Carter Nonet Shows Singular Spirit
- Share via
In a recent conversation, bassist Ron Carter promised that his nonet was going to be something special.
And he was right. His opening set Tuesday night at Catalina Bar & Grill offered perfect testimony to the fact that innovation and adventure still exist in jazz, at a time when the music is passing through a period of distinct retrospection.
A group consisting of four cellos, two basses, piano, drums and percussion is, on the face of it, an unusual instrumentation. For Carter, it affords a variety of tonal coloration that best allows him to explore his orchestral compositional goals.
Equally important, if less promoted by the ever modest Carter, the ensemble served as a marvelous setting for a series of his extraordinary solos. Praised over the years for his powerful work as a rhythm section player, Carter has never been fully acknowledged for his virtuosic skills as a soloist.
In a program that included several originals, as well his arrangements of Leon Russell’s “A Song for You” and the traditional spiritual “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child,” Carter’s melody lines were upfront most of the time. And whether he was simply stating the theme or cruising through a set of variations, everything he played had the balance between logic and emotion that can only come from an inherent compositional overview.
*
The nonet, despite a few problems with the room’s acoustics, produced one of the more unique sounds ever heard in a jazz club. Although four cellos playing in a harmonized ensemble would seem to be a guaranteed formula for audio mud, Carter’s thoughtful scoring carefully exploited the instruments’ wide range of timbres. He occasionally used them in tight, riff-like phrases to provide crisp accompanying accents for his solos, then opened up the harmonic floodgates to unleash rich, dark-toned chording.
Combining the complex textures of a cello quartet with the vigorous swing of five jazz musicians--including some far-reaching percussion sounds--is no small accomplishment. And Carter is to be praised for insisting, at considerable personal financial expense, upon maintaining such a singular group.
If nothing else, his playing, his composing and his leadership add up to an emphatic message that the 59-year-old Carter--at a time when much of the attention is going to the young jazz lions--is still a force to be reckoned with.
* Ron Carter Nonet at Catalina Bar & Grill through Sunday. 1640 N. Cahuenga Blvd., (213) 466-2210. $14 cover tonight and Sunday, $17 cover Friday and Saturday, with two-drink minimum. Carter performs two shows nightly, at 8:30 and 10:30.
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.