Rent Romus is a big picture kind of guy. Over the past quarter century he’s been a catalytic figure on the San Francisco Bay Area’s improv music scene as a player, producer, and proprietor of the invaluable Edgetone Records, a label responsible for nearly 200 releases by a daunting array of brilliant envelope-pushing artists. As a composer and bandleader, he’s pursued a similarly expansive vision with his Life’s Blood Ensemble, a talent-laden group for which he’s created a strikingly vivid body of music (often inspired by epic mythology drawn from his ancestral roots in Finnish culture).
For Rising Colossus, Romus brings his various musical worlds together. Focusing on original pieces he’s commissioned from younger Bay Area artists, Rising Colossus offers an incisive and often exhilarating glimpse at a scene that Romus has played an essential role in shaping. The LBE dives headlong into a disparate array of compositions, opening and closing the album with very different works inspired by epic tales: pianist Brett Carson four-part suite that subdivides the band into smaller units and Romus’s shimmering “Empyrean City Rising” that keys on Mark Clifford’s vibes.
“I’ve been fascinated by these larger epic pieces with multiple movements,” Romus says. “This is an opportunity to showcase that music and concept.”
Where Carson creates almost programmatic music keyed the titles of the sections, Marshall’s “Cicatrix” only hints obliquely at the slashing music to come. Designed around extreme contrasts, the piece moves from a beatific first movement into the churning thrum of the second. Drummer Timothy Orr brought Braxton’s epochal “Composition 23J” into the mix, and Romus opened it up for the LBE with spontaneous voicings that flow from Braxton’s liberationist spirit.
“In his notes Braxton talks about ‘23J’ having the capacity for a wider breadth of intonation,” he says. “Precision wasn’t the most important part, but creating shape and density. It’s like bebop on stimulants.”
In many ways the album’s emotional core is John Tchicai’s “Cherry Vanilla,” a composition that the free jazz explorer wrote for Romus and performed on his 1997 Lords of Outland CD Adapt or Die! A thematic piece with three distinct movements, it’s a grand promenade, raucous, and celebratory. Romus revived it at a 20-year Lords of Outland reunion concert and it’s a fitting memento for an undersung master.
“I’d forgotten how much I enjoyed it, and decided to arrange it for a larger ensemble,” Romus says. “Tchicai’s history was so extensive. He worked with players we all know and admire, and he was a very quiet and humble person, open to working with all types of people and playing all types of music. He left such a strong impression.”
Romus has put Tchicai in very good company. Life’s Blood pulses with the energy of now, while paying potent tribute to the artists who opened these lush fields for exploration. No colossus rises on its own. Romus knows that in the big picture, we’re all in this together.
by Andrew Gilbert, San Francisco Chronicle and Bay Area News Group
Cover Art "Rising Colossus" by Collette McCaslin
Recorded/Mixed/Mastered at New, Improved Recording Oakland, CA USA
Album Liner Notes by Andrew Gilbert
Rent Romus hailed by Downbeat as having "a bold sound, unmistakable sincerity and conviction". A third generation Finnish
American born in the great north of upper Michigan and growing up in the San Francisco Bay ,Romus' work on the saxophone has been dubbed “ferocious” by the San Francisco Weekly and “central to the creative music world of the West Coast” by writer jazz critic Frank Rubolino....more
supported by 5 fans who also own “Rising Colossus”
This record has such a magical flow to it, it seems to capture so directly the ups and downs of life, the joy of music and dance, and it's just so damn catchy and fun to listen to as well. Giles
This double tape from Violent Squid showcases a dizzying array of sounds, including sci-fi analog synths & dazzling guitar instrumentals. Bandcamp New & Notable Jan 24, 2021