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Son of a drum

Vinnie Sperrazza grew up in Utica, New York as the son and great-grandson of drummers. He’s played the drums all his life, while thinking about drums and drumming and drummers. We’ll get to his own playing in a minute, but what first alerted me to his existence were his Substack posts, which appear under the heading of “Chronicles”. They’re not always about drumming, but they’re always interesting. And the ones that are about drumming contain the most perceptive and eloquent writing about drummers that I’ve ever read.

Sperrazza doesn’t describe the art of a drummer with the kind of literary eloquence with which the New Yorker‘s Whitney Balliett could bring, say, a solo piece by Papa Jo Jones to life on the page. (But then Balliett once claimed that Max Roach didn’t swing.) Sperrazza finds different but equally compelling ways to tell you what a Roach, a Gerald Cleaver, a Billy Hart or an Ed Blackwell is doing, and perhaps why, and certainly how it affects the surrounding music.

When I had a cup of coffee with Sperrazza during in London before Christmas, he was keen to hear my memories of seeing Tony Williams, who is his special subject, and about whom he writes with great insight. I was able to tell him about things he’s too young to have seen for himself, like Lifetime’s gigs at Ungano’s and the Marquee, a later edition of the band in Berlin, VSOP at the Grosvenor House and the Albert Hall, the quartet with Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter and Wynton Marsalis in Nice, and Tony’s own great quintet — the one with Wallace Roney, Bill Pierce and Mulgrew Miller — in Camden.

Most of all, I think he liked me describing the unforgettable experience of listening to Tony tuning his drums during the soundcheck for the gig in the Grosvenor House ballroom, for a gig that, believe it or not, was part of the 1977 Columbia Records international sales convention. That music is still in my ears.

Before we parted, he gave me a copy of Sunday, the third album in 10 years by his quartet, which is called Vinnie Sperrazza Apocryphal and also includes Loren Stillman on soprano and tenor saxophones, Brandon Seabrook on guitar, mandolin and banjo, and Eivind Opsvik on double bass — all great players from the contemporary New York scene. Frankly, I didn’t much mind whether I was going to like it or not, because I admire his writing so much and enjoyed his company. But when I put it on, it had me entranced.

The eight pieces making up the album are intended, he says, to depict “the moods and actions of one man in NYC on a random Sunday.” It’s probably typical of Sperrazza that the opening track doesn’t feature him at all: just Stillman’s affectingly human tenor tone, Seabrook’s pinched harmonics and distortions and Opsvik’s rich arco playing in an enticing prologue full of hints of what’s to come. But then the drums have the second track more or less to themselves, creating a subtly shaded, carefully developed, bombast-free soliloquy that Max or Papa Jo would surely applaud.

All four musicians then come together on a low-down, behind-the-beat groove with a blues feeling given its spice by Seabrook’s spacey and increasingly asymmetrical guitar chords, which fade away to the ticking of Sperrazza’s rimshots. Banjo colours the next piece, a solemn chink above shivering bass and sombre drums, shadowing Stillman’s lyrical ruminations, before Seabrook cuts loose with a jittering, jabbing solo.

And those four pieces are just the half of it. Like them, each of the remaining four creates its own microclimate, exploiting the available resources with a sense of variety and wit. When Stillman switches to soprano, something about the open rhythm reminds me of John Coltrane with Steve Davis and Elvin Jones on Coltrane Plays the Blues. There’s a joyful guitar feature with an 8/8 backbeat, not entirely unlike the early Lifetime. The banjo reappears for a quiet piece that could reasonably be described as giving Americana a good name.

It made me think of The President, Wayne Horvitz’s old band, as does a lot of this album, in its ability to to make sure that every track has its own little story to tell, while presenting music that, without compromising its spirit of inquiry, is extremely easy to like.

* Sunday by Vinnie Sperrazza Apocryphal is on the Loyal Label: https://vinniesperrazzaapocryphal.bandcamp.com/album/sunday His Substack archive is here: https://substack.com/@vinniesperrazza

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  1. zohrab1600's avatar
    zohrab1600 #

    Thanks as always for your writing, Richard, whether on music or motor sport history. This isn’t a comment worthy of submission, but just a memory. In October 1966 as a fairly naive young jazz nut I visited New York (from New Zealand) for the first time. My mother was born in Glasgow in 1912 and with her family (less a brother who died in the ‘flu epidemic) emigrated to Kansas in 1919. The town of Salina was the last outpost before Denver, so many musicians stopped off and performed there, so she heard many, including Amelita Galli-Curcy (so?) and Bix(!) with the Whiteman band, Ellington and Calloway in Chicago, Armstrong in Kansas City, and Jimmy Dorsey at her Kansas Wesleyan University. So I became hooked, expanding from Goodman to Charlie Christian, Basie, and to those bands when giants strode the earth, NYC ca 1960. 1966 wasn’t a great time (I’ll never forget at Amarillo airport on my way home the sight of white Vietnam draftees pushing their Black comrades off the seats) but I did hear the Mitchell/Ruff Duo at Carnegie Recital Hall in a “Jazz, the Personal Dimension” series introduced by Dan Morgenstern. And mono LPs were cheap, which helped as we were still subject to the Finance Emergency Regulations 1940. Anyway, to the point…. I heard the Miles Davis Quintet at the Village Vanguard. Yep, Tony Williams, the rest of course obvious apart from George Coleman on tenor. I was familiar with “Kind Of Blue” but the more angry style I wasn’t ready for, and my main memory is of Miles’s seeming (when he wasn’t blurting and squirting and turning his back) to aim his trumpet up the green skirt of the spectacularly constructed redhead expat Kiwi whom I knew faintly. The victim of a convent education, she had travelled as part of a race horse purchase, and hadn’t even known of any Jewish New Zealanders. Anyway, a slightly complicated way of confessing that I have heard Tony Williams but neglected to listen to him. Cheers, Tom King.

    January 26, 2024

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