Bill Frisell

History, Mystery

Bill Frisell - History, Mystery

05/13/2008 | Nonesuch 

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All Music Guide Review

History, Mystery is among Bill Frisell's most eclectic yet accessible projects. Produced by longtime ally Lee Townsend, this double-disc, 90-minute, 30-piece suite encompasses the full range of Frisell's musical past and his influences, obsessions, and storylike vision. It is performed by a star-studded octet that includes trumpeter Ron Miles, saxophonist Greg Tardy, and a string section featuring Eyvind Kang, Jenny Scheinman, and Hank Roberts, with bassist Tony Scherr and drummer Kenny Wollesen in the rhythm section. History, Mystery dances across entire musical landscapes: bebop/post-bop, Malian folk music, tangos, Delta blues, modern classical music, vintage soul, and rock. The source material for this recording was compiled from a multimedia collaboration with artist Jim Woodring called Mysterio Sympatico in 2002 and recorded during a tour. The rest was recorded for Stories from the Heart of the Land, a 2007 series on National Public Radio. Frisell composed most of this work, but his own "history" is revealed in his choice of covers: Sam Cooke's "A Change Is Gonna Come," "Jackie-Ing" by Thelonious Monk, "Sub-Conscious Lee" by Lennie Tristano, and "Baba Drame" by Malian guitar legend Boubacar Traoré. The sense of "mystery" is in just how these various sources are melded in a multi-textured tapestry of sound. Balance for this work is achieved in the strength of its arrangements, and the glue that binds them together is the string section. Its role is pivotal: it anchors the listener through its many stylistic and textural changes. The notion of "history" here is also revealed in the way songs are juxtaposed. For instance, a soul tune like "A Change Is Gonna Come" actually precedes a knotty yet swinging bop number like "Jackie-Ing."

Non-American sources are cited, too. The nuevo tango-inspired "Probability Cloud" is the theme that bookends disc one. It begins as a digital guitar soundscape before an Astor Piazzolla-inspired tango comes to the fore in the strings. Traoré's droning desert blues "Baba Drame features an interlude that evokes late-19th century Spanish folk music, itself inspired by the chants and sung prayers of the Moors centuries before. Disc two engages themes, departures, and returns in numerous ways: the haunting, near-ambient "Monroe," with guitar and viola in the forefront; the spectral "Lazy Robinson" that floats between carnival music and modern classical composition with a rock backbeat (in waltz tempo); and the two-part "Answer," a strange, nightmarish, and disorienting sketch where the strings play an actual counterforce to Frisell's guitar. The music here is very adventurous and exploratory yet completely accessible. "Faces," with its traces of Gil Evans and Igor Stravinsky, contrasts wonderfully with the tough bebop in "Sub-Conscious Lee (itself furthered by Scheinman's violin referencing Stéphane Grapelli's Gypsy swing). "Waltz for Baltimore" places the grittiness of Tardy's guttural rhythm & blues honk against Frisell's elegant, modernist jazz chords; they are both made slightly surreal by Scheinman's violin, playing a minimal loop that bridges and yet displaces eras in ether. History, Mystery is an ambitious work; it's full of elliptical, riveting moments, shape-shifting colors, and multivalent textures. Frisell's inherent love of formal lyricism, expansive harmonics, and divergent musical histories reflects his tireless passion for tracing sources. In composing his own material, he also interprets and arranges his sources. On History, Mystery he achieves musical alchemy; he creates something new from familiar, exotic, and even forgotten forms, providing listeners with a magical aural experience. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

History, Mystery Track Listing

  • Track#
  • Title
  • time
  • lyrics
  • 1
  • Imagination
  • 1:51
  • Sound Clip for Imagination from History, Mystery


  • 4
  • Out of Body
  • 2:27
  • Sound Clip for Out of Body from History, Mystery


  • 5
  • Struggle
  • 5:32
  • Sound Clip for Struggle from History, Mystery


  • 7
  • Onward
  • 1:38
  • Sound Clip for Onward from History, Mystery


  • 8
  • Baba Drame
  • 6:09
  • Sound Clip for Baba Drame from History, Mystery


  • 9
  • What We Need
  • 1:37
  • Sound Clip for What We Need from History, Mystery


  • 11
  • Jackie-Ing
  • 2:55
  • Sound Clip for Jackie-Ing from History, Mystery


  • 12
  • Show Me
  • 3:16
  • Sound Clip for Show Me from History, Mystery


  • 13
  • Boo and Scout
  • 2:28
  • Sound Clip for Boo and Scout from History, Mystery


  • 14
  • Struggle, Pt. 2
  • 6:25
  • Sound Clip for Struggle, Pt. 2 from History, Mystery


  • 15
  • Heal
  • 1:41
  • Sound Clip for Heal from History, Mystery


  • 18 (2)
  • Monroe
  • 4:18
  • Sound Clip for Monroe from History, Mystery


  • 19 (2)
  • Lazy Robinson
  • 2:18
  • Sound Clip for Lazy Robinson from History, Mystery


  • 20 (2)
  • Question #1
  • 1:14
  • Sound Clip for Question #1 from History, Mystery


  • 21 (2)
  • Answer #1
  • 0:40
  • Sound Clip for Answer #1 from History, Mystery


  • 22 (2)
  • Faces
  • 1:52
  • Sound Clip for Faces from History, Mystery


  • 23 (2)
  • Sub-Conscious Lee
  • 5:39
  • Sound Clip for Sub-Conscious Lee from History, Mystery


  • 24 (2)
  • Monroe, Pt. 2
  • 1:52
  • Sound Clip for Monroe, Pt. 2 from History, Mystery


  • 25 (2)
  • Question
  • 0:56
  • Sound Clip for Question from History, Mystery


  • 26 (2)
  • Lazy Robinson, Pt. 2
  • 3:18
  • Sound Clip for Lazy Robinson, Pt. 2 from History, Mystery


  • 27 (2)
  • What We Need, Pt. 2
  • 1:16
  • Sound Clip for What We Need, Pt. 2 from History, Mystery


  • 28 (2)
  • Waltz for Baltimore
  • 8:47
  • Sound Clip for Waltz for Baltimore from History, Mystery


  • 29 (2)
  • Answer #2
  • 1:50
  • Sound Clip for Answer #2 from History, Mystery


  • 30 (2)
  • Monroe, Pt. 3
  • 2:58
  • Sound Clip for Monroe, Pt. 3 from History, Mystery


  • History, Mystery Notes

    Nominee - 51st GRAMMY® Awards
    Best Jazz Instrumental Album, Individual or Group
    (For albums containing 51% or more playing time of INSTRUMENTAL tracks.)
    History, Mystery
    Bill Frisell

    History, Mystery features an octet of strings, horns, and rhythm section with some of Frisell’s closest collaborators—Jenny Scheinman (violin), Eyvind Kang, (viola), Hank Roberts (cello), Ron Miles (cornet), Greg Tardy (clarinet and tenor saxophone), Tony Scherr (bass), and Kenny Wollesen (drums). History, Mystery debuts many recent Frisell compositions as well as a few of his arrangements of favorite pieces by other songwriters, ranging in style from soul pioneer Sam Cooke to jazzmen Thelonious Monk and Lee Konitz. Producer Lee Townsend and engineer Shawn Pierce recorded the group in various combinations and contexts, live and in the studio.

    The original compositions on the album were born from and inspired by collaborations with visual artist and fellow Seattle resident Jim Woodring. One such collaboration, “Mysterio Simpatico,” was premiered at St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn in June of 2002. The two later presented “Probability Cloud,” which appears in parts on the first disc, at Zankel Hall in New York in January of 2006. In a review of the performance, the New York Times wrote, “Both Mr. Frisell and Mr. Woodring make the familiar unfamiliar. In Mr. Frisell's compositions, cozy, archetypal Americana—country tunes, blues, waltzes—is slowed down, melted at the edges, eerily reharmonized or disassembled and contemplated part by part.”

    Townsend says, “History, Mystery explores a fuller palette of orchestral colors and timbres than for any project Bill has done before. Thematic elements recur throughout the album, furthering its symphonic sensibility.”

    Credits of History, Mystery

    • Bill Frisell
    • Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar (Electric), Liner Notes, Loop


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