Rebecca
Gates
Ruby Series
(Badman CD)
With Ruby
Series, main Spinane Rebecca Gates reappears after three years,
drops the name, and makes a hard yet graceful turn from her previous
arty-indie-pop. Maybe its the years adding up, but more
likely its her second home of Chicago thats turned
her onto jazz. Yes, jazz: though under Gates spell, its
sedate, spacious, and sexy stuff.
Teamed again
with the golden multi-instrumentalist John McEntire (who engineered
The Spinanes last album, Arches and Isles) as well as drummer
Brian Deck (who, along with McEntire, was in the Sea and Cake
and Tortoise), bassist Noel Kupersmith and brief appearances by
keyboardist Mikael Jorgensen, Gates has sculpted seven tracks
in intimate, delicate beauty with suave jazz at their foundations.
A sauntering piano line opens "The Seldom Scene" before
Gates warmed-honey voice slides in, and the piano starts
to twinkle.
Stand-up bass
appears here and there, as do a sleepy vibraphone and lazy, snare-heavy
drums. Gates weighted whispers seem to weave their way around
the cocktail-club arrangements, filling up most of the crevasses
and open spaces left. Her swimming intonation suits the form well,
and though she seems restrained at times, her softer voice still
manages to lay a warm hand upon the heart like no one else. Ruby
Series is not, truly, a jazz album. The lovely space age lullaby
"Lure and Cast" is formed almost wholly of electronic
loops. "Move," with its built-in fuzz, is traditional,
no-beat sadcore, and "Doos," filled with dizzying throbbing
and acoustic guitar breaks, is another case of Gates beautifully
bruised pop.
But even the
sophisticated rave base of "In a Star Orbit," and "The
Colonels Circle," with its beefy, buoyant bass and
light guitar strokes, have at their hearts the type of musical
interplay and individuation which is fundamentally found in jazz.
Maybe this is what smart pop sounds like when it gets a bit of
aching in its bones, and wed be well advised to listen up
for progress reports.Scott D. Lewis
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