When Jazz Meets Hip-Hop

When it comes to integrating hip-hop and jazz, Robert Glasper has raised the bar substantially. The pianist and composer focuses on the feel of hip-hop rather than the sound, often avoiding the easy route of dressing up his music with Hip-Hop 101 guidepostsโ€”turntable wizardry, digital beats and boastful raps. His collaborations with Mos Def, Q-Tip,…

When it comes to integrating hip-hop and jazz, Robert Glasper has raised the bar substantially. The pianist and composer focuses on the feel of hip-hop rather than the sound, often avoiding the easy route of dressing up his music with Hip-Hop 101 guidepostsโ€”turntable wizardry, digital beats and boastful raps. His collaborations with Mos Def, Q-Tip, Bilal and Maxwell have afforded him onsite training with high-caliber hip-hop and R&B musicians. Also, Glasperโ€™s love and understanding of the inventive soundscapes produced by Pete Rock, Madlib and the late J Dilla (arguably Glasperโ€™s strongest hip-hop influence) greatly inform the rhythmic dynamics and spatial awareness of his piano trio and, to an even greater degree, his Experiment Band, which more explicitly displays his hip-hop brain waves.

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Glasperโ€™s approach to the piano resembles ?uestloveโ€™s approach to the drums; he can emulate the sounds of sampled melodic phrases, repeating nuances with uncanny precision in much the same way that ?uestlove can replicate the crackling sounds of a drum machine. That ability to mimic others does not stiffen Glasperโ€™s own engaging improvisations, which can often embrace the orchestral elasticity of Oscar Peterson or the impressionistic touch of Herbie Hancock.

His latest disc, Doubled-Booked (Blue Note), illustrates all of these sublime musical gifts. Divided into two parts, the disc documents the artistic maturation of Glasperโ€™s acoustic trio (with bassist Vicente Archer and drummer Chris Dave) and offers the first official release of the Experiment, a decidedly electric outfit that again features Dave, along with bassist Derrick Hodge, and saxophonist and vocoder player Casey Benjamin. In lesser hands, Doubled-Booked would result in a calculated DID (dissociative identity disorder) event, with split personalitiesโ€”acoustic jazz on the one hand and electric hip-hop on the other. But Glasper manages to maintain a thematic continuity and a consistent voice throughout.

For instance, his descending melody on the idyllic โ€œDowntimeโ€ tumbles across the groove and behind the beat in Dilla-esque fashion. Glasper also incorporates some Dilla touches on his riveting rendition of Thelonious Monkโ€™s โ€œThink of One,โ€ on which he slyly quotes Ahmad Jamalโ€™s โ€œSwahililand.โ€

And even though the Experiment material contains a superfluous special appearance by Mos Def on the brief โ€œ4evaโ€ and by Bilal on the agreeable, but ultimately bland, mid-tempo โ€œAll Matter,โ€ Glasper engages his new band mates with same vigorous improvisational interplay he has with his trio. With the Experiment, Glasper gives a stunning makeover of Hancockโ€™s early-โ€™70s fusion standard โ€œButterflyโ€ that highlights his masterful rapport with Benjamin on the vocoder. Benjamin also shines on the flinty โ€œFestival,โ€ the Experimentโ€™s most kinetic performance in which Benjaminโ€™s wordless vocoder work glides across the rhythmic firestorm created by Daveโ€™s ricocheting rhythms and Hodgeโ€™s molten bass lines.

One of Glasperโ€™s early champions was trumpeter Terence Blanchard. In fact, itโ€™s his voice we hear first on Doubled-Booked in โ€œIntro,โ€ in which Blanchard invites Glasper to perform at his newly opened jazz club. While Blanchardโ€™s music doesnโ€™t owe as much a debt to hip-hop as Glasperโ€™s does, the trumpeter and composerโ€™s latest disc, Choices (Concord), reveals some overlapping sensibilities. Hodge plays electric bass in Blanchardโ€™s group and Glasperโ€™s Experiment, and both Doubled-Booked and Choices feature Bilal. Interestingly, Bilal sings more persuasively on Blanchardโ€™s bossa-nova-tinged โ€œJourneyโ€ and gorgeous ballad, โ€œWhen Will You Call,โ€ exhibiting a streamlined maturity that wasnโ€™t as evident on his 2001 debut disc, 1st Born Second (Interscope).

However, itโ€™s a guest appearance by Dr. Cornel West, the noted scholar and author, that makes Choices more auspicious. The inauguration of Barack Obama may have provided the impetus for Choices, but itโ€™s Westโ€™s philosophical ruminations that provide the guiding force. Mostly through interstitial vignettes, West waxes free-form about intellect versus wisdom (โ€œByusโ€), the significance of music on humanity (โ€œBeethovenโ€), the self-reflective comparisons between philosophers and jazz artists (โ€œJazz Man in the World of Ideasโ€) and the promise of a new political era signaled by the arrival of Obama (โ€œNew Noteโ€).

But as moving as Westโ€™s musings are, they sometimes sound awkward. Though his words may have inspired the compositions, the music doesnโ€™t always sound as if was composed with spoken word in mind, which is interesting considering Blanchardโ€™s long history of scoring Spike Leeโ€™s films. Heโ€™s skillful at penning engaging music that underscores dialogue. When Westโ€™s appearances are fully incorporated in the music, as on the pensive titled-track, Crescent City-flavored โ€œNew World,โ€ and the dreamy โ€œWinding Roads,โ€ the results are far more gripping and less tedious than the stand-alone interludes.

Those blemishes aside, Choices amounts to yet another testament to Blanchardโ€™s gifts as a scintillating trumpeter, composer and bandleader. Taking cues from the legendary Art Blakey, with whom he once worked, Blanchard surrounds himself with stellar young musicians who perhaps help forge the sense of modernity. Also like Blakey, Blanchard encourages his band members to contribute compositions. With this slightly new lineup, Fabian Almazan takes over the piano chair left by Aaron Parks and saxophonist Walter Smith III replaces Brice Winston. Along with holdovers Hodge, drummer Kendrick Scot and guitarist Lionel Loueke, they stretch and shine on all of the compositions.

Yet, itโ€™s Blanchardโ€™s sterling trumpet improvisations, which at times soar to cloud-scraping heights, paired with his evocative compositions that distinguish the work. The gentle โ€œDโ€™s Choice,โ€ with its magnetic melodicism, has the makings of a future jazz standard as well as providing a vehicle for more adventurous R&B singers, while the elegant โ€œRobinโ€™s Choice,โ€ which finds Blanchard and Smith floating and dovetailing elegantly across a bed of skittering rhythms, gives evidence that Blanchard, too, has been checking out the stylistic synthesis of Glasper.

John Murph is a regular contributor to The Root.

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