*** Ron Miles
WOMAN'S DAY
(Gramavision)
Trumpeter Ron Miles's second
Gramavision release is a quiet one, but no less intense than his label debut,
last year's My Cruel Heart. Joined by regular bandmates bassist Artie
Moore and drummer Rudy Royston, plus guitarist Bill Frisell (in whose quartet
Miles also works), the Denver-based trumpeter folds spare lyricism and rhythmic
sophistication into a category-defying blend of rock, funk, and jazz. He's a
master craftsman who wields all his tools -- compositional and improvisational
-- with equal skill.
As a composer he often pairs opposites to create tension and drama. On "You
Taste . . . ," a slow, simple melody played by trumpet and
guitar collides against thrashing bass and drums. And though some of his
writing is disarmingly direct, "Born Liar" is all insinuation and shadow, with
melodies and rhythms revealing themselves briefly, then slipping away into
darkness. As a soloist, Miles can say a lot with a little. Limiting himself to
just a few well-chosen notes from the middle of his range on "Belly," he uses
rhythmic displacement, thematic development, and varied timbres to build a
poised and beautifully proportioned solo.
-- Ed Hazell
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