| Boston
Sunday Globe
November 22, 1998
City Weekly
ON THE RISE
Band's members, music in state of flux
Bassist
Mike Rivard is a pro. He's worked with a long list of top
names like Paula Cole, the Story, and Mark Sandman (of Morphine),
to name a few. When it came time to start his own band,
though, he faced a frustrating problem: How could he ever
include all the people he enjoyed playing with? So instead,
he formed a club.
"I call it Club d'Elf," says Rivard. "It's really a band
masquerading as a recurring night at a club. We provide
an interesting musical bed, and I bring in other musicians
so it is a different thing each time. This way I don't get
bored."
Club d'Elf runs loosely two Thursdays a month at the Lizard
Lounge in Cambridge. The core band comprises Rivard on bass,
Jerry Leake on tablas and percussion, Jere Faison on sampler,
and Erik Kerr on drums. The group lays down a hypnotic groove,
often incorporating elements of hip-hop, funk, electronica,
and free jazz as well as Moroccan and West African trance
traditions.
In the last year, eclectic players like Roger Miller (Binary
System, ex-Mission of Burma), John Medeski (of Medeski,
Martin, and Wood), saxophonist Dana Colley (of Morphine),
Brahim Fribgane (playing doumbek, an hourglass-shaped drum,
and oud, which resembles a lute, from Hassan Hakmoun's New
York-based Moroccan ensemble) and others have added their
sounds as guest artists.
"The idea is to develop a pool of musicians," says Rivard.
"You just have to play once, and from then on you are a
member."
While the sound of Club d'Elf is certainly esoteric and
unusual, Rivard doesn't feel the music is that far out of
the mainstream.
"People's ears are opening up to new sounds," he says. "And
there is something to be said for having this kind of groove,
trance, and electronica done live. Groups like the Chemical
Brothers, when they play live, are just a couple guys up
there with samplers. We give people something to look at."
There
is also a fairly unusual experimental approach to the use
of non-Western sounds, mixing elements as seemingly disparate
as Gnawan mystical sufi from Morocco with Indian classical
music.
"It's all about finding the parallels, the common trance
elements in music from different parts of the world," says
Rivard. While mostly instrumental, depending on the guest
artist, Club d'Elf has also worked with singers, such as
Paul Stiller, formerly of the a cappella group Vox One,
who likes to experiment with heavily ambient electronic
effects added to his voice, and Sandman, whose low key style
of singing is distinctive in any context.
-David Wildman
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