The late poet
Robert Creeley was no stranger to jazz. His own work descended from
Ezra Pound and William Carlos Williams, and he provided the link in the new American poetry between the Black Mountain school and the Beats; early on, he composed his work to the music of
Bud Powell. Later he collaborated with the jazz musicians preeminent among them:
Steve Swallow (whom
Creeley collaborated with on numerous live occasions and on the bassist's ECM
Home album in 1979, where his poems were sung by
Sheila Jordan), and the late
Steve Lacy. As evidenced on So There,
Swallow is the perfect aural illustrator and collaborationist for
Creeley because he allows the poet free reign, giving him a place to truly speak for himself.
Swallow composed the music to follow the flow and rhythm of
Creeley's taut, sometimes elliptical line and his rhythmic breath. The work for So There began in 2001, when
Swallow got his old friend to read numerous poems into a microphone at Tom Mark's Make Believe Ballroom Studio in New York.
Swallow began working his way through the poems, listening to them dozens of times to find those he most wanted to compose to. He worked on the music for years; creating compositions not only involving his bass, but also for piano. More startlingly, he began composing pieces for string quartet based on what he said were "not just the rhythms of Bob's speech, but the colors and atmospheres implicit in the poems as well." In January of 2005,
Creeley died, never having heard any of the finished work. In March of 2005, along with pianist
Steve Kuhn and the Oslo
Cikada String Quartet,
Swallow and company began recording the work with ECM producer and label owner
Manfred Eicher in Norway.
What is most beautiful here is the manner in which
Swallow allows the seeming spontaneity in
Creeley's speech and lean images to inform the music. There are places when the stop and start rhythm of the poet's cadence is simply underscored with one of
Kuhn's piano lines on the right hand, and others where the entire group floats and hovers about it before digging into the groove.
Swallow also picks up on the notion of counterpoint in
Creeley's poems and gives the strings room to flow not so much against the words, but instead to color them with alternate meanings. And truth be told, we've seldom heard
Kuhn this freely disposed to swinging, to playing this freely or this expressively.
Swallow's compositions allow room for improvisation, and the sheer delight of
Creeley's language seems to set this impulse to the air in the hands and ears of the musicians. Check the gorgeous swinging post-bop improvisation by
Kuhn and the counterpoint from
Swallow before the quartet enters in "Names." When
Creeley's voice enters, the music lies low for a moment, and the poet's words almost dance above the strings. Elsewhere, such as on the piece taken from "Histoire de Florida,"
Kuhn's playing is elemental, not ornamental, in setting the place and mood for
Creeley's voice as he cheerfully allows the melody to create a space for the poet to speak through. The strings move almost sentimentally, as he reads: "You're there/still behind/the mirror, brother face/Only yesterday/you were younger/now you/look old/Come out/while there's still time/left/to play."
Swallow's voice plays a shimmering blues in the high register that is nearly pastoral as an answer, playful even, and it gently becomes elegiac, though not funereal; there is joy no matter the mood, and
Creeley's sense of humor is wondrous in so few words even when he's serious: "Lift me into heaven/slowly/Cause my back's/sore/My mind's/thoughtful/I'm not sure/I even want to/go. The blues come out to dance in "Sufi Sam Christian," and
Kuhn's playing is simply gorgeous, as is
Swallow's. The entire exercise is one of mystery, surprise, and delight. This is a gentle kind of presentation that carries its force in the measure of astonishment that the listener feels after encountering the work. So There is an album that can be listened to over and again in a single setting, but it still won't give up all its secrets, because there is mischief here, too ("I Know a Man"), and
Swallow can tease it out from the poem, or perhaps, it's vice versa.
Creeley's always-twinkling eye seems to pull it from the composer, who lays it before us, tempting listeners to indulge the magic a small bit at a time. Wonderful. ~ Thom Jurek