Carol Robbins: Moraga (2012)
By DAN BILAWSKY, All About Jazz
Published: July 3, 2012
While the harp is often pigeonholed as an instrument that belongs in the confines of classical music, artists like Carol Robbins, Zeena Parkins and Edmar Castaneda are helping to change public perception about this topic. Castaneda has created rhythmically engaging music that’s high on excitement, and Parkins is constantly breaking barriers by invading every area, from edgy, alternative rock to avant-garde jazz, with her harp in hand(s); but Robbins is the one that found a way to manipulate the instrument’s classical nature to be used for jazz purposes.
While her harp has provided color behind jazz vocalists Cynthia Felton and Jackie Ryan, and well-known singers in other orbits, like Patti Labelle and Boz Scaggs, her most notable work to date has been with pianist Billy Childs’s Jazz Chamber Ensemble. This group takes a cinematic and visceral stance on sound, as it paints music that resides at the crossroads of jazz and classical music, and Robbins’ harp has been one of the key ingredients in its winning formula.
Light textures and interwoven ideals often come to the surface in that group’s work and, while Childs certainly had an influence on Robbins, she finds her own sound on this album. Morbid melodies (“Three Rings”), John Coltrane-like burners (“Straight Away”) and music that that awakens in a collective rubato mist, eventually taking shape around Darek Oles’ firm and driving bass, show Robbins’ to be a well-rounded composer, but the variety doesn’t stop there. Robbins brings beauty into focus with some Cole Porter (“Every Time We Say Goodbye”), doles out some luxuriant and light-handed bossa nova in a duo setting with guitarist Larry Koonse(Antonio Carlos Jobim’s “Caminhos Cruzados”) and delivers a haunting rendition of a Nino Rota number that sounds like a cross between music box melodies, “Hedwig’s Theme” and “Nature Boy.”
While Robbins hands out the refined work and dramatic flourishes expected of her ilk, her ability to give the harp a guitar-like sound broadens the possibilities in this music. She can comp with grace and deliver clean-toned single note lines when the music calls for it, but when Koonse’s guitar is also at play or the situation demands more restraint she knows how to recede from the foreground and blend into the scenery.
Robbins should be applauded for creating a meaningful program of music that showcases her work as a composer and performer, while also highlighting the ever-expanding role of the harp in jazz; Moraga is a real musical treat.
Personnel: Carol Robbins: harp; Billy Childs: piano; Gary Meek: saxophone, clarinet; Larry Koonse: guitar; Darek Oles: bass; Gary Novak: drums.
Record Label: Jazzcats