GROUNDTRUTHER
'LATITUDE' CD REVIEW
Year: 2004
Record Label: Thirsty Ear
Style: Ambient Jazz
Musicians: Charlie Hunter:
8-string electric guitar; Bobby Previte: drums,
electronics; Greg Osby: alto sax.
Review: Anyone
expecting anything but the unexpected will
likely be bothered and bewildered by Groundtruther's
maiden voyage Latitude. Groundtruther is a
more-than-the-sum-of-its-parts amalgam of the
complete creative range of the participants:
the sparkling groove-jazz wail of Charlie Hunter,
the Third Stream/fusion/avant-hard bop of Bobby
Previte, or the lithe, angular, Andrew Hill-meets-Cannonball
Adderley at Roscoe Mitchell's house hard bop
of Greg Osby. Groundtruther is more of a concept
than a "band" in the usual
sense: A Guest joins the duo of Previte and Hunter
and they improvise. Wait, if free improvisation
usually turns you off, don't jump to the next
review -- and you free improv types that abhor
anything smacking of accessibility, stick around
a bit, as this'll likely appeal to you, maybe.
These gents manage to combine and balance laying
down grooves (though they be abstract, but grooves
nonetheless), empathetic free playing, and surreal
ambiance/soundscapes. Here there be the best
aspects of each players' style joined together
into something fresh and unique. Best of all,
there are 11 concise, tantalizing tracks, so
you know these fellows are "editing" themselves,
forgoing any excess whatsoever, drawing you in
but not leave you floating in the ionosphere.
If a wizard/scientist/mix-master could take the
best parts (including their Spirits, not just
sounds 'n' riffs) of the legendary-in-their-spheres-and-beyond
albums Miles Davis' Bitches Brew and Brian Eno's
Another Green World, Latitude would be the probable
result. This may indeed turn out to be one of
THE platters of '04.