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    Kansas City
    by Jeff Kaliss

    "Musically, we were trying to capture the sound of the time as best we could," Joshua Redman told me after his return to his New York City apartment last year from the set of Robert Altman's film Kansas City, set in 1934. "But they didn't make us feel restricted."

    Although the film premieres this fall, the spirit of the soundtrack suggests that musical director Hal Wilner (who's also produced tribute recordings to Kurt Weill, Walt Disney, and Nino Rota) has successfully worked his magic again, and that we'd do well to join the jam at Altman's fictional Hey Hey Club. Wilner has assembled a stellar selection of '90s jazz performers and managed to keep them true to the compositional and instrumental conceits of the '30s, while still allowing them space to show off and have fun. The fun blasts out of the tenor sax of James Carter from the opening measures of Count Basie's and Jimmy Rushing's "Blues in the Dark" set over a wicked vamp by pianist Geri Allen.

    While all the tracks are period pieces, most aren't as familiar as "Moten Swing", (written by brothers Bennie and Buster Moten, who helped bring New Orleans trad jazz into the prebop KC sound), in which Carter and Jesse Davis are careful to limit their quotes to material no more recent than the 1930 pop tune, "Exactly Like You".

    But the panorama of Kansas City sound extends towards the subsequent bop innovations of KC native Charlie Parker and visitors Charlie Christian and Lester Young in the soundtrack's arrangement of Hawk's "Queer Notions". The eccentric solos by David Murray, Russell Malone, and Cyrus Chestnut here push the historical envelope just a bit.

    Handy's tenor locks horns with Redman on "Yeah, Man". And there's another spirited scrimmage between brassmen Nicholas Payton, James Zollar, and Olu Dara, carried out as a New Orleans street march on Basie and Durham's "Lafayette," with the sounds of the bystanding Hey Hey crowd artfully engineered and mixed in by Eric Liljestrand. The enthusiastic club clientele also participate in Kevin Mahogany's vocalized bluesy admission, "I Left My Baby".

    A more moody but equally apt effect is showcased in the big band format of "Lullaby of the Leaves" and in two takes on the Duke Ellington standard "Solitude", the first humidified by Redman's broadly blown sax and the second quietly romanced by the basses of Christian McBride and Ron Carter. A sweet but sassy Don Byron reminds us of the time when clarinets still counted in Walter Page's "Pagin' the Devil" .

    Here then is an intriguing and valuable musical experiment: despite the historical restrictions on the players, their virtuosity comes through, as does the ambience of that special time and place, so important to the evolution of jazz.

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