Moroccan musician
Bachir Attar is the leader of the phenomenal
Master Musicians of Jajouka, a performing ensemble whose history extends back centuries. Every so often, their music has been "discovered" by luminaries as diverse as the writer/composer
Paul Bowles,
Rolling Stones guitarist
Brian Jones, and jazz revolutionary
Ornette Coleman. Here,
Attar was lured to New York City for a one-shot collaboration with omnipresent downtown composer/guitarist/math whiz
Elliott Sharp. The sessions have a bit of an introductory feel with the musicians concentrating on slower, more languid pieces, allowing each player to stretch out at his leisure. In general,
Sharp appears to defer to
Attar's traditions both in the style of the compositions and in reining in his own flamboyant impulses. Instead, he provides a blues-inflected support to
Attar's vocals and embroideries on rhaita and guimbri, the former a double-reed horn similar to the shenai, the latter a kind of North African flute. In fact, some of
Sharp's playing prefigures his later work with his blues ensemble
Terraplane. On the negative side, some of the drum machine sounds produced by
Sharp sound stiff and out of place. While none of the music here rises to the heights of either the ecstatic music of
the Master Musicians or the hyperdense controlled chaos of numerous
Sharp projects, this is still a fairly successful meeting of disparate traditions with both musicians clearly approaching each other with open ears. ~ Brian Olewnick