Review by Des Cowley.
Jason Bruer & Hammerhead – I Didn’t Get to Where I Am Today (Independent, CD & Digital release)
Sydney composer and saxophonist Jason Bruer formed his sextet Hammerhead in 2010, and this new release represents the band’s third album to date. It is something of a gargantuan affair, clocking in at seventy-minutes, jammed with carefully crafted music. Hammerhead’s debut album, Mosaic (2014), saw Bruer deep-diving into the world of hard bop, exploring music associated with the legendary Blue Note label, replete with covers of Wayne Shorter and Oliver Nelson. But on second album Turning Point (2019), Bruer changed tack. While still delving into the essential sound of the hard boppers of the fifties and sixties, he switched to playing all-original music, a move he’s persisted with on I Didn’t Get to Where I am Today.
Bruer is an eclectic and driven musician, who confesses to an early love of artists like Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd and Genesis, alongside Coltrane and Freddie Hubbard. Over the years he’s freelanced with The Models, Eurogliders, Steve Kilbey, and during an extended stint working as a session musician in London he played with Eric Clapton, BB King, Steve Winwood, Paul Weller, Bonny Tyler and others. But, when it comes to Hammerhead, there can be few doubts: he’s putting jazz front and centre.
Hammerhead incorporates a range of Sydney talent: Andrew Robertson on alto, baritone sax and flute; Simon Ferenci on trumpet & flugelhorn; Greg Coffin on piano; Dave Quinn on bass; and Alex Hirlian on drums. What is evident, right from opening track ‘Tumbleweed on George Street’, is how big this band sounds, with the frontline of horns spinning elaborate lines across Coffin’s groove-laden piano and Quinn’s busy basslines. Robertson’s flute acts to further enrich the colour palette, contributing a soft-hued veneer to this rapid-fire music. Most of all, there’s a dancing quality to be heard, recalling the jazz/funk workouts of Horace Silver, as heard on Song for my Father and The Jody Grind.
Bruer exhibits a sure-footed proficiency on tenor sax, his cresting tone full of clarity, as it dips and dives, plunging into the rhythmic density of Hirlian’s drums. Ferenci’s trumpet, on the other hand, positively soars, cranking out torrents of high notes, driving the music forward. On ‘You Know Why’, the pace is fast and hectic, the trio of horns oozing synergism, brandishing break-neck runs spun out over frenetic percussion. ‘Folk Song’, a gorgeous piece, finds Bruer on soprano sax, unfurling a gentle and attractive melody, buoyantly propelled by a snappy bass beat, and delicate cymbals. ‘Like Mike’ is classic hard-driving bop, stitched together from a string of melodies segueing from languid to fevered. Intricately envisaged, the piece is fashioned out of shimmering piano, intricate bass figures, and funky drumming, which act as a scene-setter for Bruer’s solo, his slow-burn tenor sax building a furious head-of-steam, nudging the piece into Coltrane-inflected modal territory.
While it’s clear Bruer and Hammerhead are not in the business of tearing down fences, I Didn’t Get to Where I Am Today divulges the sound of a band at the top of its game, putting a contemporary hard bop spin on a bundle of Bruer’s original tunes. There’s a density at work here, a complex layering that, at times, feels near orchestral, particularly on gentler tracks like ‘More Questions than Answers’ and ‘The Yearning (Biddy’s Song)’, with their greater emphasis on impressionistic tone colours. At the same time, the album exudes elements of funk and soul, echoing the work of Cannonball Adderley, Lee Morgan, and others. Bristling with accomplishment, it comes across as finger-tapping music, propelled by tight rhythmic energy, the sound of Hammerhead dishing out infectious grooves.