Since the beginning of the 21st century,
David S. Ware's recordings have moved more toward the notion of composition than free-blowing
improvisation. The album
Threads is the most fully realized of his scoring attempts yet, and stands out from his catalog as a work of great innovation and emotional power.
The David S. Ware String Ensemble is comprised of his quartet with
William Parker,
Guillermo Brown, and
Matthew Shipp, and is augmented by
microtonal violist
Mat Maneri and
classical maestro
Daniel Bernard Roumain on violin.
Ware's compositions are not subtle by
jazz standards. They involve stridently stated rhythmic arrangements, such as those found on
"Sufic Passages," which inverts and extends part of the line from
John Coltrane's
"A Love Supreme," and is eerily reminiscent of the intro statement of the 1960s
Ramsey Lewis Trio with
Maurice White in live settings -- check out
"Hang on Sloopy," "Wade in the Water," or
"Dancing in the Street" from
Cadet Records for reference.
Ware sounds nothing like
Lewis, of course, particularly with this instrumentation.
Shipp uses a Korg synthesizer on the entire album, and the rhythmic patterns but forth by
Brown and
Parker are mere jump-off points for explorations in tone, color, and texture.
Ware's melodic sensibility is never quite revealed, though it is never absent, either. Here, once a pattern is stated and developed, it is extrapolated upon first by the string players creating
modal passages in the middle.
Ware and
Shipp function either as soloists or contrapuntal rhythmic foils on the track.
On
"Ananda Rotation," co-written with
Shipp,
Ware delves into the sonority of
Parker's bowed bass as the entry point into minor-key journeys around a noir-ish thematic. The other strings join in, droning across the background and
Shipp colors the entire proceeding with washes of unidentifiable sonics.
Brown hovers over the cymbals and tom-toms like a ghost as
Ware delves into the heart of these different tonalities and opens them onto a new sonic landscape where
Maneri moves across the drone to improvise alongside him. The album is broken up in the middle by a stomping blowout entitled
"Weave I," where the strings never make an appearance; in fact it is a duet between
Ware and
Brown, taking an
Afro-Cuban rhythm and turning it inside out on a theme created by
Ware, who also roils through its variations until it returns toward the end. The same thing happens at the album's close. But it is on the title cut and the shimmering, melodic restraint of
"Carousel of Lightness" that
Ware makes his true sensibilities most plain. His acceptance of sonic ambiguity and harmonic opaqueness are brought under the command of dynamic on these tracks, and from the crack in the tension comes some of the most beautiful, intuitive, and forward-thinking ensemble playing in a decade by any American
jazz group.
Threads is easily
Ware's classic thus far in that it showcases the musician at the height of all of his powers:
improvisational, compositional, and as an arranger and bandleader. This is
Ware's masterpiece and the first really new compositional statement in
jazz in years; if this record isn't -- at least -- nominated for a Grammy as 2003's best
jazz record, then the entire category deserves to be struck from the ballot. ~ Thom Jurek