I first enjoyed the original Oregon, during an "ECM Festival", at Washington, D.C.'s Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. Alongside Gary Burton, a young Pat Matheny, Eberhard Weber, John Abercrombie and Jack Dejohnette, Oregon truly shined. Thirty five years, and dozens of recordings later, the incredible jazz quartet Oregon will be releasing their latest effort, the eagerly awaited "Prime". Led by three of their original members, guitarist and keyboardist Ralph Towner, Bolinas-based Paul McCandless on reeds, and bassist Glenn Moore, Oregon's "Prime" follows the success of their Grammy winning "Oregon in Moscow" and "Live at Yoshi's". Oregon has continued, rather admirably following the tragic death of original percussionist Colin Walcott during their 1984 European tour. Walcott had ironically suggested that the great Indian percussionist Trilok Gurtu could make a fine addition to the group, and after his death, Gurtu joined Oregon for three albums, "Ecotopia", "45th Parallel" and "Always, Never and Forever". With the departure of Gurtu to John McLaughlin's band, Oregon added percussionist Mark Walker, first heard on their 1997 release, "Northwest Passage", and to date, the longest-standing addition since Walcott.
"Prime", is due to be released January 23rd. "All About Jazz" reviewer John Kelman, writing about it's imminent arrival, said that "Given most marriages don’t last 35 years, the fact that three of perennially genre-busting group Oregon’s four founding members have remained together so long—and there’s little doubt that if Colin Walcott had not tragically died in a car accident in ’84, he’d still be around too—is truly remarkable. Sure, there are a few old warhorse rock and roll bands like the Rolling Stones who’ve been around longer. But given the mercurial and significantly less-recompensable nature of jazz, guitarist/pianist Ralph Towner, woodwind multi-instrumentalist Paul McCandless, and bassist Glen Moore’s ability to continue to evolve and find new things to say makes them a definite anomaly in the jazz landscape."
"Their latest release also features more recent recruit Mark Walker, who, having been with the group since ‘97’s Northwest Passage, is Oregon's longest-standing percussionist since Walcott’s untimely passing. Prime demonstrates just how they’ve taken influences from a variety of spaces over the years—jazz, folk, classical, ethnic music of India and Brazil, and more—and integrated them in ways that eliminate delineation, developing a unique language imitated but never copied. Their strongest album in years, Prime also reconnects the group with recording engineer Jan Erik Kongshaug and Rainbow Studio in Oslo, Norway. This is the first time they’ve recorded there since their short tenure with the ECM label in the mid-‘80s, and the result is an album whose sonic excellence matches its exceptional writing and performances.
As always, Towner provides the lion’s share of the writing. It's as much about his unique way of voicing as specific melodic and rhythmic concerns, and it remains instantly recognizable but never predictable. In its pastoral folksiness, “If” bears some resemblance to earlier pieces like “Green and Golden,” but its odd meter and deceptively difficult changes provide characteristic yet fresh grist for Towner and McCandless’ advanced improvisational acumen, which remains uncannily lyrical in the face of harmonic adversity.
And while some have accused Oregon of becoming softer and less edgy over the years, Towner’s three-part “Monterey Suite,” some of his best writing in recent years, lays waste to that suggestion. While lacking the sharp angularity of some of his earlier work, the complex nature of the first part, “Dark,” still comes from a shadowy place similar to “Distant Hills,” even as Walker’s kit work gives it less idiosyncratic but more dynamically-building forward motion. The second movement, “Tammurriata,” vividly proves that Towner’s creative sense of counterpoint is still intact.
As always, a number of brief free pieces act almost as way stations along the disc’s greater narrative arc, and it has the same inherent sense of purpose that has always differentiated Oregon's spontaneous improvisations, which are more about texture and ambience than mere notes and pulses.
Moore contributes two pieces, most notably a reprise of “Pepe Linque” from ‘85’s Crossing which, with Walker’s shuffle beat and Towner’s blues/gospel piano, is the closest Oregon has ever come to boogie. Proof that, with Prime, despite the kind of familiarity that can only come from so many years together, Oregon still has more than a few tricks up its sleeve."
I will always have long time friend and WPFW's "G Strings" host Tom Cole, to thank for my continued love of Oregon. The recent recordings of Towner on Bill Bruford's "If Summer Had It's Ghosts" with Eddie Gomez, and McCandless' work on several Bela Fleck and the Flecktones albums, notably "Live at the Quick", has made me hungry for this newest effort. Based on what I have heard so far, I too, am truly "primed".