Like his most famous
employer, Miles Davis, John Scofield has had his own classic
band eras. With Bill Stewart, Marc Johnson, and Joe Lovano
he used his distinctive playing and compositional skills
to bring a freshness to the sound of the straight-ahead
jazz quartet; and on his 1987 Pick Hits Live, he and cohorts
Dennis Chambers, Gary Grainger, and Robert Aries used
a piercing intelligence to temper fusion's athletics.
His more recent funk efforts have suffered; some from
the sensitive but "grease"-deficient work of
Larry Goldings and some from a general excess of politeness.
Bump was an interesting, if tepid, foray into modern hip-hop
grooves, but hitting the road in front of the Phish/MMW
crowd has forged that sound and his road band into something
to be reckoned with. It is no accident that Uberjam is
credited to the John Scofield Band; the title tune was
created by the members over three years of road dates.
Far from being a pastiche, it demonstrates the cohesive
unit that this group has become. Whether it is rhythm-guitar
wiz Avi Bortnick adding Indian samples to Jesse Murphy's
dub bass on "Acidhead," or former Average White
Band drummer Adam Deitch laying in the phat-ist of phat
grooves, it is apparent that Scofield has come up with
another classic ensemble--one well equipped to take jazz
into the 21st century.
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