CD REVIEW
BIG NEIGHBORHOOD - 11:11

The liner note explanation of the title of Big Neighborhood's second CD
release, penned by the group's guitarist/leader, David White, sounds
sort of loopy and New Age weird. White claims that “in some circles
11:11 is a wake-up code as seen on digital clocks designed to reach the
subconscious mind and trigger genetically encoded memories showing us
that we are higher spirits....”
Claptrap. Go hug a crystal. That's my take on it. But when you
spend an evening with the modern-leaning two disc set by this
original-sounding Seattle-based quartet, then hit the sack early and
wake up a couple of hours later, under the influence of either prostate
problems or providence, and see 11:11 glowing on the alarm clock, it
makes you stop and wonder.
In my review of Big Neighborhood's first disc, Neighbors (Origin
Records, '05), I said the group sounded like a band that Steely Dan
might have hired as a studio musicians. Revisiting that disc in
conjunction with an immersion with 11:11 says that I might have gotten
it wrong. By way of comparison, Big Neighborhood's sound seems to walk
streets similar to those frequented by Chick Corea's Elektric Band,
with a looser and more spontaneous swagger in its step.
This is a cohesive blend of glowing guitar (with a bit of Bill
Frisell folksiness creeping in on occasion) with an ebullient, usually
odd-meter bass/drum rhythm team and a succinct alto sax (weaving in and
out of the mix; not standing out in front of it), working a precision
versus freedom groove about as skillfully and engagingly as it can be
done. The influences are varied—calypso, modern jazz, 20th Century
classical, reggae, '70s rock—all mixed together by Big Neighborhood
into a fresh, forward-leaning sonic brew.
-Dan McClenaghan, All About Jazz