Originally issued on the Norwegian Sonet label in 1971 and later re-released on Soul Note (without "Concerto for Self-Accompanied Guitar"),
The Essence Of... contained
George Russell's first large-scale work to incorporate electronic elements from contemporary classical music as well as an emerging influence of modern rock. "Electronic Sonata for Souls Loved by Nature" is a massive work in which a jazz big band made up of many of the period's finest Scandinavian musicians serves as the backing orchestra for the very youthful
Jan Garbarek quartet with guitarist
Terje Rypdal, bassist
Arild Andersen, and drummer
Jon Christensen. A fairly abstract tape made up of moody, organy sounds is generally running in the background, sometimes predominating when the orchestra subsides. Otherwise, the composition progresses from theme to theme, many of them propulsive and groove-oriented, serving as platforms for improvisations from the featured players. Listeners who only know
Garbarek from his later, substantially more placid work for ECM may be taken aback at the ferocity and swagger on display here, his roots in
Albert Ayler very apparent.
Rypdal and American trumpeter
Stanton Davis are also shown to good effect, the former taking several blistering solos comparable to
Sonny Sharrock's work from around the same time. If there's a problem, it's that
Russell's attempts at a prescient kind of jazz-rock hybrid sometimes result in melodies that plod a little instead of dance, a common fate among jazz composers who never quite grasped what made rock so exciting in the mid-'60s. Additionally, the work (here heard in a live performance) is really a string of themes and not so much an organic whole, but these quibbles aside, it still stands up as a striking and forward-looking composition. "Concerto for Self-Accompanied Guitar," here performed by
Rene Gustafsson overdubbing himself, is a lovely work, with hints of Gaelic folk music in an odd combination with
Russell's patented Lydian mode jazz. "Now and Then," recorded a couple of years prior to the other pieces, is more along the lines of
Russell's previous work, especially as heard on his At Beethoven Hall [Live] recording: good, rambunctious big band jazz. On the whole, highly recommended. ~ Brian Olewnick