Here is another of pianist
Irene Schweizer's duets with a powerhouse drummer, in this case, vanguard legend
Andrew Cyrille, in a concert recorded live at
the Willisau Festival in 1988. What is most remarkable about this session is how immediately the rapport between the pair is established.
Schweizer goes after a rhythmic angular line, chopping it up into small staccato phrases, and
Cyrille, using the entire wealth of his drum kit and gongs, feeds back her pulses as either specific accented answers or contrapuntal inversions that she takes enough delight in to lengthen her statements. There is no stalling between these two, no looking around for a language, it's all one syllable: "GO!"
Schweizer moves through batteries of
classical and
jazz motifs, undulating her left-hand harmonics in sharp bursts of ostinato as her right explodes off the end of that periodic architecture.
Cyrille doesn't dance around her -- he plays to her ideas, moving his own into the center of the mix to create tension and continuum, not release. The
hard boppish motif, layered in scalar runs and rim shots, that lies at the heart of
"From Staefa to Willisau Via Music" echoes both
Monk and
Stravinsky in alternating lines before giving way to
Herbie Nichols,
Tristano, and
Schoenberg or
Messiaen. It's
Cyrille that cuts it loose from the traditions and brings it into the present day as a dialogue between them -- not on
jazz history, but on
improvisational movement and the physicality of spontaneous composition. There are few expressions of spontaneous communication in
improvisational music that could equal, let alone surpass, this one. ~ Thom Jurek