A musical statement, one of the best albums of the year
author: John Book, Music For America
The CD cover looks simple enough: a musician holding a saxophone in front of the camera, showing confidence in his chosen instrument in a stance that represents himself and the music. By naming the album The World Is Not Your Home (Jumbie), and with the songs being published under Imaginary Homeland Music (ASCAP), The Davis Rogers Sextet are about making grand statements too.
Some have compared Rogers' work to that of John Coltrane, and I definitely hear an appreciation of his work, specifically the post-Atlantic/pre-A Love Supreme era where each musician gets their space and evens out the colors and tone. Rogers is someone who can play, and while it's easy to compare him to every other saxophonist, it's best to just hear him play. In the title track he comes in for a solo after the six minute mark, and it sounds as if he's scoping the area, making sure everything is clear, welcoming himself into the proceedings with audio handshakes as bassist Marion Hayden and drummer Gerald Cleaver answer him in kind. Two minutes into his solo, he lets loose and starts flirting a bit with the piano work of Craig Taborn, and it becomes an artful dance.
The artful dance is something that pops up frequently, sometimes at the most unexpected places, and it definitely pulls the listener in, wanting to stay there and hear what will come next. Rogers also enjoys incorporating sounds from around the world, so at any moment he may bring in the tribal sounds of Africa, or percussion sounds that can be heard in South America, or in "La Isla De Reyes" it's a lengthy vacation to Cuba with various solos coming in and out at a pace that may leave people breathless. This and two other tracks go over the 10 minute mark, so outside of making statements, they want to be able to test each other and themselves in their dedication of the song. Rogers is the kind of saxophonist that someone like the late Michael Brecker would be proud of, someone willing to test their limits by playing without them. This is not only a powerful jazz statement, but a musical statement, one of the best to come out this year.
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