Liner Notes for Andrew
Cheshire’s Another View
by George
Graham
These days, the path for
many -- both fans and players -- to the jazz guitar comes through rock. And
increasingly jazz guitar is being taught in schools and conservatories, where
hotshot rock players who find themselves outgrowing the heavy metal stage are
being turned into jazz scholars. And with that academic background has come a
generation of technically proficient guitarists who nevertheless can often sound
similar to each other. Once the rule in jazz, largely self-taught jazz
guitarists are a rarity.
Andrew
Cheshire is one of those rarities, a player who has found his own stylistic
path. Born on Long Island in 1962, Cheshire’s first exposure to guitar was at a
summer camp where at age 10, he was taught to play Peter Paul & Mary folk songs.
Two years later, he took a few lessons from blues guitarist Don Celenza, whom
Cheshire still holds in high regard. One of his earliest exposures to jazz came
when the late drummer Mousey Alexander, who was one of his paper route customers,
invited him into his house to listen to music and jam sessions going on there.
Then at 13 came some lessons from Tim Siciliano, whom Cheshire calls “to this
day the finest jazz guitarist I've ever heard.”
By age 15, Cheshire was
performing professionally at “little wine and cheese places on Long Island,”
playing standards in a trio, and learning on the gig how to swing. Since his
last guitar lesson was 22 years ago, he learned jazz the old-fashioned way.
Still in his teens, he moved to Brooklyn and attended every jazz jam session he
could, and going through the often painful process of discovering just how much
there was to learn about playing, improvising and rhythmic feel. His initiation
rite into the jazz world came in the form of a tune that was virtually required
of every jazz player in the 1970s On Green Dolphin Street. He knew he was
a “in” when “after the set one of the cats came up to me and said ‘Hey Kid, you
finally learned how to play Green Dolphin Street, huh?’” It was around
this time that Cheshire started composing.
It wasn’t long before
Cheshire had opportunities to play with Kenny Barron, Roy Haynes,
Buster Williams, Dewey Redman, Harold Mabern and a host of
others.
After some five years
off from playing, following marriage and a non-musical job, an invitation from a
drummer in a West Indian-style band led him to take up his guitar again,
eventually leading to performing with the Walter Perkins Quartet among
others. Along the way, his musical growth was documented though a fascinating
body of unreleased recordings of funk, spacey explorations in odd time
signatures, along with some straight-ahead sessions.
Tiring of the
environment in Brooklyn, Cheshire and his family moved to rural Milanville, PA,
on the Delaware River, where he has been perfecting his craft, widening his
musical vision, composing steadily, and becoming a downright fine guitar player
with a distinctive and original approach.
It was during this
period when I first encountered Andrew, inviting him to appear on the Homegrown
Music regional-artist series I produce for public radio station WVIA-FM,
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, PA. His innovative, mostly single-line soloing style
combined his harmonic originality in original compositions and in fascinating
reharmonization of standards, made it quickly evident to me that Cheshire was a
guitarist/composer outside the ordinary mold.
In
1996,
Cheshire recorded his first CD
This Is Me
(Joule Records) with a stellar quartet featuring the redoubtable Ron McClure on
bass, Don Friedman on piano and Matt Wilson on drums. It showed Cheshire’s sure
hand at composing, with tunes notable for a combination of lyrically attractive
melodic lines with the sophisticated harmonic progressions that mark the best in
jazz writing. He brought a guitar style to match: warm, tasteful, inventive and
expressive. The CD illustrated Cheshire’s single-line dominated style, which
meshed beautifully with Friedman’s lush piano. The CD combined seven fine
Cheshire originals with a classy readings two standards.
Now comes
Another View,
which is just that: a different facet of Cheshire’s composing and playing,
performing in a piano-less quintet, aiming for a feel like some of the classic
old Blue Note sessions, but with fresh, new music.
Once again, Ron
McClure, bassist extraordinaire, who will forever be remembered on Charles
Lloyd’s enormously popular Forest Flower sessions, returns, joined
by the ubiquitous and enormously tasteful drummer Jeff Hirschfield. The
horn section includes tenor man Rich Perry, a veteran of his own albums and
known for his graceful, soaring solos with the Maria Schneider Jazz Orchestra.
Perry’s solo work on
Another View is nothing
short of phenomenal. On trumpet is up-and-coming Delaware native Kurt Weiss.
Based in New York for the past eight years, Weiss’ career has been diverse
enough to include stints with Ray Charles, Natalie Cole, the Glenn Miller
Orchestra, and his own group. On this, his first straight-ahead jazz session,
Weiss solos with authority and a sense of clarity and focus that mark him as a
player likely to be attracting a lot of attention.
The album title also is
relevant to the instrument Cheshire employs. Originally planning to record on an
acoustic guitar, Cheshire decided the day before the session to use a solid-body
guitar more associated with rock, complete with “whammy bar,” which he put to
creative use. His sound this time around combines hints of “high-tech”
contemporary elements with the warmth of traditional electric guitar. He also
takes a somewhat different stylistic approach for this session, playing more
chords during solos, while still turning out those single-note lines that brim
with intriguing octave jumps, unexpected melodic lines and flourishes of
triplets.
Cheshire really blossoms
as a composer for this session, with the material running from exploratory modal
pieces to wonderfully melodic Latin-influenced.
The former is the focus of the
title tune. Another View
is based on the tritone interval (which precisely divides the scale), that
Cheshire calls “a parallel universe in which I can explore two worlds at the
same time,” The composition shows some of Cheshire’s interesting ensemble
writing for the horns, heard throughout the album, with horn and guitar lines
weaving in and out of each other. The track features the CD’s most “exploratory”
solos by Perry, Weiss and especially Cheshire.
Tomorrow Is Today,
based on a laid-back Latin rhythm, subtly delivered by Hirschfield, provides a
vehicle for a gorgeous solo by McClure, followed by Cheshire’s almost
playful outing that throws a few little musical jabs into an otherwise flowing,
lyrical setting. Weiss and Perry make the most of fairly succinct solo
opportunities.
Earth Dance
pirouettes back and forth between waltz and swing time, and features a melody
line Cheshire structured to take advantage of the natural sonority, ebb and flow
of the horns. Perry really sinks his teeth into this harmonically fascinating
tune in his brilliant solo.
Eva,
named after Cheshire’s wife, is also based on a Latin rhythmic figure. In its
theme the harmonic lines are passed back and forth between the horns and the
guitar, while the other plays unison figures.
If
Secrets
resembles the old Blue Note sound, it’s intentional. Cheshire aimed to provide a
more standard structure to this piece, without sacrificing the harmonic
interest. It provides a strong vehicle for “blowing:” Perry shines, Weiss burns,
and Cheshire soars.
Saturn
was born first of a melody line, around which the interesting, often unexpected
harmonies were woven. The ensemble lines are a showpiece for Cheshire’s fine
writing.
Twentieth Century
composer Béla Bartok was the inspiration behind Diverge. Bartok’s
technique of having the melodic line separate into ever wider intervals provides
the basis for the piece (and its title), based on the Phrygian mode. Cheshire
makes the most of the diverging line in his memorable solo. The track also
includes a fiery solo by Hirschfield.
Love Planet
embodies a wonderful laid-back feel, again with some great ensemble writing for
the horns, with the trumpet and tenor moving in and out of a rhythmic
counterpoint. The shifting harmonic colors of the piece, with its transitions to
3/4 at the end of each chorus, gives Perry, Weiss, Cheshire and McClure get a
chance to do some of their most appealing solos on the record. Cheshire’s solo
aptly spotlights his technique of implying the chord changes mostly through
single note lines, beautifully supported by McClure. As a composition, it’s got
everything a jazz musician would want, and given enough exposure, could easily
become a standard.
While prestigious
institutes of higher learning are turning out some guitarists of formidable
ability, it’s nice to know that someone like Andrew Cheshire can come up the old
fashioned way and create music no less edifying, while bringing the distinctive
style and personality that comes from finding one’s own way.
-- George Graham
WVIA-FM
(c) Copyright 1998 George D.
Graham. All rights reseved.
This page may not be copied to another Web site without written permission.
Guitarist Andrew Cheshire's second release stands out from the
crowd by virtue of his distinctive original compositions, as well as individual
contributions that bring out some magical group interaction. Cheshire had
apparently planned to play the date on acoustic guitar, but decided at the last
minute to go with a solid-body electric. It was a fortuitous choice. While the
tunes themselves recall the more adventurous side of the classic Blue Note era,
they have an open, airy feel that also brings to mind Kenny Wheelers writing.
Cheshire's warm chords mix with single notes that are quietly sustained, bent,
and whammied into vapor trails that Ron McClure inhales and feeds back to
Rich Perry's warmly volatile tenor, and Kurt Weiss' flexible,
singing trumpet. Jeff Hershfeild's masterful control of dynamics on drums
rounds out a wonderfully cohesive group, all the more amazing given the fact
that this band had never played together before. What's more, the date took all
of five hours to finish, with first takes predominating. You'd never know it
from the results; this sounds like a working unit, everyone shining in his own
right, their individual lights refracting and making the leaders writing
resonate with uncommonly sympathetic, graceful interpretations. Strongly
recommended.
-- Larry Nai - Cadence April, 1998
Cheshire, who by the
time of this session had left Long Island and Brooklyn to live in Milanville, Pa.,
is in a more pronounced musical direction. His personal sound is at times steely,
stealth and under-the-surface. There's a harder edge, sharpened by a band with
tenor saxophonist Richie Perry and trumpeter Kurt Weiss that gives
broader definition to his written material, and a clearer understanding of how
to exist in the stratosphere. Rhythm mates bassist Ron McClure and
drummer Jeff Hirshfield push the proceedings along with just the right
mix of spunk and taste. There's some dark brooding in the opening title track,
but by the second cut "Tomorrow Is Today," a group sound emerges, similar
to a Lee Morgan-Joe Henderson or Jazz Messenger brilliance. The diamond is being
sliced, facets are honed, light refracts from all directions. "Earth Dance"
is a waltz-to-swing, slightly latinsh vehicle, and "Eva" (for Cheshire's
wife) sports another shimmering melody. "Secrets" is a loping. longing
line, "Saturn" again has Blue Notable references, "Diverge" is more moody
and jagged (has Cheshire admired Larry Coryell?) while the finale "Love
Planet" swings lightly, Perry getting to it directly and deeply, with a very
Coltrane-Michael Brecker informed sound that infuses the group from the first to
last drop of music played throughout this session. Cheshire's got a tiger by the
tail here, trying to tame it without getting scratched. He's chasing that
elusive balance between music that is original without sounding cliched. He's
also searching for his own sound and has by and large achieved it with several
different stances, much as a batter adapts to each individual pitcher. Perry
and McClure help tremendously in that area, while the guitarist helps
himself by not overstating the obvious. His music is charmed with the amazement
of life, fueled by passion, and delivered in an honest manner. You can't ask for
much more of modern jazz these days.
-- Michael G. Nastos - All Music
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Last Modified Date: 15/01/2005
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