During this live recording of the Brass Fantasy at the Moonwalker Club in Aarburg, Switzerland,
Lester Bowie and his nonet go through many phases of jazz, funk, and progressive music. Old favorites of the Brass Fantasy are complemented by some new material. Arrangements are assigned to notables such as brother
Byron Bowie,
Steve Turre,
E.J. Allen, and
Earl McIntyre. Trumpeters
Lester Bowie,
Allen,
Gerald Brazel, and
Tony Barrero are joined by
Vincent Chancey on French horn,
Frank Lacy and
Luis Bonilla on trombone,
Bob Stewart on tuba,
Vinnie Johnson on drums (replacing
Phillip Wilson who was murdered in the streets of N.Y.C. weeks before this performance), and
Famoudou Don Moye on other percussions. Of the well-known pieces, there are non-vocal versions of the soul ballad "The Great Pretender" and the slow gospel dirge blues "For Louis" (
Armstrong) dedicated to
Wilson. Funk, in its myriad conjugations, rears up on the fun
Ray Charles number "Night Time," and on the harder, marching band-like
Michael Jackson tune "Remember the Time," as well as on
Jackson's hot-to-heavy dance tune "Black or White." The hard-driving Latin funk of
Bruce Purse's "Night Life" sports more soloing from
Allen,
Lacy, and
Lester. At their most fervently swinging,
Rahsaan Roland Kirk's "Three for the Festival" is a little ragged, but pretty hot featuring a solo from
Johnson.
Jimmie Lunceford's "Siesta for the Fiesta" is the surprise; it's a jumping chart with a funky edge and outer limits solos from
Chancey and
Bonilla. The heaviest pieces are "Strange Fruit" and
Allen's "Journey Towards Freedom." On the latter, a
Billie Holiday classic about a lynching in the south,
Bowie terms racism "the crime of the century" with an abstract intro leading to a solemn, hymn-like theme and a whip or pistol-shot sequence; the music tells stark tales of what has not changed, and all without speaking a word. The "Journey" is a heavy water experiment, a 6/8 strutting, juggernaut melody with a tuba ostinato that has a distinctly forward motion, counterpointed horns that call out/respond in loud symmetry, and a rather seriously wrought solo by
Stewart. A polyphonic coda concludes this stunning piece of modern creative music for the ages. The variations on themes and styles, and a sense of utter outrage, as well as good feelings toward those in their family and in the audience, earmark this session as one of the most important in the Brass Fantasy's history and development.
–
Michael G. Nastos, Rovi