Remembering a Master drummer as Bandleader
By Nate Chinen
When Max Roach died last August at 83, he was remembered for a number of
things: his stature as a patriarch of bebop; his role in quickening the pulse of
jazz drumming; his intelligent ambitions as a conceptualist and composer; his
commitment to social justice and equality. What was sometimes buried in the mix
was Mr. Roach's track record as a bandleader, which began in earnest in the
1950s.
But this weekend at Iridium, a handful of Mr. Roach's former sidemen are
celebrating precisely that aspect of his legacy. Chief among them is the tenor
saxophonist Odean Pope, who worked alongside the trumpeter Cecil Bridgewater in
a longstanding edition of the Roach quartet.
On Thursday night Mr. Pope and Mr. Bridgewater occupied a front line that
also included the tenor saxophonists Billy Harper and James Carter. What they
played was power music, some of it only tangentially related to Mr. Roach but
all of it connected to the fast-flowing currents of bebop and its stylistic
successors.
Early in the first set Mr. Harper and Mr. Bridgewater teamed up to play "Effi,"
a hard-bop waltz by the pianist Stanley Cowell. They took divergent paths in
their solos: Mr. Bridgewater developed a concise motif, while Mr. Harper
unleashed an outpouring. In both cases there was calm and competent support from
a rhythm section composed of George Burton, the bassist Lee Smith and the
drummer Jeff (Tain) Watts.
Mr. Pope has organized the tribute to feature a slightly different cast of
characters each night, with a natural emphasis on the drum chair. In Mr. Watts
he had an assertive dynamo, the sort of player who drives the music onward with
complex polyrhythm. The inevitable drum solo came at the set's close, on a song
of Mr. Pope's called "To the Roach." Fittingly, it was both technically agile
and thematically sound.
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