In
recent years, as the breadth of drummer, composer and
bandleader Jerry Granelli’s work has expanded,
so has his profile as a recording artist.
Granelli’s long-standing fascination with words
led to the 1993 jazz instrumental CD A
Song I Thought I Heard Buddy Sing, inspired
by Michael Ondaatje’s experimental novel about
Buddy Bolden, Coming Through Slaughter. His
latest recorded collaboration with producer Lee Townsend, Sandhills
Reunion is a multi-layered interweaving of words
and music that can best be described as audio cinema.
It features music by Granelli and this bandmates with
vocals and spoken text written and performed by actor/playwright/singer
Rinde Eckert. The band members are Francois Houle (clarinet),
Jeff Reilly (bass clarinet), David Mott (baritone sax),
Christoph Both (cello), Christian Kögel (electric
and acoustic guitars) and J. Anthony Granelli (bass,
lap steel guitar). It has been released on the Canadian
label, Songlines.
"With "Sandhills Reunion" Granelli
and a new ensemble of past musical collaborators mix
a variety of musical approaches with the reflections,
imaginings and internal dialogues of actor/playwright/singer
Rinde Eckert. The recording highlights the strengths
of both, but is best experienced by taking in everything
as a whole."
"Much as films like "Koyanisqaatsi" have
created new ways of experiencing music and the visual
medium, "Sandhills Reunion" aims to find
a new confluence of music and the spoken word. Eckert's
musings are, at times allegorical and enigmatic, at
other times crystal clear. The writing is captivating,
loosely tied together through the Sandhills of Nebraska
and the character of Billy the Kid."
"Granelli solicits music from each member of
the septet, and the result is a diversity of styles
that includes the ambient/new music sensibility of "River
of Glass," the Middle Eastern inflections of "Our
Particular Tragedy," the light funk of "Your
Voice,² the raunchy blues of "Just Angels," the
Americana of "Last Light," and the unabashed
folk of "Spun Like a Spur." When combined
with Eckert's poetry, the result is a unified work
that takes the listener on a vivid journey down a number
of paths that, in the end, ultimately seem to converge
at the same place."
"Granelli is the director
of what is almost an audio film in its vivid visual
evocation... creating a soundtrack, an aural travelogue
that takes Eckert's writing and orchestrates it into
an even broader context."
""Sandhills Reunion" works because
both musical and poetic elements are strong unto themselves,
and when placed together they successfully elevate
each other beyond their respective boundaries." ~
John Kelman, AAJ
"Sandhills Reunion is unlike anything I've heard,
but the mood it draws--going back more than thirty
years--is the same as that of Bob Dylan's 'John Wesley
Harding' or the Band's 'The Band': odd, folksy, sometimes
surreal tales, very American in nature, told with a
simple eloquence entwined with superb yet understated
musicianship. An odd, poignant masterpiece." -
Dan McClenaghan, AAJ
Eckert’s text is a glancingly-linked sequence
of reflections, imaginings, internal monologues and one
historically accurate dialogue (“Twenty Questions
for an Outlaw”) using the persona of Billy the
Kid as a thematic touchstone and the Sandhills region
of northwestern Nebraska as the landscape of memory and
desire. By turns rowdy, comic, ironic, nostalgic, angry
and melancholy, it presents the unnamed speaker’s
psyche in the context of American reality and myth (complete
text is included in the booklet). The music, composed
and played by a newly formed ensemble of trusted Granelli
collaborators, counterpoints and boldly colors the words
with its timbres and rhythms. It conjures up its own “locations” within
the band’s collectively imagined synthesis of blues,
jazz, rock, funk, the popular and the more esoteric music
of the 20th century – from raunchy bars to uptown
refinement, chamber music to the avant-garde. From the
band’s first performance to making the final synthesis
of music and text took 3 ½ years. Jerry comments: “I
knew that to get the sound I wanted we’d need Lee
Townsend to produce the work. We agreed upon an overall
concept, basically recording it like shooting a film – just
gathering material, then putting it all together in the
mix. I asked the members of the band to write – not
specifying what to write, but implying what I was hearing.
I didn’t write a lot of music myself but was kind
of the vision holder. The musicians never heard any texts.
Part of the reason for this is that we wanted the music
to stand alone, not as a servant to the words. The idea
was that we would have two strong elements that come
together to produce a third thing, a transcendent new
form..”
Rinde adds: “I had just come back from a residency
in Nebraska when I started to write. Images of the Sandhills
were still fresh, in particular the roundup and branding
in which I’d taken part. I remembered my boyhood
fascination with cowboys. But, of course, I was out of
place. I suppose the appearance of Billy the Kid in that
prairie heartland could be seen as a metaphor for my
own youthful memories and my enduring sense of alienation
and dislocation in this culture. Whatever the nature
of the psychological ground, this poetic conceit was
fertile. I could imagine a rancher, in his proper place,
at home with his wife, his responsibilities, his particular
fate, dreaming of a kind of powerful other self, at home
in the world, errant, romantic, or alien. This irony
seems consistent with the music, with its urbane wit
and its kind of formal simplicity and beauty.”
Throughout the 1990’s, Granelli
lead his own quartet, UFB with which he collaborated
on three recording projects with Townsend - Broken
Circle, News
From The Street and Rinde
Eckert Story
In, Story Out. For Granelli this group represented
the completion of a musical circle from a number of standpoints.
He enlisted young Berlin guitarists, Kai Bruckner , and
Christian Kögel and bassist Andreas Walter to explore
and develop his own personal combination of such pop
styles as blues, funk, jazz and rock through grooves
and improvisation.
"There's no better way for a veteran jazz drummer
like Jerry Granelli to stay fresh than to surround himself
with a youthful band well-versed in the idiom but also
groomed in rock, blues and funk. Then again, there's
no better mentor for aspiring young musicians than a
seasoned session ace like Granelli who has logged time
since the early '60's with a wide variety of artists,
ranging from Ornette Coleman to Mose Allison. It's no
surprise then that Granelli's latest project as a leader
- an adventurous collaboration with Berlin-based guitarists
Kai Bruckner and Christian Kogel and bassist Andreas
Walter - is such a success, " wrote Dan Ouellette
in CD Review.
The impulse for the watershed Broken Circle is strongly
based on the written word, in this case words by and
about the first peoples of the North American continent.
Like UFB's first CD, News
From The Street, Broken
Circle uses material from well outside the jazz
genre, including Peter Gabriel and Prince.
Of Broken Circle,
Jerry Granelli writes, "The music that we have put
together with producer Lee Townsend draws its inspiration
from aspects of Native American culture that have influenced
me over the last 25 years. For this project, I have written
a suite of original instrumental music in which I hope
we have captured part of the spirit of this culture.
We have complemented this suite with pieces by guitarists
Kai Bruckner and Christian Kögel, as well as carefully
selected songs by John Coltrane, Charles Mingus, Prince
and Peter Gabriel. The music of these four composers
has a common thread of honesty and 'realness' that we
believe works with the spirit of the original music.
"For the CD package, we have gathered the living
words of Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse as well as excerpts
from writings by such contemporary voices as N. Scott
Momaday, Mari Sandoz and Peter Matheissen - all of which
we have found to be particularly illuminating in combination
with the music to convey the powerful and tragic story
of this great civilization. The element which ties together
the past and present for us is the work of the renowned
Native American painter Fritz Scholder , who has kindly
allowed us to incorporate four of his spectacular
paintings into the package design.
"And finally, from a purely musical standpoint,
I feel that this record is a step forward on the path
of UFB as a guitar-based improvising ensemble, with the
goal of transcending the theme-solo-solo-theme format.
For this I am very grateful to my colleagues, Kai Bruckner,
Christian Kogel, Andreas Walter and Lee Townsend."
The quartet's first recording, News
From The Street, features Granelli originals
as well as compositions by Jimi Hendrix, Little Village
(John Hiatt, Ry Cooder, Nick Lowe & Jim Keltner),
Gatemouth Brown, Thelonious Monk, Bruce Hornsby and Rinde
Eckert. The music is energetic, often funky, and as with
most of Granelli's work, it never drifts far from the
improvisatory spirit of the blues.
The formation of UFB followed a period where Granelli
worked with a quintet of Jane Ira Bloom (soprano saxophone),
Julian Priester (trombone), Anthony Cox (bass) and David
Friedman (vibes and marimba). Their 1994 recording, Another
Place, also produced by Townsend, is a fine
example of Granelli's seamless approach to composition
and improvisation.
But Granelli's interest in guitar-based instrumentation
first materialized in 1975 when he put together a two-guitar
ensemble called “Visions”. It was not until
1994, however, that Jerry's affinity for such instrumentation
reached a creative peak on his landmark album A
Song I Thought I Heard Buddy Sing. In conceiving
the album, Granelli was inspired by the book , Coming
Through Slaughter by Michael Ondaatje, which is
a personal reflection on the life of the legendary New
Orleans trumpet player of the 20's, Buddy Bolden. A Song
I Thought I Heard Buddy Sing is a collection of blues-based
jazz pieces - related thematically and stylistically
but in various fresh and mutated forms. Although the
CD is not in any way a literal adaptation, the book did
serve as the unifying factor behind the music developed
for the recording. Excerpts from the Coming Through
Slaughter which loosely correspond to the group's
musical interpretations are featured in the liner notes.
Available on the ITM label in Europe and the Evidence
label in the U.S., the album features guitarists Bill
Frisell and Robben Ford along with Kenny Garrett, Julian
Priester and Anthony Cox. It proved to be an ingeniously
modern melding of blues and contemporary jazz by some
of today's most inventive improvisers. Musician called
it "the most thoughtful fusion inquiry in ages." The
album, produced by Townsend, was awarded the German Critics'
Record Prize.
Although the Buddy album
was his first high-profile recording project as a leader,
Granelli's reputation in the jazz community had long
been established. He first received attention in the
60's as a member of Vince Guaraldi 's group and then
later as the rhythm-section mate of Charlie Haden in
the Denny Zeitlin Trio. A San Francisco native, Jerry
was once active as a session drummer, playing on a number
of hit records of the 60's and 70's. Over the years Jerry
has also frequently worked with Mose Allison. Regarded
as the star pupil of legendary drum master Joe Morello
, Granelli spent much of the 70's and early 80's concentrating
on teaching in various innovative and respected music
programs - Seattle's Cornish Institute, The Naropa Institute
in Boulder, Colorado and The Conservatory in Halifax,
Nova Scotia.
In the mid-80's, Granelli returned to active recording
and performing first in a trio with Ralph Towner and
Gary Peacock and also with the group Quartett featuring
vocalist Jay Clayton, Julian Priester and bassist Peacock.
Their CD is available on New Albion. Granelli has gained
a strong reputation for his work with singers. He has
collaborated with Rinde Eckert on two albums Finding
My Way Home and Story
In, Story Out; and has worked closely for many
years with Clayton. Other Granelli recordings include “One
Day at a Time” and “Koputai” (ITM)
feature Ralph Towner, Robben Ford, Charlie Haden and
Julian Priester and Forces of Flight is a duo recording
with bassist Glen Moore (ITM). Only recently, he left
his long-standing position as music professor at the
Hocshule der Kunst in Berlin.
More recently the prolific bandleader has released
a string off impressive improvisationally-oriented
albums with colleagues from New York, Berlin and Halifax.
The “V16
Project” features guitarists David Tronzo and Christian
Kögel and long-time collaborator Anthony Cox on
bass. Music Has its Way With Me (1999) features
Kögel (guitar), Jamie Saft (keyboards), Jerry's
son and frequent collaborator J. Anthony Granelli (bass)
and DJ Stinkin' Rich on vocals and truntables. Jerry's
group Badlands, featuring Saft, J. Anthony Granelli and
horn players Briggan Krauss, Chris Speed, Peter Epstein
and Curtis Hasselbring have released two albums on the
Canadian label Songlines – Crowd Theory (1999)
and Enter a Dragon (1998).
Quotes & Reviews
"After returning to the jazz scene with two extraordinary
albums, drummer Jerry Granelli reveals a bluesier, pop-rock
side with his Berlin-based UFB band. On the recent "News
From the Street," he reinvents tunes by Hendrix,
Bruce Hornsby, Gatemouth Brown, Rinde Eckert, and others
in a fusion that retains both the jazz freedom and the
earthy grounding of his impeccable percussion." -
The San Francisco Bay Guardian
"Jerry Granelli's group's version of 'Rainbow's
Cadillac' is one of the best covers, maybe the best cover,
of a song of mine that I've heard. They really took the
song and made it their own. A really clever arrangement,
and everybody in my band, a bunch of really tough critics,
loved it, for instance. So, well done, and we are really
pleased to be a part of this." - Bruce Hornsby
"This quartet is clearly on the edge of contemporary
music, with its highly inspired, often subtle, and ultimately
satisfying fusion of bop, blues and funk." - East
Bay Express Weekly (Berkeley, CA)
" News From The Street spans Granelli's musical
roots and long affection for Delta-flavored blues, with
tunes from Bill 'Honky Tonk' Doggett, Ry Cooder, and
Clarence 'Gatemouth' Brown set against more contemporary
artists: Jimi Hendrix, Rinde Eckert, and Bruce Hornsby.
Doggett's jump-blues 'Honey Boy' begins the disc with
a funky hook, layered with skittery electric guitars
and fat bass, backlit by Granelli's crystalline drumming;
Cooder's 'Big Love' pairs acoustic and electric guitars
drenched in steamy bayou ambiance; and Eckert's translucent,
porcelain waltz, "Ellen Waltzing," is an exquisite
piece of wistful, Bill Evans-style romance. Throughout
'News' Granelli's sparse, delicate drumming shines in
thoughtful, inspired meditations and shifting dynamics
of resonant phrasing, rhythmic execution, and masterful,
precision timekeeping." - Jazziz
"[Granelli is] one of the most tasteful and melodically
oriented drummers heard here in years." - The Boston
Globe
Quotes & Reviews
"After returning to the jazz scene with
two extraordinary albums, drummer Jerry Granelli reveals
a bluesier, pop-rock side with his Berlin-based UFB band.
On the recent "News From the Street," he reinvents
tunes by Hendrix, Bruce Hornsby, Gatemouth Brown, Rinde
Eckert, and others in a fusion that retains both the
jazz freedom and the earthy grounding of his impeccable
percussion."
- The San Francisco Bay Guardian
"Jerry Granelli's group's
version of 'Rainbow's Cadillac' is one of the best
covers, maybe the best cover, of a song of mine that
I've heard. They really took the song and made it
their own. A really clever arrangement, and everybody
in my band, a bunch of really tough critics, loved
it, for instance. So, well done, and we are really
pleased to be a part of this."
- Bruce Hornsby
"This quartet is clearly
on the edge of contemporary music, with its highly
inspired, often subtle, and ultimately satisfying
fusion of bop, blues and funk."
- East Bay Express Weekly (Berkeley, CA)
" 'News From The Street' spans Granelli's musical
roots and long affection for Delta-flavored blues,
with tunes from Bill 'Honky Tonk' Doggett, Ry Cooder,
and Clarence 'Gatemouth' Brown set against more contemporary
artists: Jimi Hendrix, Rinde Eckert, and Bruce Hornsby.
Doggett's jump-blues 'Honey Boy' begins the disc with
a funky hook, layered with skittery electric guitars
and fat bass, backlit by Granelli's crystalline drumming;
Cooder's 'Big Love' pairs acoustic and electric guitars
drenched in steamy bayou ambiance; and Eckert's translucent,
porcelain waltz, "Ellen Waltzing," is an
exquisite piece of wistful, Bill Evans-style romance.
Throughout 'News' Granelli's sparse, delicate drumming
shines in thoughtful, inspired meditations and shifting
dynamics of resonant phrasing, rhythmic execution,
and masterful, precision timekeeping."
- Jazziz
"[Granelli is] one of the
most tasteful and melodically oriented drummers heard
here in years."
- The Boston Globe