Thursday, April 30, 1992 Slamming with that Other Jordan Jazz artist Stanley Jordan takes his time with Stolen Moments by Robb Frederick The Collegian "If you're gonna have a hit you gotta make it fit / So they cut it down to 3:05." -Billy Joel, "The Entertainer" If Billy Joel played jazz, he wouldn't be plagued by such problems, for the jazz arena has no room for neatly trimmed singles, pressed and polished and ready for heavy radio rotation. Jazz artists seldom dwell on songs long enough to mold them into singles; they're too busy racing on to the next groove or following the flow into a fresh new arrangement. That's the key to discs like Stolen Moments, the latest release by guitar guru Stanley Jordan. The disc, a collection of six far-reaching covers and one Jordan original, brims with immediacy, unraveling as the lengthy numbers evolve from crowd-testing intros to impassioned, almost chaotic, jam sessions. Recorded at Tokyo's Blue Note club in late 1990, Stolen Moments captures the essence of live performance recordings and cements Jordan's slot as a forerunner of jazz guitar innovation Jordan has long been touted as a musical prodigy, and with good reason. Schooled on his mother’s piano by age six, he was lured into rock guitar after hearing records by Jimi Hendrix and Carlos Santana. He never quite let go of his piano training, however, and decided instead to let his earlier instruction shape his evolving guitar technique. Frustrated that he couldn't duplicate the piano's two-handed parts on guitar, Jordan began tapping the strings along the guitar neck. The result was a stylistic innovation that significantly broadened the jazz guitar spectrum, as Jordan slapped out complex, ever shifting numbers, full of intricate rhythms and jaw-dropping counterpoint. Stolen Moments revels in this new-found flexibility. From the THROE WEEK SESSION May 13-June 3,1992 Finals June 5 ACCTG 200 BISCOO2 ECNS47O ECONOO4 ECON3O2 ENGL 202 C ESACTI3B ESACT342 HIST 175 MANGT47O MISBD32I PHIL 012 PSY 002 PSY 412 SPAN 003 big band swing of John Coltranc's "Impressions" to the melancholy reading of "Over the Rainbow," Jordan continues to test the waters, never quite settling down with one particular groove. With some respectable backing by drummer Kenwood Dennard and bassist Charnett Moffett, Jordan unabashedly indulges in his technique, gliding smoothly across the high end, ...Stolen Moments captures the essence of live performance recordings and cements Jordan's slot as a forerunner of jazz guitar innovation . then dipping into the lower end of the scale for a spirited change of pace. "Lady in my Life" builds on a funk-oriented bass line, which holds the piece together as Jordan sails through a string of feverish solos that never stray from his classical smoothness. The fresh interpretation of "Stairway to Heaven" begins as a faithful homage to Jimmy Page’s graceful finger work, but Jordan is out on his own ground by the ECNS4IO ECON 002 EE 251 EETBD4IS EMCHOI2 ENGL 004 ENGL 015 ENGL 202 D ACCTG 204 ESACT 357 ACNTG4IO FIN 301 ADM Jill GEQSCO2O ART 120 MIST 020 BIOBD 494 A 11UM AN 101 CIIEMOOI UR 100 CIIEMOI2 MANGT3OO CHEMOI4 MANGT32O CHEMOIS MATH 004 CMPBDIOO MATH 005 CMPSC 101 MATH 040 (PASCAL) MATH 110 Independent Study for variable credit may be arranged for the 8- Week Session. Summer On-Campus Housing is available in the Student Apartments. Call the Office of Housing and food at 898-6161 forfurther information. A complete scncduleof classes for Summer Session 1992 is available in the College Registrar's Office. The University reserves the right to cancel classes due to insufficient enrollment or unforscen circumstances. SPCOM 1(X)A THEA 100 EIGHT WEEK SESSION June 15-August4,l992 Finals August 6-7 The Collegian :-BEHREND COURSE LISTING SSION 1992 time the frantic solo comes around. He rages into the passage without pausing to ask for directions, and Dennard and Moffett soon follow. By the time the number reaches the six-minute mark, each musician has tapped into his own groove and milked it for all the energy it's worth. But as soon as the arrangement strays too far, Jordan brings the number back into focus, closing it off with another of Page's signature riffs. Jordan shows his roots on the disc's title track, a subdued version of Oliver Nelson's haunting classic. A casual listening seems to lake the guitarist out of the mix; but when we realize that the delicate keyboard passages are in fact a product of Jordan's string-tapping technique we're forced to take another look at the startling range of his ever-growing bag of tricks. Jordan has said that he prefers ■/ live performances and the spontaneous creativity a supporting crowd can inspire. After listening to "Return Expedition," a 15 minute-plus romp through the lower register, it's hard not to see his point. The number starts slow, warming up the crowd and establishing Jordan’s niche before Dennard and Moffett charge in with equally inspired intensity. As the song plots its course, the trio shifts directions and then doubles back again and again, each musician pushing the others into the next passage. When the crowd picks up on certain grooves, Jordan and co. respond by pushing the arrangement up another notch, picking up even more speed before winding back down for the track's exhausted close. It's moments like this that validate Jordan's spot at the forefront of the contemporary jazz community. His unparalleled technique aside, Jordan demands acclaim for his ability to work a crowd, to find the groove his fans want and tailor the next passage to carry them along, no matter how long the trip takes. MATH 140 (Y MATH 141 MATH 251 MKTG 301 MUSIC 005 OPMGT3OI PHYS 151 PHYS 201 PL SC 003 PSY 002 QB A 200 RUSIOO SPCOM 100 A SPCOM 1008 10 WEEK SESSION May 13-July 31,1992 UNDERGRADUATE INTERNSHIPS, / PRACTICUMS AND PROJECTS 1 Page <9 ® 3, * > l^i & \