Wednesday, April 28, 2021

(1966) Dusko Goykovich - Swinging Macedonia ***1/2

 


With: Dusko Goykovich (trumpet, flugelhorn), Nathan Davis (flute, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone), Eddie Busnello (alto saxophone), Mal Waldron (piano), Peter Trunk (bass), Cees See (drums)
Record date: August 30 & 31, 1966


1966 was the year of Mal’s slow comeback to the jazz scĂ©ne in Europe. He recorded his first two albums as a leader, both in Italy before moving to Germany. In Germany he first lived in the city of Cologne before eventually settling in Munich for more than 20 years. In Cologne, Mal lived near the Yugoslavian trumpeter Dusko Goykovich and he gigged regularly with him. Goykovich was born in the town of Jajce which is located in current Bosnia Herzegovina. Those were the years of Tito, communism, the iron curtain and Yugoslavia’s no affiliation politics. There might have been a big barrier in Europe in those years but jazz really is an international language and there was a lively jazz scene in Yugoslavia.

For this album Dusko is not only accompanied by Waldron but also by the excellent and highly underrated multi reedist Nathan Davis (I love that guy). The other guys were all well established names in the European jazz scene all appearing on countless of European jazz cd’s. Peter Trunk was in Hans Koller’s band for a while and Cees See appeared more than once next to Waldron. They are all very solid players, although I find Busnello a little boring.

This is some very interesting music for the period it was recorded in, the combination of names in personnel but also the repertoire played. The Eastern European influence in pretty evident in some of the compositions and there’s a slight hint of some fine gipsy jazz here and there. The results are sometimes pretty successful. The opening Macedonia and also the Fertility dance sound exotic, creative and full of power. An excellent blend of different musical cultures. Also Mal’s percussive style fits in perfectly. ‘Saga Se Karame’ truly sounds amazing with a fantastic soprano solo by Davis. This was really some of the more advanced music with plenty of space for both See and Trunk to come out of their comfort zones. But on the more contemporary jazz compositions all the energy fades away and that is very unfortunate. Songs like ‘The Gypsy’ and ‘Old Fisherman’s Daughter’ or ‘Bem-Basha’ miss that creative spark and are really one out of a dozen of jazz records. No bad playing but just not as interesting as those more up tempo compositions with that Eastern feeling.

Dusko really is an excellent player with great technical skills. The influence by Miles is a little to big here and there (especially when he is playing the muted trumpet) but he has enough power to really make a statement. He also had fine compositional skills as most of these originals by him prove. Both Davis and Waldron are in excellent form but sounded better on their own records from those years. They mostly shine on the more original compositions where they have more space to show off their own creative forces. The rhythm section plays excellent but is mostly in the background.

This was originally released on Phillips, Columbia and Odeon. Those originals are worth quite some money. The Enja reissues are a better buying option. This record really has two faces: the compositions where the Eastern influences are more dominant are very interesting. The more contemporary jazz compositions are a little boring and feel like they are unnecessary breaks in mostly creative music.

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