Uri Caine is an American pianist and prolific 
          recording artist who spans the jazz and classical worlds and never rests 
          on his laurels. He has composed a new version of the Diabelli variations, 
          worked over Schumann's Dichterliebe and arranged some of Wagner's 
          music for small ensemble, but it was his 1996 CD Urlicht/Primal Light 
          (Winter&Winter New Edition 910 004-2), 
          which won an award as Best Mahler CD the following year, that aroused 
          my attention and admiration initially. In it Caine explored Mahler's 
          music with an improvising jazz group, showing understanding of the spiritual 
          and emotional essence of familiar (perhaps nowadays too familiar) favourites 
          with evident affection and respect - 'cross-over' of the best type to 
          bring together lovers of both musics, and not at all, in my book, a 
          mere self-indulgent ego trip. 
        
        With a different, smaller team this was recreated live 
          at the Purcell Room as part of the South Bank Centre Related Rocks 
          festival, and the queue for returns was an indication of Caine's international 
          support. Many moments, such as the trumpet opening of the 5th Symphony 
          and the Frere Jaques bass solo from the first, came across with 
          vivid immediacy; songs from Youth's Magic Horn (The Drummer Boy), 
          Wayfarer and Deaths of Children sets were poignant in 
          their new guises, the jazz breaks never losing contact with their sources 
          however transformed. The music of the Drunkard in Spring from The 
          Song of the Earth was exhilaratingly rumbustious and the Farewell 
          effectively recontextualised, with the contralto soloist replaced 
          by a Hebrew cantor. 
        
        The music was played continuously by David Binney (saxophone) 
          DJ Olive (turntables) Drew Gress (bass) Joyce Hammann (violin) Ralph 
          Alessi (trumpet) & Cornell Rochester (drums) with Uri Caine (piano) 
          and Moshe Haschel (cantor), each of them playing a full part in bringing 
          a fruitful project to a live audience. Perversely, there were no programme 
          notes to help give the many listeners who didn't know their Mahler an 
          idea of what was being worked upon. Those are supplied in the track-listing 
          of the original CD, which was on sale afterwards, as was also a revised 
          and expanded version, Gustav Mahler in Tolbach (W&W 
          NE 910046-2), recorded live by a similarly constituted group, 
          with Aaron Bensoussan (cantor & oud), at the Gustav Mahler Festival, 
          Dobbiaco (Italy) July 1998. Its first of two CDs ends with the Adagietto 
          from the 5th Symphony, which in concert risks no longer always achieving 
          its original intensity and poignancy, which is here restored by Uri 
          Caine's daring and free ranging imagination. 
        
        Also of considerable interest is Caine's working up 
          of Bach's Goldberg Variations, which looks at this masterwork 
          from many perspectives, yet without quite the meaningful assimilation 
          which gives his Mahler project such an enduring resonance. The double 
          CD Aria and 70 Variations for Various Ensembles (W&W 
          910 054-2) has Caine playing a copy of a Silbermann fortepiano, 
          a modern piano and a Hammond organ, with an assemblage of tracks from 
          classical choral and instrumental groups, jazz players and vocalists 
          (no way they could have been brought together for a live presentation!) 
          reflecting the current scene, in which musicians are happy to collaborate 
          with those from other genres. 
        
        The listing as provided seemed perverse, taking up 
          some twenty thick pages with trendy typography (art & design Stephen 
          Byram) but without giving any help about the non-Goldberg sources, which 
          were tantalisingly recognisable, but hard to pin down out of their usual 
          context. However, Uri Caine has kindly written to me personally and 
          explained that "the Variations 
          that are based on other works by Bach include his first cello suite, 
          his cantatas, his organ preludes - those Variations are meant to recall 
          in a general way other music by Bach, but not necessarily to specific 
          pieces! Other Baroque composers that Bach studied are also referred 
          to and I tried to write pieces in their general style, but was not referring 
          to specific pieces of theirs - the kaleidoscopic nature of theme and 
          variations allows for many different styles in one piece."
        
        I did not find that this major exercise cast any significant 
          new light upon Bach for me, but it is an interesting novelty and may 
          well encourage Caine afficionados to explore the original masterpiece. 
          For readers new to the Uri Caine experience I would still recommend 
          the single CD, Primal 
          Light, as the one to purchase first. 
        
        Peter Grahame Woolf