In Chicago, musicians with any type of connection to jazz's avant-garde continue to wear the name Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM) like a badge of honor -- and with good reason. The AACM, since the '60s, has been having a profound influence on avant-garde jazz by favoring space rather than density and offering a contemplative, reflective alternative to the blistering atonality associated with
Cecil Taylor,
Albert Ayler, and late-period
John Coltrane (play
Coltrane's scorching Om next to the recordings of
Anthony Braxton and
Roscoe Mitchell, and it is impossible to overlook the fact that the AACM has generally represented a kinder, gentler approach to avant-garde jazz). But being influenced by the AACM does not mean that Chicago residents are obligated to follow some type of script rigidly. For example, tenor saxophonist/bass clarinetist
Keefe Jackson (an Arkansas native who relocated to the Windy City) brings an intriguing variety of influences to
Just Like This.
Jackson, who recorded this 55-minute disc in Chicago in 2007, clearly appreciates the AACM's use of space, but
Just Like This is hardly a carbon copy of
Braxton's or
Mitchell's work. Instead,
Jackson and his band Project Project also draw on non-AACM influences ranging from
Charles Mingus to
Ornette Coleman. The version of Project Project that
Jackson leads on
Just Like This is a 12-person unit that is dominated by horns -- except for bassist Anton Hatwich and drummer
Frank Rosaly, everyone on this album is a horn player -- and the horn arrangements definitely owe something to
Mingus' bands. But while
Mingus' inside/outside recordings were much more inside than outside,
Just Like This is a lot freer and is often more outside than inside. Both AACM and non-AACM influences serve
Jackson well on this appealing CD. ~ Alex Henderson