BILL LASWELL
JAZZONIA
1/ Moody's Mood For Love (McHugh,Fields,Moody) 6.15
2/ Little Boy Don't Get Scared (Getz,King Pleasure,Hendricks)7.55
3/ Swan Blues (Carpenter,Pleasure) 6.13
4/ I'm Gone (Jones,King Pleasure) 5.41
5/ Blue (Joni Mitchell) 6.20
6/ Cottontail (Ellington) 8.36
7/ Angel Eyes (Brent,Dennis) 5.57
8/ Twisted (Ross,Gray) 5.25
9/ Fade (Laswell) 1.47
Recorded at Orange Music Sound Studios, West Orange, New Jersey
Engineering: Robert Musso
Concept: Alan Douglas
Construction: Bill Laswell
Produced by Bill Laswell & Alan Douglas
Mastered by Joe Gastwirt at Ocean View Digital
Dana Bryant (1,4): voice; Asante (1,3,4,6,7,8): voices; Blue a/k/a Alicia
Renee (1,3,8): voice; Byard Lancaster : alto saxophone (1,4), tenor saxophone
(2,8,9), flute (8,9); Karl Berger: vibes (1,2,3,7), piano (3,5), synthesizer (5,7),
keyboard bass (5,7); Brandon Ross (1,2,8,9): guitar; Bill Laswell: bass
(1,2,3,4,6,8,9), percussion (1,2,3,4,8,9), turntable (1,2,8,9), sounds (5), beats (6);
Roc Raida (3,4): turntable; Grandmaster Melle Mel (4,8): voice; Graham
Haynes: cornet (4,6), flugelhorn (7); Amina Claudine Myers: Hammond organ
(4,6,8,9), electric piano (4,6,8,9), voice (7); DXT (5,6): turntable; Bootsy Collins
(6): voice; Nicky Skopelitis (7): guitar.
Material strings (1,2,5,7) arranged and conducted by Karl Berger.
1998 - Douglas (USA), ADC18 (CD)
2021 - Bill Laswell Bandcamp (Bassmatter Subscription Exclusive)
Note: This was re-released in 2006 (sans 1 track) with Jazzonia as the group and the title
Little Boy Don't Get Scared.
Note: The Bassmatter release retains the cover of the 2006 release, title noted here and keeps all 9 tracks.
REVIEWS :
The concept which Bill Laswell and Alan Douglas conceived for this CD has been tackled by various musicians
with varying results, taking the jazz tradition of the past and updating them for the present, with hip-hop
beats and the like. This mixture has often enough resulted in lukewarm acid jazz or, worse yet, cynical
cash-ins, although gems can be found. Thanks to Laswell's unique vision, however, the music on this disc
is nothing short of amazing. The renditions of vocalese jazz standards (including "Moody's Mood for Love,"
Stan Getz's "Little Boy Don't Get Scared" and Duke Ellington's "Cottontail") are built around a vocal duo from
Brooklyn: Asante and Laswell himself. He doesn't just play his dubby bass, but also programmed the hip-hop beats
and contributed sounds in general (some of which were taken from his earlier releases: compare "Blue" to "33"
from Valis II). That's not all, however; apart from the soulful vocals of Asante, singers include Dana Bryant
(whose voice is incredibly sexy), Alicia Renee, and even rap pioneer Grandmaster Melle Mel. Amina Claudine
Myers, who plays some funky organ and electric piano on various tracks, also sings on one track. Adding to
the hip-hop element are turntablists Roc Raida and DXT; Laswell himself also does some scratching. The jazz
element is brought in by saxophonist Byard Lancaster and cornetist Graham Haynes (both restrained and intense
at once) and the subdued, bluesy guitar work of Brandon Ross and Nicky Skopelitis. Finally, Karl Berger is an
important voice on most of the tracks; he not only arranged and conducted the Material Strings (sounding
romantic but clich-free), but also plays vibes and keyboards. Two tracks deserve special mention: "Blue" (a
Joni Mitchell cover) is the only instrumental track, apart from the one-minute and 47-second "Fade" at the
end of the disc -- and it's pure melancholy, thanks to Berger's textures and Haynes' echoey cornet. The other
one is "Cottontail," which Laswell treated with a drum'n'bass loop and some priceless "walking dub bass."
Bootsy Collins has a short cameo on this track. The biggest plus of this album is that it's never afraid of
being sentimental, with its full strings and lush arrangements, but at the same time it's completely free of
cheese and clichs. Laswell has indeed blended various styles into a fresh and original sound which sounds
traditional and new at once. Who says that staying in the tradition has to imply sounding like a xerox of it?
Chris Genzel