Tim Berne continued
Bloodcount's forays into extended-form creative jazz with
Poisoned Minds, the second installment of the band's live CD series recorded at Instants Chavirés in Paris during September of 1994. There are only two pieces on the disc, "The Other" at 27 and a half minutes and "What Are the Odds?" at 41 and a half minutes; with running times like those,
Berne was clearly not aiming for significant airplay on commercial radio. Instead,
Poisoned Minds is for serious listeners without attenuated attention spans, a somewhat radical concept in itself. Yet aside from the lengths of the pieces, many elements of the music are not particularly radical despite
Berne's avant-garde rep -- melody, rhythm, and theme are all important to the saxophonist, and the innovation comes from the way he manipulates structure, fitting the pieces of the puzzle together in unpredictable ways. "The Other" begins with
Berne on alto and
Chris Speed on clarinet, stating a bluesy, soulful, and somewhat melancholy theme in rubato time; drummer
Jim Black uses this opportunity to color the music with textural embellishments rather than drive it forward. Urgent propulsion is dominant in the piece's middle section, where tension is stretched to the breaking point as
Black and bassist
Michael Formanek jam out with a twisted rhythm and
Berne and
Speed, scarcely taking time to inhale, throw long purple-faced lines over the top. And yet "The Other" perhaps finds its greatest power in an uneasy conclusion that combines elements of free jazz and chamber music, subverting any expectations of a slam-bang finale.
Berne starts "What Are the Odds?" on alto accompanied only by
Black, and he's not in the mood for rumination at this point, possessed instead by uptempo, boppish energy. As his sax lines leap and twist, bits of a
Berne-ish melody become discernible, and suddenly the whole band is off to the races together on a highly charged theme that catapults forward even through abrupt, oddly timed stops and starts. Then
Speed bursts through with a hot tenor solo over churning, chunky, and propulsive accompaniment from
Black,
Formanek, and guitarist
Marc Ducret. The groove pulls completely apart in a cacophonous outburst from all the bandmembers, but
Berne and
Speed somehow find their way back to the theme and then drag the rhythm section back in line with them. An abrupt downward shift in dynamics leads to a beautifully subdued ensemble passage, and then
Formanek is soon displaying his solo chops. From here on, unpredictability comes not in the piece's linear form -- which is in fact leading to a slam-bang finish -- but rather in the way
Berne uses intra-band tension. In three separate waves, solo or group episodes informed by free improvisation are pitted against steadily rising backdrops of funky, twisted riffs that only
Berne could write. Rhythmically off-kilter and yet with grooves that
Black can drive a truck through,
Berne's engaging riffs ultimately win the struggle, with so much energy expended that the listener is left -- happily -- exhausted.
–
Dave Lynch, Rovi