Label:
ESP Disk – ESP 1053
Format:
Vinyl, LP, Album / Country: US / Released: 1967
Style:
Free Jazz
Recorded in New
York City, May 1967, RLA Sound Studios NY.
Engineer
– Richard L. Alderson
Photography
By – Harlene Sandra Stollman
All
compositions did Frank Wright, except Jones' "The Lady".
A1
- The Lady . . . . . 9:04
A2
- Train Stop . . . . . 7:32
A3
- No End . . . . . 6:49
B1
- Fire Of Spirits . . . . . 12:31
B2
- Your Prayer . . . . . 15:42
Frank
Wright – tenor saxophone
Arthur
Jones – alto saxophone
Jacques
Coursil – trumpet
Steve
Tintweiss – bass
Muhammad
Ali – drums, percussion
Despite the fact that avant-garde jazz has often
met with the criticism that its tonalities and rhythms put it far outside the
jazz (and by extension black music) tradition, it is quite true that many of
the forerunners of free jazz found their voice in blues and R&B outfits.
Ornette Coleman, Albert Ayler, Dewey Redman, Noah Howard, Prince Lasha and
Pharoah Sanders all came up in blues bands in the South and Midwest, which in
some ways predate both bebop and avant-garde credentials...
Mississippi-born and Cleveland-raised tenor man Frank Wright (1935-1990) was one of the forerunners of the multiphonics-driven school of saxophonists to follow the direction pointed by Ayler, but with a more pronounced bar-walking influence than most of his contemporaries. Whereas Ayler's high-pitched wails, wide vibrato and guttural honks all belied an R&B pedigree, his solos still contained the breakneck tempos and facility of bebop, for which he had earlier earned the nickname "Little Bird. Wright, on the other hand, offers his honks and squawks with a phraseology derived from the slower, earthier funk of R&B and gospel music; indeed, he was a bassist in Cleveland blues bands until switching to tenor in the early '60s as a result of Ayler's influence (the same influence that brought Wright to New York in 1964).
In the spring of 1967, Wright made his second date as a leader for ESP, the powerful quintet statement of Your Prayer (ESP 1053) featuring Wright in the company of Cleveland-born altoist Arthur Jones, expatriate Martinique-born, French-educated trumpeter Jacques Coursil, drummer Muhammad Ali and bassist Steve Tintweiss. Where the first date falters at a lack of dynamics and cohesion (not to mention experience), Your Prayer finds Wright refining the bag his solos come from, yet maintaining a firm hold on the ecstatic free-blues shout that makes up most of his solo language. The set starts off with Jones' composition "The Lady, a simple unison ascending-descending call for the horns peaking in vibrato, which gives way to a searing solo by the composer with echoes of Dolphy's speed and intervallic leaps coupled to Johnny Hodges' tone, a quality that clearly defined this altoist's style for the few years he was actively recording. Coursil follows with a deft series of punches and blasts, exuding the bubbly-yet-raw swing his solos always carry, even in the most 'out' contexts.
Wright's
distorted squall seems like a real style now (though in the ensuing twenty-odd
years, it would change some), a thick wall of sound that is less given to
distraction, coming through pure and hot. In the Wright-Ali duo that follows,
"Train Stop, Wright harps rhythmically on phrases, repeating and expanding
upon them and wringing out every last growling breath before moving to yet
another plane far eclipsing the ADD approach that hampers his first recording.
Muhammad Ali, brother to the more well- known free drummer Rashied, approaches
the kit with a more singular style that focuses on hurtling masses than the
allover, coloristic palette that his elder sibling has employed. At over fifty
minutes (for a single LP at its release), Your Prayer is a rather lengthy slab
of high-energy grit, but its unified forward and upward motion make for a
firmly rooted sonic liberation.
Slightly
over a year after recording his second ESP session, Wright, Ali, Jones, altoist
Noah Howard and pianist Bobby Few would leave New York together for Europe with
the wave of American free players that subsequently descended on Paris. The
Center of the World Quartet (Wright, Ali, Few, and Howard, who was later
replaced by bassist Alan Silva) recorded prodigiously for BYG, America,
Calumet, Sun and their own Center of the World label throughout the '70s, and
brought the tools of post-Coltrane freedom to bear on a decidedly funkier and
more populist approach to ecstatic jazz. As poet Larry Neal wrote in a 1969
review of Ayler's R&B record New Grass in the Cricket, "I know what the
Brother is trying to do. But his procedure is fucked up. Though these ESP
sessions are only an early indicator, Frank Wright was one to get it "on."
One of Frank Wright's finest recordings.
If
you find it, buy this album!