Scofield
captures legend's earthy groove
The Ottawa Citizen
Sunday, October 16, 2005
Page: A9
Section: City
Byline: Alex Hutchinson
Source: The Ottawa Citizen
John Scofield rode into town last night on the tail
end of
the wave of Ray Charles mania that followed the soul
legend's death
last summer.
In front of a nearly full house at Casino du Lac-Leamy's
1,100-seat
theatre, the jazz guitarist played material from his
recent album of
Charles' music, part of the concert series marking the
25th
anniversary of the Ottawa International Jazz Festival.
Scofield did a good job of walking the middle ground
between
slavish imitation and the unrecognizable abstraction
that sometimes
hurts jazz tributes, thanks partly to the fact that
the heart of
Charles' music -- the earthy groove that defined the
soul genre --
runs deep within Scofield's own playing.
Scofield brought a muscular young rhythm section, with
bassist John
Benitez's baggy jeans and Fubu T-shirt and drummer Steve
Haas's
knitted skull-cap and soul patch highlighting the band's
generation
gap. Haas's crackling backbeat drove the music forward,
while
organist Gary Versace floated above with silky backgrounds
that
sounded as good as the Raelettes and a simple but lyrical
solo on
You Don't Know Me.
But despite the youth of the rhythm section, it was
Scofield
himself who was pushing and prodding familiar soul classics
like Hit
the Road Jack in new directions, with tight arrangements
and
solos that avoided simple riffing.
Scofield's tribute album, That's What I Say, hit stores
in June and
featured an impressive parade of guest vocalists ranging
from Dr.
John to John Mayer. This left roomy shoes to fill for
Boston-based
Meyer Statham, who has been handling the vocals (and
occasional
trombone riffs) for the tour that kicked off last month
in New York
City.
Statham's warm baritone seemed almost too smooth for
the material
on the opening rendition of I Got a Woman, but as the
show went on,
he started to step out a bit. By the time the band returned
with a
funkified reprise of the opener late in the program,
Statham was
growling and running up and down the scale with gospel
flourishes.
But in the end, it was Scofield's soloing chops that
fans came to
hear, and he showed his full range of invention, from
the sustained
bop lines on Just Me, Just You to the driving funk of
the I Got a
Woman reprise, which ended with a Scofield trademark:
a long and
playful romp with distortion and feedback pedals, producing
a
glorious jumble of moans and whistles that even Charles,
in his
infinite creativity, could never have foreseen.