On his sophomore Mack Avenue date, saxophonist
Kenny Garrett has taken a back-to-basics approach to melodic composition with some compelling twists and turns.
Seeds from the Underground is a set of ten new originals, performed by his standard group -- bassist
Nat Reeves and pianist
Benito Gonzalez -- with drummer
Ronald Bruner (who also hails from
Garrett's hometown of Detroit) and percussionist Rudy Bird. While the framework of nearly everything here stays firmly within the post-bop frame,
Garrett' structural reliance on intricate, memorable melody is a keen lift-off point for group interplay. Opener "Boogety Boogety" features him head to head with
Gonzalez, whose large chord voicings recall
McCoy Tyner, though his brightly hued harmonics are his own. Bird's percussion drives the tune along the top, adding a Latin feel. "J Mac," inspired by
Jackie McLean, is a sprint that draws on
McLean's ability to cover bases from
Charlie Parker to
John Coltrane while keeping his own sense of lyricism inherent.
Garrett's solo is knotty, unchained, and pyrotechnic. Bruner's kit just pops, double-timing the band. "Detroit," a ballad, hovers between wistful and noirish. It's evocative of an earlier era (especially with the sound of a turntable needle on a vinyl record's blank space), with one caveat: the lovely, understated, wordless vocals of Nedelka Prescod. The title track features
Garrett on soprano, with some athletic rhythmic turns that Bruner and Bird (the latter on bata drums) shine inside. Here, too, one can hear the influence of
Tyner, not only on
Gonzalez, but in
Garrett's harmonic extensions. "Welcome Earth Song" finds Prescod and a chorus of vocalists underscoring a gorgeous folk melody in a beautiful, sprightly 21st century post-bop presentation. "Ballad Jarrett" also features
Garrett on soprano, it's spare, warm, lush, and haunting. Each piece here is resonant. On
Seeds from the Underground, the boundary of
Garrett's lyricism has been extended; his newfound rhythmic invention is singular among other post-bop technicians. But these qualities are part of something larger: that this music is welcoming and accessible, underscoring the notion that
Garrett's new compositions have that mercurial something in them that approaches the mysterious nature of song itself . ~ Thom Jurek