Since the mid-'80s,
Branford Marsalis has led various incarnations of his quartet, issuing a bevy of highly inventive and playful albums like
Random Abstract,
Crazy People Music, and
Braggtown, all of which showcase his love of swinging acoustic jazz and dynamic group interplay. 2019's
The Secret Between the Shadow and the Soul is no exception and finds the saxophonist balancing an expressive maturity with a continued sense of fun. Following up 2012's
Four MFs Playin' Tunes, as well their 2016
Kurt Elling collaboration
Upward Spiral, this iteration of the quartet features pianist
Joey Calderazzo, bassist
Eric Revis, and drummer
Justin Faulkner (who replaced
Jeff "Tain" Watts in 2009). Together, they play with a deft abandon that often borders on focused chaos. The best example of this here is the
Revis-penned "Dance of the Evil Toys," a kinetic snowplow of free group improv that brings to mind
Ornette Coleman. Interestingly, most of the other extroverted moments are cover songs.
Marsalis dives into
Keith Jarrett's "The Windup," accenting the pianist's already exuberant song with a roiling second line-meets-gospel groove that sounds like
Dave Brubeck on thick caffeine. Similarly, they tackle
Andrew Hill's "Snake Hip Waltz," playing gleefully within the track's off-kilter, 3/4 buoyancy and bluesy, Parisian sophistication. While post-bop dynamism is certainly one of
Marsalis' fortes, he's also a deeply emotive and lyrical performer, something that colors much of his work here. "Conversation Among the Ruins" is a deeply elegiac ballad by
Calderazzo that's rife with classical intonations and ends in double time swing.
Marsalis even pays tribute to his late mother,
Dolores Marsalis, who passed away in 2017, dedicating his song "Life Filtering from the Water Flowers" to her. It starts out as a ruminative tone poem as
Marsalis' sax emerges from a silent fog, only to be joined by his bandmates in a spiral of joyful purpose. Equally mutative is
Revis' "Nilaste," a harmonically nuanced minor noir in which the band investigate the song's dark shadows before exploding into the light. It's that dynamic balance, so organic to
Marsalis' group, that illuminates all of
The Secret Between the Shadow and the Soul.