If you check an on-line list of the 100 greatest jazz
flautists which seems to have been last updated in February of 2005, of course
you'll find names like Eric Dolphy, Herbie Mann and Rahsaan Roland Kirk leading
the pack. Andrea Brachfeld comes in at number 70. Listen to her latest album,
Lady of the Island, due out the ninth of October, and I
think you'll agree that the list could use some revision. Brachfeld plays
passionate hard driving be bop with the best of them, and in softer moments her
tone is magic.
The new album offers nine tunes, a nice mix of original
compositions, some strays from the jazz song book, and at least one outlier.
Coming seven years, she explains in the liner notes, after a disabling personal
injury prevented her from playing, the album marks her return to the genre she
considers her first love. It's good to have her back.
She is joined on the album by a gang of her friends. Bill
O'Connell who coupled with her in producing the CD plays piano on seven tracks.
Bassist Andy Eulau and drummer Kim Plainfield play on eight of the tracks. Bob
Quaranta plays piano on two and Fender Rhodes on one. The line-up of guest
artists includes Todd Bashore (alto sax), Wycliffe Gordon (trombone), Yasek
Manzano (trumpet, flugelhorn), Wallace Rooney (trumpet), and Chembo Corniel
(congas, percussion). They are talented musicians who contribute some exciting
solo work.
Brachfeld's liner notes offer some fairly extensive commentary
about her own compositions as well as the rationale for her other choices. She
opens with her own "Be Bop Hanna," written she explains when she
heard her niece's three year old daughter saying she wanted "be bop."
"Be bop" it turns out was the child's word for candy. The resultant
composition is a confection that starts the album with a smile, if not
downright laughter especially listening to Wycliffe Gordon's trombone. The
other Brachfeld originals are "Little Girl's Song" written for her
daughter, "Four Corners," a tribute to the life changing
possibilities of Feng Shui, and "In the Center," a collaborative
composition with O'Connell. Manzano's
trumpet solo on "Four Corners" is sweet. "Dead Ahead" is an
O'Connell original with a fine trumpet solo from Rooney.
The more familiar songs on the CD include Herbie Hancock's
"Eye of the Hurricane" arranged by O'Connell and featuring Rooney and
Gordon, and some driving solo work from Brachfeld. The Duke Ellington ballad
"I Got It bad" gets a soulful treatment from O'Connell and Brachfeld.
Freddy Hubbard's "Birdlike" has the kind of Latin vibe that dominated
Brachfeld's earlier career. Bashore does some featured solo work on both songs.
Graham Nash's "Lady of the Island," the album's title song is the
surprise, certainly not the kind of tune you'd expect to find on a jazz album.
The sensual beauty of Brachfeld's treatment—she adds a little vocal
element—joined with Manzano on the flugelhorn, shows what can be done with a
simple melody in the hands of sensitive artists.
Like I said if Lady of the Island is any
indication of what Andrea Brachfeld can do, as well as what she may be doing in
the future, somebody better take another look at that list of 100 greatest
flautists and give some serious thought to its revision.
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