Rob Mazurek has one foot planted north in Chicago and the other south in Sao Paulo, and he draws from the music of both cities on the atmospheric, exuberant
Skull Sessions. Beginning in the '90s, the cornetist became a guiding force in Windy City avant jazz, post-rock, and electronica with
the Chicago Underground,
Tortoise, and
Isotope 217, and he carried his ever inquisitive sensibility to Brazil in the new millennium, forming
Sao Paulo Underground with
Mauricio Takara (drums, percussion, cavaquinho -- a Brazilian ukulele) and later
Guilherme Granado (keyboards, electronics), both of whom appear on
Skull Sessions. Recorded at Sao Paulo's Teatro do SESC Pinheiros in November 2011,
Skull Sessions is a recording by
the Rob Mazurek Octet, which in addition to
Mazurek,
Takara, and
Granado features Swiss-born Brazil resident
Thomas Rohrer on rabeca (a Brazilian fiddle) and
Carlos Issa on guitar and electronics along with three of
Mazurek's Chicago collaborators: flutist
Nicole Mitchell, vibraphonist
Jason Adasiewicz, and drummer
John Herndon. In a sense, one might expand -- at least in spirit -- the band to include the presence of
Miles Davis, because
Skull Sessions was conceived by
Mazurek to be performed in Sao Paulo in conjunction with the traveling We Want Miles multimedia exhibition and tribute.
As one might expect,
Mazurek was not given to rote duplication of
Davis' music. Rather, through his own compositions (with some recycling: note the hard boppish melody line of "Vodou Cinque" from the
Starlicker album
Double Demon that surfaces in "Voodoo and the Petrified Forest"), he captured the spirit of the trumpeter's expansive and even now controversial early- to mid-'70s electric funk-fusion years. That's not to say
Mazurek and band don't find touchstones in other portions of
Davis' lengthy, ever-changing career, but the four 13- to 17-plus-minute pieces here -- plus the spookily burbling four-and-a-half-minute coda "Keeping the Light Up" -- could be heard as 21st century corollaries to the music heard on
Davis' tradition-shattering live albums like
Agharta,
Pangaea, and
Dark Magus. And yet, as
Mazurek and
Rohrer cut through the sonic storm, balanced by
Mitchell's fluttering flute and
Adasiewicz's glistening vibraphone,
Skull Sessions is in many ways more organic and ebullient, not rooted in '70s urban street funk but instead melding the collective, collaborative improvisational approach of
Sun Ra, Chicago's
AACM, and
Mazurek's own massive
Exploding Star Orchestra with driving, celebratory rhythms that speak more strongly of the Southern Hemisphere than the Northern. It would be hard to imagine music more akin to a turbulent river, ebbing and flowing through both roiling rapids and calmer, even serene waters, the musicians in perfect synchronicity even as they rise to assert their individual identities. No ensemble driven by an iron-fisted bandleader could possibly achieve this. A sense emerges that
Mazurek traveled to Brazil to learn at least as much as he would teach, one of the results being a fine album like this. ~ Dave Lynch