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Home > Features > Kermit Driscoll: A Resolution Realized Related Posts Chris Pattishall Channels Mary Lou Williams on Debut Album Before he knew what he wanted to do for his debut album, Chris Pattishall was adamant about what he didn’t want to do. “I didn’t … Read More Jihye Lee: Daring to Lead A decade ago, an apprehensive yet thrilled Jihye Lee walked into the Berklee College of Music with no jazz background or knowledge of the English … Read More Cowboys & Frenchmen Reflect on Touring Days in New Video Album Our Highway, the new album by New York-based quintet Cowboys & Frenchmen, invites listeners to recall busier days. The 43-minute suite harks back a couple … Read More Shai Maestro Is Only Human Absorption. Energy. Pinched nerves. Grandmothers. These might seem like off-kilter topics for an interview with athletic Israeli pianist/composer Shai Maestro and his equally intense longtime … Read More Home About JazzTimes Advertising Contact Us Terms of Use Privacy Policy Manage Your Consent Published since 1970, JazzTimes—“America’s Jazz Magazine”—provides comprehensive and in-depth coverage of the jazz scene. Often controversial, always entertaining, JazzTimes is a favorite of musicians and fans alike. FOLLOW US © 2021 Madavor Media, LLC. All rights reserved. ACCOUNT FAVORITES Features Reviews Festivals & Events Audio & Video Guides News Subscribe Festivals & Events SEE MORE Editor’s Picks LISTS Year in Review: The Top 40 New Jazz Releases of 2020 (10-1) For our 2020 Year in Review section, we... Ad CRI GENETICS PROFILES The Changing Nature of Protest in Jazz What we went to offer is a positive notion, a... LISTS 10 Best Jazz Albums of the 1970s: Critics’ Picks What better way to celebrate the 50th anniversary... Kermit Driscoll: A Resolution Realized Bassist talks with David R. Adler about latest album and what he's had to overcome in recent years UPDATED APRIL 26, 2019 DAVID R. ADLER Sponsored Ads Most Valuable Vinyl Records Best Sounding Speakers 1. 1. First Signs of Lung Cancer 2. 2. Rare Vinyl Records 3. 3. Vinyl Albums For Sale 4. 4. Top 50 Rare Records S ince 2004, bassist Kermit Driscoll had been making New Year’s resolutions to document his own music as a leader. He’s best known for his 1987-1996 tenure with guitarist Bill Frisell, but name it and Driscoll has played it: Broadway shows, classical, folk, rock, Xlm and TV music, the exacting work of Ben Monder, John Hollenbeck, John Zorn and more. Now he’s fulXlled that promise to himself and released Reveille (19/8), his long-awaited debut. It features his friends Frisell and drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, with new colleague Kris Davis on piano. The catalyst was Driscoll’s life-threatening bout with Lyme disease, diagnosed at an advanced stage in 2005. Friends organized “For the Love of Kermit” beneXt concerts, and according to Driscoll, “Vinnie was responsible for a lot of donations that came to me through the [musicians’] union. He was helping when I was real sick. And he kept saying, ‘We’ve got to play, we’ve got to play.’ It was Vinnie’s idea.” Of the eight Driscoll originals on Reveille, some date back many years while others are new. The feel of the album is loose and iowing, with edgy guitaristic elements but also tightly composed and chamberlike thematic statements (Xve of the 10 tracks feature Davis). Says Frisell, “Kermit created an atmosphere where I wouldn’t say it was easy-there was some hard music-but he made it safe for us to go for it.” That feeling of support harked back to the earliest days of their friendship. “Kermit was so important to me in getting the conXdence to Xnd my own voice and play my own music,” the guitarist recalls. “It’s easy to get discouraged, but from my Xrst feeble attempts Kermit was there for me when I needed him. [Drummer] Joey Baron, too, though I met Joey later. When I put my Xrst band together, there wasn’t any question: Those were the guys.” Born in Nebraska in 1956, Driscoll dropped out of high school, toured the Midwest with rock bands and wound up at Interlochen Arts Academy, then the University of Miami. “It just so happened that Jaco Pastorius was teaching [in Miami] that one semester,” Driscoll remembers. “I met Jaco and it was all over. Just him in a practice room with a little amp-I’m hooked, I’m hooked.” (Jaco’s death in 1987 was a blow to the whole jazz community, but for Driscoll the wound seems especially raw. He couldn’t speak of it without tears.) From Miami it was on to Berklee, where Driscoll and Frisell met on their Xrst day in 1975. “Jaco got me Xred up about playing the bass, and Bill got me Xred up about playing music,” Driscoll says. “Without those two, you wouldn’t be sitting here with me today.” Was it Frisell’s compositions that inspired him most? “Every aspect of his life,” Driscoll responds. “We used to play gigs at Michael’s Pub in Boston for $4.50, and Bill would write it down on his calendar so he wouldn’t forget to pay taxes on it. He’s that honest.” “Kermit is younger than me,” says Frisell, “but he already had way more experience on the road when I met him. He found himself working right away [in Boston]. I was scuning along and he got me a gig with this Top 40 band called the Boston Connection. We played hotels and had to wear these orange polyester suits- there’s still a promo picture of this band. And the drummer was Vinnie Colaiuta.” According to Driscoll, “We played disco and Vinnie was just playing his ass off. He was my roommate in Boston around ’76 or ’77. He used to play at me, but now he plays with me. And if you listen to Reveille, you hear how Vinnie is on Bill’s case all the time; you can hear how much he respects Bill, and likewise.” Driscoll’s album marks the Xrst time Frisell and Colaiuta had played together since the disco band. In Frisell’s ’80s and ’90s groups Driscoll played electric bass, at times in an unorthodox fashion. “Sometimes I’d play nothing but high-register stuff for a while,” he says, “not typical bass function all the time. I like to orchestrate on the bass.” Some of this was born of necessity, as Frisell explains: “[Cellist and quartet member] Hank Roberts injured his hand or Xnger, and suddenly we were playing the same music with three people. It was a moment when we were really cornered, and Kermit Xgured out all these ways to do it.” On Reveille Driscoll plays upright bass on all but two tracks, one of the two being Joe Zawinul’s “Great Expectations,” an early specimen of electric Miles Davis (from the album Big Fun). Driscoll grinds out the rocking, “Peter Gunn”-ish line on his 1962 Fender Precision. “That’s going back to all the stuff we were listening to when we Xrst met,” says Frisell. The other non-original on Reveille is “Chicken Reel.” Listeners of a certain age know it as the music that used to introduce Foghorn Leghorn, the man-sized talking rooster from TV cartoons. “That’s the Frisell iniuence,” Driscoll says, “the Americana iniuence. Why not play the music from when you were a kid? What about when you sang in fourth grade?” Kris Davis, on piano, brings out the complex, multi-voiced aspects of Driscoll’s writing and gives the band’s improvising a jolt. Originally from Canada, Davis has become vital to the New York scene in recent years, working with the likes of Tony Malaby, Tyshawn Sorey, Jon Irabagon and many others. She met Driscoll while subbing for Gary Versace in John Hollenbeck’s Large Ensemble. “I thought, here’s a piano player who can play anything in the world,” Driscoll declares. “Her technique is boundless, but she might also play one note, or stop playing. And you must know how rare that is in a pianist.” “I received an e-mail from Kermit out of the blue,” Davis recalls, “asking me if I would be interested in playing on his Xrst record, with Bill Frisell and Vinnie Colaiuta. I remember sitting at the computer in shock, beaming with excitement. He and I met up many times to work on his compositions and get some experience playing together. From the beginning I felt very comfortable. Kermit really just wanted me to do my thing and not control it; he would always say that to me.” Fitting in among these three veterans and dear friends could have been daunting, but Davis’ contributions- prepared-piano atmospherics on “Ire,” hypnotic chord cycles and smart soloing on “Thank You” and “For Hearts”-are integral to the success of the date. Pressed for a favorite Driscoll composition, she chooses “Hekete”: “I like how the form unfolds, Xrst with Bill and me weaving our lines in and around each other, and then my solo as a transitional section into the faster groove.” There is an earlier version of “Reveille,” the closing title track, on trumpeter Russ Johnson’s 2005 album Save Big, and the contrast is striking. As bassist on the Save Big session, Driscoll conXgured the tune as an airy quasi-ballad with two horns and no chord instrument. On the new album we hear it spontaneously arranged for guitar, bass and drums. Colaiuta puts down a double-time ride cymbal feel, altering the rhythmic environment completely. “That was take one,” Driscoll comments, and it involved no prior discussion. “Bill came in the day before with Kris to rehearse, but Vinnie just sight-read everything. I gave him a tempo, he counted it off and we started.” It’s clear from Reveille, and from Driscoll’s bearing, that Lyme disease hasn’t robbed the bassist of the attribute John Hollenbeck says he most admires: “Unabashed, raging enthusiasm, on and off the ‘court.'” And yet still he struggles. He mentions he’s been hospitalized twice in recent months, but otherwise his health is an area he’d rather not talk about at length. “The fact is so much can be created by the mind,” he says. “If I say I’m sick, I’ll be sick. If you tell yourself you’re well, you’re going to be well. The mind is so powerful.” Recommended Listening: Bill Frisell/Kermit Driscoll/Joey Baron Live (Gramavision, 1995) Gerry Hemingway Quintet Double Blues Crossing (Between the Lines, 2005) Ben Monder Oceana(Sunnyside, 2005) John Hollenbeck Large Ensemble Eternal Interlude (Sunnyside, 2009) Kermit Driscoll Reveille (19/8, 2010) Originally Published April 1, 2011 Kermit Driscoll Apr 6 - May 25 From 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM EDT Flushing Town Hall Presents Jazz 101 Flushing, New York Apr 22 From 8:00 PM to 9:30 PM EDT Guitarist Stephane Wrembel Performs Django Reinhardt Apr 24 From 7:30 PM to 8:45 PM EDT John Scoield Ridgeield, Connecticut JazzTimes Newsletter America's jazz resource, delivered to your inbox SIGN UP FOR OUR FREE NEWSLETTER

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Page 1: Kermit Driscoll: A Resolution Realized

Home > Features > Kermit Driscoll: A Resolution Realized

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Kermit Driscoll: A ResolutionRealizedBassist talks with David R. Adler about latest album and what he's had toovercome in recent years

UPDATED APRIL 26, 2019 – DAVID R. ADLER

Sponsored Ads

Most Valuable Vinyl Records Best Sounding Speakers

1.1. First Signs of Lung Cancer

2.2. Rare Vinyl Records

3.3. Vinyl Albums For Sale

4.4. Top 50 Rare Records

S ince 2004, bassist Kermit Driscoll had been making New Year’s resolutions to document his ownmusic as a leader. He’s best known for his 1987-1996 tenure with guitarist Bill Frisell, but name itand Driscoll has played it: Broadway shows, classical, folk, rock, Xlm and TV music, the exacting

work of Ben Monder, John Hollenbeck, John Zorn and more. Now he’s fulXlled that promise to himself andreleased Reveille (19/8), his long-awaited debut. It features his friends Frisell and drummer Vinnie Colaiuta,with new colleague Kris Davis on piano.

The catalyst was Driscoll’s life-threatening bout with Lyme disease, diagnosed at an advanced stage in 2005.Friends organized “For the Love of Kermit” beneXt concerts, and according to Driscoll, “Vinnie wasresponsible for a lot of donations that came to me through the [musicians’] union. He was helping when Iwas real sick. And he kept saying, ‘We’ve got to play, we’ve got to play.’ It was Vinnie’s idea.”

Of the eight Driscoll originals on Reveille, some date back many years while others are new. The feel of thealbum is loose and iowing, with edgy guitaristic elements but also tightly composed and chamberlikethematic statements (Xve of the 10 tracks feature Davis). Says Frisell, “Kermit created an atmosphere whereI wouldn’t say it was easy-there was some hard music-but he made it safe for us to go for it.”

That feeling of support harked back to the earliest days of their friendship. “Kermit was so important to me ingetting the conXdence to Xnd my own voice and play my own music,” the guitarist recalls. “It’s easy to getdiscouraged, but from my Xrst feeble attempts Kermit was there for me when I needed him. [Drummer] JoeyBaron, too, though I met Joey later. When I put my Xrst band together, there wasn’t any question: Those werethe guys.”

Born in Nebraska in 1956, Driscoll dropped out of high school, toured the Midwest with rock bands andwound up at Interlochen Arts Academy, then the University of Miami. “It just so happened that JacoPastorius was teaching [in Miami] that one semester,” Driscoll remembers. “I met Jaco and it was all over.Just him in a practice room with a little amp-I’m hooked, I’m hooked.” (Jaco’s death in 1987 was a blow to thewhole jazz community, but for Driscoll the wound seems especially raw. He couldn’t speak of it withouttears.)

From Miami it was on to Berklee, where Driscoll and Frisell met on their Xrst day in 1975. “Jaco got me Xredup about playing the bass, and Bill got me Xred up about playing music,” Driscoll says. “Without those two,you wouldn’t be sitting here with me today.” Was it Frisell’s compositions that inspired him most? “Everyaspect of his life,” Driscoll responds. “We used to play gigs at Michael’s Pub in Boston for $4.50, and Billwould write it down on his calendar so he wouldn’t forget to pay taxes on it. He’s that honest.”

“Kermit is younger than me,” says Frisell, “but he already had way more experience on the road when I methim. He found himself working right away [in Boston]. I was scuning along and he got me a gig with this Top40 band called the Boston Connection. We played hotels and had to wear these orange polyester suits-there’s still a promo picture of this band. And the drummer was Vinnie Colaiuta.”

According to Driscoll, “We played disco and Vinnie was just playing his ass off. He was my roommate inBoston around ’76 or ’77. He used to play at me, but now he plays with me. And if you listen to Reveille, youhear how Vinnie is on Bill’s case all the time; you can hear how much he respects Bill, and likewise.” Driscoll’salbum marks the Xrst time Frisell and Colaiuta had played together since the disco band.

In Frisell’s ’80s and ’90s groups Driscoll played electric bass, at times in an unorthodox fashion. “SometimesI’d play nothing but high-register stuff for a while,” he says, “not typical bass function all the time. I like toorchestrate on the bass.” Some of this was born of necessity, as Frisell explains: “[Cellist and quartetmember] Hank Roberts injured his hand or Xnger, and suddenly we were playing the same music with threepeople. It was a moment when we were really cornered, and Kermit Xgured out all these ways to do it.”

On Reveille Driscoll plays upright bass on all but two tracks, one of the two being Joe Zawinul’s “GreatExpectations,” an early specimen of electric Miles Davis (from the album Big Fun). Driscoll grinds out therocking, “Peter Gunn”-ish line on his 1962 Fender Precision. “That’s going back to all the stuff we werelistening to when we Xrst met,” says Frisell.

The other non-original on Reveille is “Chicken Reel.” Listeners of a certain age know it as the music that usedto introduce Foghorn Leghorn, the man-sized talking rooster from TV cartoons. “That’s the Frisell iniuence,”Driscoll says, “the Americana iniuence. Why not play the music from when you were a kid? What about whenyou sang in fourth grade?”

Kris Davis, on piano, brings out the complex, multi-voiced aspects of Driscoll’s writing and gives the band’simprovising a jolt. Originally from Canada, Davis has become vital to the New York scene in recent years,working with the likes of Tony Malaby, Tyshawn Sorey, Jon Irabagon and many others. She met Driscoll whilesubbing for Gary Versace in John Hollenbeck’s Large Ensemble. “I thought, here’s a piano player who canplay anything in the world,” Driscoll declares. “Her technique is boundless, but she might also play one note,or stop playing. And you must know how rare that is in a pianist.”

“I received an e-mail from Kermit out of the blue,” Davis recalls, “asking me if I would be interested in playingon his Xrst record, with Bill Frisell and Vinnie Colaiuta. I remember sitting at the computer in shock, beamingwith excitement. He and I met up many times to work on his compositions and get some experience playingtogether. From the beginning I felt very comfortable. Kermit really just wanted me to do my thing and notcontrol it; he would always say that to me.”

Fitting in among these three veterans and dear friends could have been daunting, but Davis’ contributions-prepared-piano atmospherics on “Ire,” hypnotic chord cycles and smart soloing on “Thank You” and “ForHearts”-are integral to the success of the date. Pressed for a favorite Driscoll composition, she chooses“Hekete”: “I like how the form unfolds, Xrst with Bill and me weaving our lines in and around each other, andthen my solo as a transitional section into the faster groove.”

There is an earlier version of “Reveille,” the closing title track, on trumpeter Russ Johnson’s 2005 album SaveBig, and the contrast is striking. As bassist on the Save Big session, Driscoll conXgured the tune as an airyquasi-ballad with two horns and no chord instrument. On the new album we hear it spontaneously arrangedfor guitar, bass and drums. Colaiuta puts down a double-time ride cymbal feel, altering the rhythmicenvironment completely. “That was take one,” Driscoll comments, and it involved no prior discussion. “Billcame in the day before with Kris to rehearse, but Vinnie just sight-read everything. I gave him a tempo, hecounted it off and we started.”

It’s clear from Reveille, and from Driscoll’s bearing, that Lyme disease hasn’t robbed the bassist of theattribute John Hollenbeck says he most admires: “Unabashed, raging enthusiasm, on and off the ‘court.'” Andyet still he struggles. He mentions he’s been hospitalized twice in recent months, but otherwise his health isan area he’d rather not talk about at length. “The fact is so much can be created by the mind,” he says. “If Isay I’m sick, I’ll be sick. If you tell yourself you’re well, you’re going to be well. The mind is so powerful.”

Recommended Listening:

Bill Frisell/Kermit Driscoll/Joey Baron Live (Gramavision, 1995)

Gerry Hemingway Quintet Double Blues Crossing (Between the Lines, 2005)

Ben Monder Oceana(Sunnyside, 2005)

John Hollenbeck Large Ensemble Eternal Interlude (Sunnyside, 2009)

Kermit Driscoll Reveille (19/8, 2010)

Originally Published April 1, 2011

Kermit Driscoll

Apr 6 - May 25From 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM EDTFlushing Town Hall PresentsJazz 101Flushing, New York

Apr 22From 8:00 PM to 9:30 PM EDTGuitarist Stephane WrembelPerforms Django Reinhardt

Apr 24From 7:30 PM to 8:45 PM EDTJohn ScoieldRidgeield, Connecticut

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