| Northeast
Performer
September 1998
Club D'elf, 1st set
Lizard Lounge
Cambridge, MA July 30th, 1998
The "All Star Game" Effect - First observed in certain
high-energy fusion groups of the '70s, this phenomenon typically
occurs when a collection of highly talented individual musicians
play together in an open ended format. Its
results resemble that of a basketball all star contest,
where the individual members display brilliant moments but
lack the togetherness that makes the performance special.
This
is the danger of a night like this. It sounded like a dream.
Boston based bass guru Mike Rivard assembles some of the
area's master musicians - whirlwind Jerry Leake on tablas
and percussion, eclectic electric violinist Mat Maneri,
groove meister Erik Kerr, effect aficionado Paul Stewart
- along with New York's finest, John Medeski and DJ Logic,
and immerses them in a trancy cesspool. All of this smolders
at the Boston area's most happening venue. The night promised
a musical depth and virtuosity that Boston clubs rarely
see - and a potential all-star Game.
The
winds that carry the names Medeski and Logic travel fast.
An hour before the performance's start, a line of 70 people
already stretched back down the sidewalk. The dim swankiness
of the Lizard Lounge pulsed with a hundred or so people,
all jockeying for tables and optimal viewpoints. The stage
area was impressive - tablas, shakers, keyboards, effects,
upright bass, drumset, turntables, samplers. Anticipation
-- and heat - hung heavily in the air.Rivard led his troops
to their instruments and quickly addressed the All Star
Game issue. First a looped bassline, played with mallets.
Then a sample appeared, joined by other atmospheric elements
from Medeski, Leake, Logic, Maneri, Hall and Stewart. And
there it was - a trancy cesspool, nothing extraneous or
outstanding, proficiency showing itself off musically instead
of technically. Kerr steps in with appropriate funkiness.
The sporadic fill whipped past and landed smack on beat
one, no over the barline craziness that would detract stylistically.
Medeski
proved his draw, sliding strange chords into the wash. He
would drop an obtuse chord voicing and change the character
of the song. Early in the night, when the playing was uneasy
and everyone was still feeling each other out, a Medeski
solo raked the air and put enough energy behind the band
to solidity the performance. Add DJ Logic to the mix, who
would spin the perfect thing at the perfect time at the
perfect volume. Again, whereas either player could have
decided to dominate the evening, they added themselves tastefully
into the music.
There was a definite progression in the playing as the night
rolled along. The beginning saw Kerr settling into the looped
samples, Rivard adjusting to his "conducting persona," Maneri
(who blistered several solos throughout the set) tiptoeing
into the fray. By the midnight hour, they'd swung, stomped
and thoroughly rocked.
-jonathan babu
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