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Carter Fine-Tunes Violin’s Jazz Voice

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SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

What do you do when you play an instrument that is usually categorized as “miscellaneous” in the jazz polls? When you’re a jazz artist trying to carve a career with an ax that is one of the principal working tools of classical music?

Violinist Regina Carter knows the answer: Find your own path. And on Wednesday at the Jazz Bakery, in the opening set of a five-night run, she provided some additional details, delivering an entertaining collection of bravura performances for a nearly full house of enthusiastic listeners.

Immediately evident in Carter’s playing is that she is amply informed about her jazz antecedents. Violin may not have been a prominent instrument in the music’s history, but it has been handled with skill and innovation by a list of performers ranging from Stuff Smith and Joe Venuti to Stephane Grappelli and Jean-Luc Ponty. And, in driving, straight-ahead improvisations on tunes such as “Lady Be Good,” Carter illuminated her capacity to understand, and be inspired by, that historical tradition.

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But there was another, more expansive aspect to Carter’s performance. Well-trained as a classical violinist, she has used her virtuosic technique to begin shaping a style of her own--a kind of postmodern approach to jazz improvising that deconstructs traditional elements into a personal musical mosaic. On solo after solo, she combined fragmentary ideas--numerous quotes from every imaginable source, jazz riffs, sudden technical flights of fancy, passages in which she blended her voice with her violin lines--to produce a kind of rigorous, inside-out look at the process of improvisation.

All of this worked as well as it did in part because Carter was joined by a first-rate group of players: Werner “Vana” Gierig, piano; Adam Rogers, guitar; Darryl Hall, bass; Alvester Garnett, drums; and Mayra Casales, percussion. Although the sound reproduction tended to muddy some of the ensemble work, the playing was filled with intriguing passages--most notably during a playful but insistently creative exchange between Hall and Garnett.

The evening was, in short, a revelatory appearance by an artist whose talent reaches well beyond her chosen instrument. Carter’s abilities are still in a process of development, but she has already made a case for the violin as one of the contributory jazz voices for the new century.

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* The Regina Carter Sextet at the Jazz Bakery through Sunday. 3233 Helms Ave., Culver City. (310) 271-9039. $20 admission today and Saturday at 8 and 9:30 p.m., and $18 Sunday at 7 and 8:30 p.m..

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