I've been meaning to describe my explorations of my illustrious colleague, Mr. Lavelle, for months but am a sloth and easily distracted. This will not do. Besides, how often do I get a chance to write about someone's music with avid participation from them as musicians aren't always this enthused?
Of the five discs I have, two are simple drum-less gatherings, a set of duets with Daniel Carter and a Clarinet Trio with Sabir Mateen and Stanley Jason Zappa. The other three are more 'conventional' groupings with drum and bass involved. All are examples of work from someone who has put his all into compelling participation in an increasingly marginalized idiom. I wonder how he does it.
He has had an interesting trajectory of involvement with trumpet wrestling going back to his ninth year. He even made an attempt at attending Berklee that didn't pan out to his satisfaction and he cut his losses. It was our gain as it gave him space to discover his sound and ways to shape it the old fashioned way, living it.
Along the way, he added Bass Clarinet to his quiver and it's overlooked cousin, Alto Clarinet. For enhanced presence of the trumpet family, he added Flugelhorn and Pocket Trumpet. I had a chance to see him work his way through this array at the gallery here with vivacious participation from John Voigt and Syd Smart. He has this way of keeping his ears to the flow and making his selections on the fly, in the moment, shifting from one instrument to another with an easy deftness that masks the highly focused thought beneath the surface.