Guitarist
Hunter Attracts Appreciative Younger Crowd
By DON HECKMAN
Guitarist Charlie Hunter's performance
at the Knitting Factory on Friday night was
fascinating in two very distinct ways. It was,
first of all, a consistently engaging musical
experience. Equally important, it took place
before an enthusiastic crowd of young listeners.
The contrast between the audience for
Hunter's appearance and the turnout for the
Cool and Crazy West Coast Jazz Festival taking
place over the weekend in North Hollywood couldn't
have been more striking. The latter program
was attended primarily by fans with a firsthand
recollection of Southland jazz in the '50s.
Hunter, on the other hand, drew a crowd whose
parents were probably toddlers when the music
and the players celebrated at the Cool and
Crazy event were at their peak.
Why
the age difference in turnout? That's a question
that jazz must deal with on a continuing
basis. But one distinct reason traces to
the fact that Hunter--who has a well-earned
reputation as a virtuosic player of the difficult-to-master
eight-string guitar--is as conversant with
rock and funk music as he is with straight-ahead
jazz, playing and blending each style with
complete musical fluency. Add to that Hunter's
open-minded willingness to position himself
within a wide array of musical settings.
He frequently works within a quartet setting
and, on his most recent album, "Songs From the Analog
Playground," included a number of tracks featuring
the vocals of Norah Jones and the rapping of
Mos Def.
At the Knitting Factory, however, he
showed up with a gritty, hard-driving quintet
featuring saxophonist John Ellis and trombonist
Josh Roseman (frequent Hunter associates),
harmonica player Gregoire Maret and drummer
Terreon Gully. Often taking a relatively reserved
role, Hunter featured the unusual textures
produced by the three wind instrumentalists,
who occasionally produced even darker-sounding
tones when Ellis switched to bass clarinet
and Roseman played with a plunger mute.
Pop
music, though, it ain't. "We're
living in the post-music age," Hunter says,
laughing, before explaining how to avoid turning
into a clone of Dr. Jivenstein: "I just do
what I do and keep a positive attitude,"he
explains. "I try to stay away from MTV , just
because I feet like it burns my brain, y'know?
It just doesn't make me feel good. And I try
to concentrate oil things that are organic
and, like, uplift me spiritually in a musical
way."
As responsive as the crowded house was
to the other musicians, however, it was Hunter
who was clearly their greatest object of affection.
And he rewarded their warm reactions with several
extraordinary solos, driving out bass lines
on his two lowest strings while simultaneously
adding chordal clusters and roving melodies
on the top strings. A remarkable feat of dexterity,
it was also a stunning demonstration of how
to combine technical virtuosity with inventive,
briskly swinging improvisation.
Given a few more Charlie Hunters, jazz
would have no problem at all in solving the
problem of how to bring new, young listeners
to the music.