Dave Douglas
Keystone

Greenleaf    GRE-03  (2006)

Jazz
CD, 2   Discs, 13   Tracks, 92:22  Length
Keystone 52:54
01 Noise From The Deep Dave Douglas 06:54
02 Just Another Murder Dave Douglas 04:51
03 Sapphire Sky Blue Dave Douglas 04:55
04 Butterfly Effect Dave Douglas 06:14
05 Fatty's Day Off Dave Douglas 02:31
06 Mabel Normand Dave Douglas 04:47
07 Arbuckle Dave Douglas 04:31
08 Famous Players Dave Douglas 06:52
09 Barnyard Flirtations Dave Douglas 01:42
10 Hollywood Dave Douglas 04:19
11 Tragicomique Dave Douglas 05:18

Keystone - Disc 2 [DVD]

39:28
01 Fatty & Mabel Adrift (1916) Dave Douglas 34:37
02 Just Another Murder Dave Douglas 04:51
Music Details
Product Details
UPC (Barcode) 099923589624
Packaging Digipac
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Trumpet Dave Douglas
Keyboards Jamie Saft
Drums Gene Lake
Saxophone Marcus Strickland
Bass Brad Jones
Turntable DJ Olive
Musician Dave Douglas Keystone
Producer Dave Douglas; David Torn
Personal Details
Index # 980
Owner Dave
Tags Free Jazz, Avantgarde Jazz
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
Dave Douglas is among the most ambitious jazzmen in recent history. The sheer breadth and depth of his catalog is, when taken as a whole, rather startling, not only for its ambition but for its remarkable consistency. Keystone is Douglas' tribute to Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle, one of the first real movie stars who was destroyed by a scandal that took three trials to have him exonerated of all charges. But it took its toll: Arbuckle was essentially ruined by it, and the rumors of that time still persist. Douglas sets the record straight in his liner notes here. Keystone is a double-disc set with a DVD of Arbuckle's short silent films with the soundtrack provided by Douglas. The other is a CD of the full pieces that stands on its own as an album. This is Douglas' electronic band and features Jamie Saft on Wurlitzer piano, DJ Olive on turntables, drummer Gene Lake, saxophonist Marcus Strickland, and bassist Brad Jones. David Torn co-produced the album with Douglas and is like a silent member of the band because of his atmospheric touches and nuances. This is a groove-oriented recording. Douglas goes for the easy, loping, languid shapes and colors that are both impressionistic and expressionistic in the formal aesthetic senses of those terms. Certainly Bill Frisell (a frequent Douglas collaborator) set a precedent with his two albums devoted to the films of Buster Keaton, but Douglas takes it a step further to what feel more like songs in their structures. There are melodies here one can hum to. Compositionally, one can hear Wayne Shorter in these tunes, as he wrote for the early Miles Davis electric band. (And one wonders what Miles would have thought of this approach by Douglas.) Keystone is more accessible and lyric than Freak In (2003), but it shares the same restraint and fine taste to showcase the savvy and swagger of his band rather than the technology available. The technology used on the set is an enhancement to a band playing in the studio rather than as a crutch to lean on. It is not intrusive, but rather a reflective backdrop from which the band articulates its lyric approach. Nowhere is this more evident than on the opener, "A Noise from the Deep"; the utterly elegant and graceful "Mabel Normand"; the spooky yet graceful "The Real Roscoe"; and the funky, swinging "Famous Player," all of which are in the center of the record. Keystone is an excellent, brave, and exciting offering from a man whose talent and vision are perfectly balanced.

With DVD