April 2005


Industrial Jazz Group - The Star Chamber
Innova Records 615
Format: CD
Released: 2004

by Joseph Taylor
josepht@soundstage.com

Musical Performance ****
Recording Quality ***
Overall Enjoyment ***1/2

With his third disc, The Star Chamber, Los Angeles-based composer Andrew Durkin continues to combine the improvisational swing of jazz with carefully constructed pieces that contain some of the feel of modern classical music. As I noted in a review of City of Angles (2002), his previous disc with the Industrial Jazz Group, Durkin’s music shows a wide variety of influences, but he synthesizes them into something wholly his own. Frank Zappa’s instrumental work is obvious inspiration, but Durkin demonstrates his affinity for Zappa in the same way Mingus did for Ellington -- as a source, a tradition he respects but obviously wants to expand upon.

Durkin wrote and arranged the selections on The Star Chamber for a nonet, a larger ensemble than he used on the IJG’s two other discs. The larger canvas allows him to use more complex and layered musical effects and adds to the sheer power of the arrangements. The Star Chamber is more unsettling in some ways than Durkin’s previous work. There’s more dissonance here and one does not need to share Durkin’s politics (suggested in such titles as "Mama’s, Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboy-Presidents") to realize he’s captured something of the moral confusion of living in this moment in history.

At the same time, there’s plenty of hope, swing, and pure love of melody in The Star Chamber. Durkin allows room for the other musicians to shine, especially Evan Francis and Cory Wright on reeds and Kris Tiner on trumpet. The recording is entirely listenable, but a little flat, and I would have sequenced the disc differently to improve its pace. These are small issues considering the complexity and strength of this new entry in a career that continues to bear watching.


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