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(CD Review) While unknown to most, Bryan Beller's name means a lot to those Frank Zappa fans who for about a decade have been listening to Mike Keneally: a musician whose output sports a very low rate of vampirism and very large quantities of enthusiasm and of fertile results, quite differently from some of the Maestro's former sidemen. It's almost ten years ago, in fact, that Beller started playing bass alongside Keneally. His very young age notwithstanding, Beller immediately proved to be a fine instrumentalist, later maturing into a nice versatility (if I'm not mistaken, he's the only Keneally collaborator to have remained in the group for so long). Two years ago I saw the large group in Holland for two nights in a row; the repertory was extremely large and diverse. Beller proved to be a solid instrumentalist with nerves of steel, making sure the group navigated the leader's difficult charts while Keneally went into uncharted territories on his guitar. View is Beller's
first solo album, and in a way it's only logical that here we find a certain
air that we've already breathed on Keneally's albums; here we have Toss
Panos and Joe Travers, two drummers who in the past have contributed to
Keneally's music; we have Keneally himself, both on guitar and keyboards;
we have Rick Musallam, the versatile guitar player who's a member of Keneally's
current quartet, who builds the foundations for some tracks and who proves
to be a revelation in the cases when he has to lead. Nick D'Virgilio,
the excellent drummer of the current quartet, engineered and mixed. Beller
produced. If I stress
the link to Keneally it's not to negate Bryan Beller's aesthetic and creative
autonomy - he's his own man, and this record could very well prove to
be the first step in a long trip with many surprises and satisfying moments;
but only to underline the fact that - quite differently from most rock
music I hear nowadays: sterile, retro, carbon copy, commercial, derivative
- Beller's album is one of those rare instances of a rock CD one can actually
listen to without feeling ashamed. It's electric music, very well played
(to me it matters quite a bit), with multiple references: blues, jazz,
a bit of fusion (but not fuzak! Let's say Jeff Beck circa Blow By Blow
- listen to Get Things Done), a pinch of Zappa (the Roxy And Elsewhere/The
Helsinki Concert band) or, better said, Keneally in his melancholic/Zappa
mode - check the theme to Eighteen Weeks. Mostly instrumental,
this is an album one can enjoy in its entirety, even if some of the things
are a bit weaker than the rest (in my opinion Bite - while not out of
place on Rick Dees' Weekly Top 40 - is out of place here), but the album
works fine as a whole. As a composer, Beller is a man of sure hand and
limpid gestures - he never has to call instrumental ability into action
to keep the record out of trouble for lack of logic. Some tracks are for
acoustic/electric bass only: the melodic Bear Divide, which opens the
record; the high voltage Elate; the cover version of John Patitucci's
Backwoods; and No, which appears to refer to Mingus with a tip of the
hat to Monk. So is everything
perfect? Of course not. For one, I have to confess I'm not terribly enamoured
of the sound of this acoustic/electric bass - and I found the fret noise
to be especially annoying. In general, though I find Beller's personality
quite present in his choice of notes to me it's still not so apparent
in their timbre - that (not so) elusive quality that makes us tell a bass
player after half a note. But these are minor points, really. Get this
album and enjoy. Reprinted
with permission © Beppe Colli 2003 |