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Close Your Eyes
Close Your Eyes

Close Your Eyes in Bloomington, MN

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For his debut recording, Chicago vocalist
Elling
pushes the envelope, challenging listeners and his musicians with beat poetry, ranting, and his
Mark Murphy
-ish singing. There's quite a bit of dramatist/actor in
, although the romantic in him is also pretty prevalent. Acting much like a tenor saxophonist,
can wail and shout, expound on social themes, and scat like a demon. Help from the extraordinary pianist
Laurence Hobgood
, bassists
Eric Hochberg
and
Rob Amster
, and drummer
Paul Wertico
inspires
to even higher plateaus, while tenor saxophone foils
Ed Peterson
Von Freeman
appear separately on three of the 13 tracks.
writes a ton of lyrics. His take on
Wayne Shorter
's
"Dolores"
is
"Dolores Dream,"
on which the singer speaks of Chi-Town in terms both favorable (hanging out at
the Green Mill
jazz club) and not so favorable ("fat frying, spluttering rank Chicago smeltering along, smothered in hot wooly sweat"), with a maniacal swing following his a cappella intro. His ramrod scatting is amazing both on this piece and on an exploratory take of
Herbie Hancock
"Hurricane."
A
"So What"
-type modality informs
"(Hide The) Salome,"
with vicious scatting and
Freeman
's tenor in complete, frustrated agreement.
's poetic recitation of
"Married Blues"
and the avant beat style of
"Now It Is Time"
show his reverence for
Rexroth
Rilke
, respectively. As far as pure singing goes,
"All the Sad Young Men"
is beautifully rendered -- similar to
Murphy
, but not as overtly pronounced.
"Close Your Eyes"
opens with a tender piano intro, flowing into bass/vocal wistfulness and a midtempo romp.
extrapolates on the original lyric and scats feverishly on the bridge. He is at his most sexual on the slinky bossa
"Never Say Goodbye"
and the ballad
"Storyteller Experiencing Total Confusion,"
with
Peterson
's sax shyly filling in cracks of fear and disillusionment. There's clearly more in store for
as he matures, but this is as auspicious a vocal jazz debut as the world has heard. ~ Michael G. Nastos
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