MIROSLAV VITOUS
Universal Syncopations
ecm
THOMAS CONRAD
The least famous participant in Universal Syncopations is the leader, bassist
Miroslav Vitous.
The other players are among the most prominent in the world on their respective
instruments:
Chick Corea, Jack Dejohnette, John McLaughlin and Jan Garbarek.
The album was recorded over a two-year period in two different studios and then
assembled by
Vitous, producer Manfred Eicher and engineer Jan Erik Kongshaug.
This process may explain why the sonic quality is not quite up to ECM s high
standards.
Despite the presence of such strong, distinctive personalities, Universal
Syncopations is
undeniably a Miroslav Vitous album, unified by his individual vision.
The foundation is a transcendental hook-up between Vitous and drummer Jack
Dejohnette.
Neither keeps time. Instead, they whirl and fidget and throb and shower sparks
of energy
and create powerful updrafts that carry this music aloft.
Vitous wrote or cowrote all nine tunes, which contain gently persistent hooks of
provocative
ideas within wide-open vistas.
In such a context, Jan Garbarek excels.
On pieces like the breezy "Bamboo Forest," he is less expansive than on his own
albums,
but his soprano saxophone is piercingly, concisely definitive. Both "Sun Flower"
and
"Miro Bop" set up Garbarek and Corea in abstract relationships of rarefied,
fragmented
call-and-response. "Beethoven" places Vitous and Garbarek in analogous but
starker
juxtaposition while Dejohnette clatters and intermittently detonates.
The synergies among Vitous, Dejohnette, Garbarek and Corea are so productive
that the
three least satisfying pieces are the ones that add the trumpets of Wayne
Bergeron and
Valerie Ponomarev and the trombone of Isaac Smith.
Their weight interferes with the way this music dances on air.
These three pieces are also where John McLaughlin replaces Corea, and it is
puzzling that
he is kept so far in the background, his vast guitar resources so underutilized.