Using two sets of musical units,
Frank Portolese's second album for the Chicago-based label, Southport, is a mix of five of the guitar player's originals, one classic, and five jazz standards. The use of two units here is not based on who happens to be available for the session, as so often is the case. Rather, the selection of personnel appears to be linked to the type of music that
Portolese wants to present. For a more avant garde, creative, improvisational, introspective set,
Portolese uses
Brian Sandstrom on bass and
Rusty Jones on drums for a pianoless trio, doing some artful work on such tunes as "Burn Unit" and Joe Henderson's "Inner Urge." Both of these tracks feature the drums of
Rusty Jones in interesting and sometimes daring interplay between him and
Portolese. Initially, they start off in different directions, like a heated argument between a couple of old friends using their instruments to make their points. Then quite suddenly, the dispute is resolved and they get back together again, ending the cut in musical accord.
Brian Sandstrom's bass is the subtle but articulate cornerstone for this unit. That this group can also wax rhapsodically is shown on "The Dance," where
Portolese and Jones exchange musical ideas but in a far less frenetic atmosphere. Jones is clearly from the
Elvin Jones school of drumming, where he extends his participation far beyond time-keeping.