Gambit moves the feet and touches the heart with its gorgeous melodies and moody, spacious arrangements, ample evidence that
Matt Darriau's Paradox Trio are still around and kicking out the Balkan jams first heard on their debut disc a full decade ago. Their old
Knitting Factory releases may have all gone out of print by the time the 2000s rolled around, but thanks to the Munich-based
Enja label you can still experience the granddaddies of the old downtown Balkan
jazz scene during the new millennium, and the recorded evidence suggests that saxophonist/clarinetist
Darriau and company are as strong as ever.
Darriau (who also plays a mean gaida -- a Balkan goatskin bagpipe) first cajoled Boston's
Orange Then Blue big band into exploring Balkan musical forms back in the '80s. He (and others who spilled out of Boston music schools) brought the Balkan vibe south to N.Y.C. in the early '90s and was one of the very first to introduce an East-meets-West tone into the downtown
jazz community.
Darriau and the other members of his quartet (it's not really a trio) have been busy with many musical projects in addition to
Paradox over the years (
Darriau himself is probably best known as reedman for
the Klezmatics), but they have found time to keep the
Paradox flame burning, and music listeners are all the better for it.
On 2005's
Gambit,
Darriau, guitarist
Brad Shepik, cellist
Rufus Cappadocia, and Macedonian dumbek wonder
Seido Salifoski are initially joined by Bulgarian kaval (an end-blown flute) virtuoso
Theodosii Spassov, who demonstrates a deep rapport with the
Paradox members. The Bulgarian is front and center in the mix and integrated so well into the band on the first four tracks recorded in Sophia during 2002 (
Spassov's unison and counterpoint thematic statements and riffs with
Darriau's fluid alto and
Shepik's precisely articulated guitar on the rousing opener,
"Theo's Gambit," set a high bar that is easily matched by his appearances on the next three tracks) that it's hard to imagine he wouldn't be missed on the pieces recorded without him in Hamilton, Ontario, during 2001. Yet the core quartet also acquits itself just fine, thank you, as
"Faux 7" and
"Free Gaida" -- beautifully atmospheric and filled with Roma soul -- lead into the 12-minute
"Cocek i Gong," where a spirited uptempo motif sets the stage for extended fire-breathing guitar and alto solos over a killer vamp that draws not only from Balkan rhythms but also from
modal jazz harmonic shifts and the punch of
jazz-
funk.
Salifoski and
Cappadocia are a rhythm section like no other -- and who could imagine a cello (OK, an electric five-string cello) with such attitude, dipping so low into bass
funk frequencies?
Theodosii Spassov returns with a rich melismatic vocal over the band's spacious rubato backing on the closer,
"Turdorka," his own composition recorded at a German festival in 2002;
Spassov's reappearance brings the disc full circle while also adding a uniquely soulful flavor to the CD's conclusion. ~ Dave Lynch