, and has released four highly regarded records as a leader on Pi Recordings. He served as producer and mixing engineer on Threadgill’s Pulitzer Prize winning record, In For a Penny, In For a Pound, and has engineering credits on albums by Sam Rivers, Art Ensemble of Chicago, Steve Coleman and Tyshawn Sorey. I first met him at UMass in 2004 when Vijay Iyer and Mike Ladd presented “In What Language”, and again with Jason Robinson’s Janus Ensemble in 2014. Now back on the west coast after time in New York, Ellman sightings are not as frequent as I’d like.
Like Smith, Halvorson is everywhere. Her concert in Holyoke last month with her sextet, Amaryllis, was a singular event. After she gets off the road with Clone Row, she takes her band to Europe for 14 dates; she was just on the Continent last month touring with Tomeka Reid’s Quartet. On the go and going places, Halvorson has won Guitarist of the Year honors in the DownBeat Critics Poll for the past nine years, and is a 2019 MacArthur Fellow.
Nick Dunston’s plate is also full. Ribot called him “my favorite bassist of the new generation.” I’m inclined to agree. At 29, he’s the youngster in the band, yet has seven releases as a leader, the latest of which is the Afro-surrealist-anti-opera COLLA VOCE. He holds the bass chair in Amaryllis, has been commissioned to compose for Wet Ink Ensemble, Bang On a Can and JACK Quartet, and has already worked with many of the most creative musicians on the planet. I met him eight years ago when he performed with Jeff Lederer, Mary LaRose, Joe Fiedler and George Schuller in Carol Smith’s backyard at a Jazz Shares party. Dunston went to school with Jeff and Mary’s daughter, Hallie.
It is a joy to watch outsized talent blossom in real time. May Ches Smith and his band of renowns continue to reap all the rewards for their good work.