
Swing Central
This is not a trick question nor a riddle: What instrument
displays more verve and versatility than any synthesizer?
The human voice.
Unlike any manufactured instrument, the voice--with
its varied repertoire of range, tone, throaty effects
and phrasing inflections--has the capacity to reflect
an infinite number of styles and feelings. Because the
voice renders words as well as melody, it engages the
listener intellectually as well as emotionally. Even
the most sophisticated and well-played instruments cannot
tell a story in song like the human voice.
Central New York's premiere jazz vocal septet,
Swing Central--four voices and an all-pro rhythm section--follow
in the footsteps of similar combos which stretch the
limits of vocal creativity: Lambert, Hendricks and Ross,
Manhattan Transfer and especially the Ithaca College-bred
quartet, New York Voices, who recently performed in
tandem with the Count Basie Orchestra at the 1998 M&T
Bank Syracuse Jazz Fest.
Swing Central's debut disc, For the Love of
It (independent) clearly demonstrates the septet's
debt to New York Voices, as three of the 11 tracks were
composed or arranged by the ex-Ithacans.
When the four SC voices interweave, as they do
so smoothly on George Gerswhin's "Our Love is Here to
Stay" (arranged by New York Voices leader Darmon Meader),
the harmonies flow like a satin in the breeze. Then,
on the same track, when they belt the bridge ("The Rockies
may crumble/ Gibraltar may tumble/ They're only made
of clay./ Our love is here to stay") the staccato treatment
really stops listeners cold, and rhythmically sets the
scene for the outpouring of Gershwin's melodic verses.
Carol Bryant's silky soprano never sounds forced, neither
in this tune nor elsewhere on the album. There's none
of that hissing, trembling treble you hear in some high
registers, just Bryant's natural, bell-tone.
Bryant's alto-voiced female counterpart in Swing
Central, Carrie Pardee takes the lead on "Open Invitation,"
a composition by Meader and his New York Voices colleague
Lauren Kinhan. Pardee's lower tones ably complement
Bryant's higher achievements, while drummer Dave Hanlon
and singer-percussionist Steve Orlando Jr. embellish
the "Invitation" with a pleasant array of chimes, bongoes
and tom-toms. Tenor Fred Johnson's "vocal horn solo"
cleverly conjures up an imaginary instrument somewhere
between a trumpet and trombone.
The versatility of vocal arrangements is clearly
illustrated by another Meader tune, "Baroque Samba,"
which begins hauntingly, almost as a round, as the different
voices enter the mix one after another, eventually overlapping.
The deceivingly simple arrangement incorporates a hint
of Gregorian chant as the a cappella intro gives way
to a Hanlon drum roll and Bill DiCosimo's keyboard comping.
DiCosimo also contributes an impressive solo on the
"Samba," displaying speed, agility and a solid grasp
of the polyrhythmic progression. Hanlon's trap set solo
likewise fetches, with its varied, always swinging approach,
as it leads up to the big vocal climax: "Ba ba ba da
ba ba da...B-OW!"
For an upstate New York band, Swing Central displays
an amazing affinity for the syncopated sounds from south
of the border. Another samba, Antonia Carlos Jobim's
"Aqua de Beber," stands out as one of the album's many
highlights. And you'll swear it's a wind instrument
and not a sample when DiCosimo fingers the synthesized
flute solo.
Although Swing Central clearly exists to showcase
vocal jazz, keyboardist-composer DiCosimo (a longtime
member of Dave Hanlon's Cookbook) nearly steals the
show on this disc. His original song, "Gift of Gab,"
seems to have been written specifically for the Swing
Central singers. Its second line intro is followed by
the voices laying down the head, before the precision
rhythm section takes over, leading to a full-bodied
bass line plucked by Syracuse Symphony Orchestra veteran
Darryl Pugh. Orlando shares the lead vocal chore with
Bryant before he breaks into a simply sinewy scat.
DiCosimo also turns in a swift-chorded acoustic
piano break on a Sharon Bradley arrangement of Ned Washington
and Bronislav Kaper's "Green Dolphin Street." Oddly,
this number starts out in 7/8 time, before segueing
to a less unusual 4/4 swing.
The vocals remain center stage throughout this
record, of course, but Swing Central isn't shy about
shining the spotlight on its talented instrumentalists,
including guest guitarist Mark Copani on "American Eyes,"
a minor key blues by West Coast composer Todd Buffa.
An apparent indictment of the Ugly American "me-me-me"
syndrome, Buffa's tune displays a decidedly noir edge.
Fred Johnson's somewhat menacing lead vocal is echoed
by Pardee before Orlando and Bryant jointly deliver
the third verse, and by now the nastiness is practically
palpable. Copani then picks a delicious Steely Dan-ish
electric guitar lead, much rockier than what he plays
with his own instrumental jazz band, Eye Level.
Later, the vocalists cackle Buffa's lyrics like
a gaslighted Greek chorus: "Don't look at me with surprise./
I'm just laughin' cuz I don't wanta cry./ It's the writing
on the wall/ and we see it go by/ as we watch through
American Eyes."
For the Love Of It incorporates a wide array
of jazz, from an unusually upbeat, re-harmonized version
of Johnny Mercer and Harold Arlen's "Come Rain or Come
Shine," to the humorous "Roger's Idea (Benny's from
Heaven)," to Bryant's smoky, low-register reading of
"Fever," accompanied only by Pugh's upright bass and
vocal percussion lines care of Johnson and Orlando.
As though paying a final, fervent homage to its
jazz ancestors, Swing Central acknowledges the influence
of Fifties vocalese pioneers Lambert, Hendricks and
Ross with the disc's double-time closer, a righteous
rendition of Hendricks' "Everybody's Boppin.'"
For band information, call 689-6242.