JEREMY UDDEN, “Plainville”
Fresh Sound News Talent Records (FSNT 330)
Fans of Jimmy Guiffre will hear a
kindred spirit in young Jeremy Udden, who grew up in
Plainville, Mass. Giuffre played clarinet at the opposite
end of the reed spectrum from Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw.
Giuffre had a soft though pure tone
that always reminded me of the woody notes you would associate with elves
living happily in deep, dark forests. Those deep, dark forests always interested
me more than the elves. And Giuffre seemed to feel
the same way.
Udden also understands the mystery
of places that can feel pastoral on the surface. In the liner notes he writes,
“Plainville is located in the rural area halfway between Boston and Providence.”
There’s a photo on the CD cover of a folksy general store with a front
porch. The kind where farmers in bib overalls would sit around talking about
the size of their crops.
Fans of the David Lynch movie “Blue Velvet” will
also feel a connection, remembering how the pretty town’s Norman Rockwell
look also had an underside of drugs and violence. Sometimes we forget that
every picturesque woodland is full of animals trying to eat each other alive.
That’s just nature in action.
Udden plays alto and soprano
saxophones, inviting guitarist Brandon Seabrook to bring along his banjo, and
keyboards guy Pete Rende to also play some pump organ (which sounds like a
beefy accordion). Eivind Opsvik
is on bass, R.J. Miller at the drums. Three special guests add more guitar and
sax colors.
All nine tracks were written by Udden,
whose earlier album “Torchsongs” also
took jazz into some place it had never been before. “Plainville”
begins with the open-faced innocence of plain-spoken harmonies and a gentle
pace, then adds melodies tinged by sadness and regret.
Sometimes these bittersweet songs build into atonal conflicts
that feel like the primal screams of suppressed people desperate for relief.
Other times there are solemn passages rigid as a Baptist preacher defiantly
daring anyone to step out of line – all the while smiling in that
frozen-faced way of many ministers on the front line just doing their job.
The emotions contained in “Plainville” may be subtly
expressed, but they are always heartfelt and complex. Every playing will offer
something new to the thoughtful listener. As they always said back home,
“Still waters can run deep.”