
Four Visions
Dave Liebman, Dave Binney, Donny McCaslin & Samuel Blais
Dave Liebman, Dave Binney, Donny McCaslin & Samuel Blais
https://sunnysidezone.com/album/four-visions
Track Listing
Blaizza
Dunes
Legions
Et voit le jour
Empty Sunbeam
A Moody Time
Technicolor Penguins
Buy a Mountain
In Bach's Studio
Road Kill
Liner Notes
The saxophone quartet has become a major vehicle for this one time maligned instrument in the realm of both classical and contemporary music. Saxophone practitioners have succeeded in placing the instrument into these musical pantheons, making the saxophone quartet the woodwind equivalent of the string quartet. Of course, the horn did find an historic fit in jazz music, so it was only a matter of time before the saxophone quartet emerged as a vehicle for improvisation.
Samuel Blais began his saxophone study at nine years old. His focus led him to the Montreal Conservatory at seventeen where an open baritone position in the school’s saxophone quartet led him to put down his alto and fill the spot. This eventually led to the ensemble placing second in the Canadian Music Competition Finals while solidifying Blais’s love of the quartet configuration.
While attending McGill University, where he received a Bachelors in Jazz Performance, Blais became a member of the Montreal based Nota Bene Sax Quartet that focused on classical and contemporary music. After touring heavily for several years, the ensemble broke up as the members went on to further schooling. Blais found himself at the Manhattan School of Music in New York City where he met and befriended saxophone legend Dave Liebman.
Liebman and Blais’s relationship led to their playing and touring together, so it was only a matter of time before Liebman learned of the younger saxophonist’s hopes to start a saxophone quartet, enthusiastically supporting the idea. In late 2011, they began to brainstorm on other players who would fit, leading to tenor titan Donny McCaslin who had a relationship with Blais through various Montreal performances and master classes. Based on his close affiliation with McCaslin, alto great David Binney became an obvious choice for completing the ensemble. Thus, the Four Visions Saxophone Quartet was born.
Initially, the group toured through Quebec in early 2012, including hits at universities and clubs in Montreal and Quebec City. Samuel was able to secure a grant that allowed him to write seven pieces for the quartet. Liebman already had a number of pieces and both McCaslin and Binney were able to write their first works for this kind of ensemble, an exciting challenge for these fantastic artists.
The saxophone quartet is a tricky ensemble that is at the same time a lot of fun but very demanding technically. The saxophone quartet celebrates the instrument offering a lot of commonality, since they are all playing the same instrument, which embodies a rich legacy and history in jazz and contemporary music. The composers have to approach the ensemble as a chamber group with each member being especially responsible rhythmically. Remember the sax quartet configuration does not include a chord or rhythm instrument but, as you hear on this recording, the harmonic texture is quite pronounced and there is nothing musically missing.
It took some time for the quartet to record. They were finally able to reconvene for a handful of rehearsals in 2015 and a couple days of recording at Red Rock Recording Studio, near Liebman’s home in Pennsylvania.
The recording begins with Blais’s “Blaizza,” which attempts to blend jazz and contemporary classical composition in a two part piece inspired by composer Eugène Bozza's Andante & Scherzo with two pairs of horns questioning and answering back and forth. Binney’s “Dunes” begins like a chorale evolving into an impressive rhythmic exercise with an opportunity for each member to solo. McCaslin’s effervescent “Legions”
swings hard in a triplet feel with features for Liebman’s soprano and McCaslin’s tenor.
Blais wrote his reflective ballad “Et Voit Le Jour” for a jazz quartet and re-arranged it for this instrumentation knowing that the ensemble would sound great on this harmonically lush piece. Binney returns to the chorale concept on “Empty Sunbeams,” which utilizes rhythmic displacement to incredible effect in the middle of the piece leading to a surprising and restrained conclusion. Liebman’s powerful “A Moody Time” slowly evolves into a wild 15/8 groove with McCaslin and Blais playing rhythmic unisons as a power bassline.
On the canonical “Technicolor Penguins,” Binney provides another rhythmic marvel with stops and starts that playfully displace the melody, while McCaslin’s grooving “Buy A Mountain” is a low tone heavy exercise in time keeping with wild soprano and tenor features. Liebman’s “In Bach’s Studio” is a thru-composed tribute to the master with intervallic chromaticism in all its splendor and solo spots for all. Blais’s uptempo “Road Kill” ends the program with a free big bandesque sax section soli providing a sense of release at its energetic ending.
The love of this ensemble configuration has blossomed for Samuel Blais. Fortunately, he was able to assemble three remarkable saxophones in Dave Liebman, David Binney and Donny McCaslin to create the Four Visions Saxophone Quartet’s first recording. This music represents an inspiring performance by a group that challenges the paradigm of what a saxophone quartet can achieve.
Review
Filipe Freitas
JAZZ TRAIL
The music hailed from classic saxophone quartets (typically comprising soprano, alto, tenor, and baritone) can be very exciting when in the hands of wise, influential musicians. Good examples are World Saxophone Quartet and Rova Saxophone Quartet, both founded in 1977 and with the latter still active. Now, a new ensemble of the same kind arrives, with its top-notch members showing off their multifaceted genius while fully enjoying a bracing musical camaraderie.
The Four Visions Saxophone Quartet was born from an idea of baritonist Samuel Blais, who first invited his former teacher, master soprano saxist Dave Liebman, to join him. The remaining two positions available couldn’t be better filled, with Donny McCaslin and David Binney bringing their tone quality and persuasive language on tenor and alto, respectively. The quartet’s debut album features ten compositions specifically written for the occasion. Blais and Binney contributed three compositions each, while McCaslin and Liebman penned two.
“Blaizza” inaugurates the session with flowing melodies in strong counterpoint and shifting tempos, combining four distinct timbres for a stunning effect. For this two-part tune straddling between modern classical and contemporary jazz, Blais sought inspiration on “Andante and Scherzo” by French composer Eugène Bozza. Conversely, his “Et Vois Et Jours” was originally written for a jazz quartet and readapted to fit the context of this disc. Manifestly, there’s absolutely no need for chordal support here since the combinations of notes clearly imply harmonic movement.
Relying on unisons, polyphonies, and question-and-answer mechanics, the passages in Binney’s “Dunes” are accessible to the ear but relatively complex in the execution. Whether intoned with stately grace or rhythmic impact, the piece is highly enjoyable, reaching a climax with the altoist’s impromptu projections on top of a groove formed by a sturdy baritone pedal and tenor-soprano ostinatos in seven. Also penned by Binney, the staccato-infused “Empty Sunbeans” could be turned into a great pop/rock song, while “Technicolor Penguins” vouches a head sequenced by off-centered melodic ideas and rhythmically accurate unisons. You’ll find poignant, tone-bent cries by McCaslin and Binney evolving into long runs toward a crescendo that culminates in piercing notes.
So luxuriant and precise in its conception, “Legions” was envisioned by McCaslin with a new found determination, and it’s all about superior interplay. It features the composer and Liebman in crisp and exuberant exchanges and Binney in a high flight. The former two deliver again on “Buy a Mountain”, another McCaslin-penned stunner.
Liebman brought the longest piece into the collection, with the cogitative “In Bach’s Studio” clocking in at nearly 16 minutes. However, it’s with “A Moody Time” that he enchants the most. Besides inside/outside offerings, he delineates epic unisons, combines a mix of thematic Eastern and Western flavors, and devises a bouncing 15/8 groove that gains emphasis with the potency of the baritone.
Promoting textural variety in their advanced writings, these accomplished saxophonists, more than fulfilling their improvisational duties, dabble in the tonal qualities of their reed instruments with an extensive range of approaches. The result is a wonderful album.