For Dangerous Vision (Artemis), the new album from his groove-based band Impure Thoughts, Michael Wolff invited a live audience into the recording studio (in the manner of Wolff’s one-time employer Cannonball Adderley) and played entire sets for the onlookers, complete with wholly improvised numbers. Wolff got the intended result: Dangerous Visions is blessed with a surfeit of spontaneity. A three-minute take on “A Love Supreme” finds bassist John B. Williams playing the original melody within a dense thicket of rhythms from tabla player Badal Roy, percussionist Airto Moreira and drummer Victor Jones, with Wolff taking myriad angles on the material. Sonny Rollins’ “St. Thomas” draws a breezy, completely improvised percussion arrangement that sends Wolff soaring, while the Wolff-penned title track builds a claustrophobic, desperate atmosphere out of a three-note motive. Two other Wolff originals really show off the strengths of this album, though: after a little recorded discussion about how the song should sound, “Heart and Soul” builds a relentless crescendo over an eight-note melody Wolff overheard his son singing, and “In the Moment” starts from a tabla line that inspires luminous improvised chords from high on Wolff’s piano; Williams and Moreira later enter to add to the sublimated atmosphere.
Originally PublishedRelated Posts
Sonny Terry/Brownie McGhee: Backwater Blues
Start Your Free Trial to Continue Reading

Jonathan Butler: The Simple Life
Jonathan Butler’s optimistic music belies a dirt-poor childhood growing up in a South Africa segregated by apartheid. Live in South Africa, a new CD and DVD package, presents a sense of the resulting inner turmoil, mixed with dogged resolve, that paved the way to his status as an icon in his country and successful musician outside of it. Looking back, the 46-year-old Butler says today, the driving forces that led to his overcoming apartheid-the formal policy of racial separation and economic discrimination finally dismantled in 1993-were family, faith and abundant talent.
“When we were kids, our parents never talked about the ANC [African National Congress] or Nelson Mandela,” he says. Butler was raised as the youngest child in a large family. They lived in a house patched together by corrugated tin and cardboard, in the “coloreds only” township of Athlone near Cape Town. “They never talked about struggles so we never knew what was happening.”
Start Your Free Trial to Continue Reading
Harry Connick, Jr.: Direct Hits
Two decades after his commercial breakthrough, Harry Connick Jr. taps legendary producer Clive Davis for an album of crooner roots and beloved tunes

Scott LaFaro
Previously unavailable recordings and a new bio illuminate the legend of bassist Scott LaFaro