Quantcast
Channel: música en espiral
Viewing all 2642 articles
Browse latest View live

ANDREW HILL - Judgment (1964)

$
0
0



Recorded two months after Black Fire and two months before Point of Departure, Andrew Hill's Judgement!—finally receiving the Van Gelder remastering treatment—demonstrates just how prolific the envelope-pushing pianist was during the '60s. While prolific doesn't necessarily mean good, what is most remarkable about Hill's seemingly endless output on Blue Note between '63 and '69—strangely eluding the accolades he deserved at the time, but finally finding his audience in recent years—is how incredibly consistent it was.
Whether using larger ensembles on Point of Departure and Passing Ships, or smaller groups on Black Fire and Dance with Death, Hill's ability to skirt the edges of the avant-garde while remaining within a more mainstream context made his inability to reach audiences, who were soaking up records by Wayne Shorter and Bobby Hutcherson, all the more curious. Both were enjoying greater success while mining similar territory, at least some of the time.
Perhaps part of the problem was Hill's more idiosyncratic, serpentine, and at times jagged writing. As cerebral as Shorter was, with the possible exception of outré recordings like The All Seeing Eye and Super Nova, he was more concerned with harmonic density, always keeping a steady pulse underneath. While Hill also kept an eye on forward motion, he was also exploring irregular and shifting meters—characteristics likely disconcerting to a mainstream crowd—while his allegiance to form alienated devotees of the free jazz movement taking hold at the time.
In some ways this 1964 recording is Hill's most unconsidered session of the time. On this quartet date he placed Hutcherson's vibes, rather than a horn player, in the front line and used Richard Davis—his clear bassist of choice, appearing on seven sessions between '63 and '65. Drummer Elvin Jones had ended his six-year run with John Coltrane, rejecting Coltrane's total transition away from defined structure. Hill's distinguishing marks are all over the album's six compositions, but they're somehow more relaxed than usual. Perhaps it's simply a matter of texture—Hutcherson's vibes are a more ethereal foil to Hill's abstruse style—but even pieces like the irregular-metered "Siete Ocho" have an understated intensity.
There's something more open about the loose swing of "Flea Flop." Hill's accompaniment beneath Hutcherson's characteristically well-developed solo is less angular and more to the point. While his own solo finds his left hand in more oddly-placed counterpoint to the skewed rhythms of his right—all the while with Davis carefully filling in the blanks—it's only when Jones steps up for a solo that things really heat up. "Alfred" is a surprisingly tender ballad, although Davis' more interactive role keeps things from becoming too settled.
What makes every new Hill reissue from the '60s significant is how he managed to blend complex compositional ideas and oblique thematic constructs; left-of-centre, to be sure, but still in that centre's general vicinity. Perhaps he was ahead of his time, and his increased popularity these days indicates that his audience has finally caught up with him; in any case, Judgement! is a classic entry that's sure to please.  -  John Kelman


Tracks
1. Siete Ocho
2. Flea Flop
3. Yokada Yokada
4. Alfred
5. Judgment
6. Reconciliation
7. Yokada Yokada (alternate take)

BOBBY HUTCHERSON  vibes
ANDREW HILL  piano
RICHARD DAVIS  bass
ELVIN JONES  drums

All compositions by Andrew Hill
Recorded on January 8, 1964 at the Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey
Blue Note Records   7243 5 63842 2 4  (RVG Edition)



PAUL BLEY - Paul Bley With Gary Peacock (1970)

$
0
0

Gary Peacock shares front-cover billing with  Paul Bley on this 1970 session, but drummer  Paul Motian is also present on the first five tracks. (Billy Elgart replaces Motian on the remaining three.) There's a curiously straight-ahead, tempo-driven feel to this short and sweet disc, quite unlike the free aesthetic that Bley, Peacock, and Motian put forward when they returned to ECM as a trio on 1999'sNot Two, Not One. That's not to say the music is conventional: there are two tunes apiece byBley, Ornette Coleman, and Annette Peacock and one by Gary Peacock, in addition to the lone standard, Jerome Kern’s"Long Ago and Far Away." (The finale, "Albert's Love Theme" by Annette Peacock, stands out as the most abstract of the bunch.) The brittle, lo-fi sound doesn't detract from the album's historical value.  -  David R. Adler


Tracks
01. Blue (Ornette Colemna)
02. Getting Started (Paul Bley)
03. When Will the Blues Leave (Ornette Coleman)
04. Long Ago And Far Away (Ira Gershwin/Jerome Kern)
05. Moor (Gary Peacock)
06. Gary (Annette Peacock)
07. Big Foot (Paul Bley)
08. Albert’s Love Theme (Annette Peacock)

GARY PEACOCK  bass
PAUL BLEY  piano
PAUL MOTIAN  drums (1-5)
BILLY ELGART  drums (6-8)

Recorded in New York April13, 1963 and May 11, 1968

ECM  1003   843 162 - 2

ENRICO PIERANUNZI QUARTET/QUINTET Featuring ART FARMER - Isis (1981)

$
0
0

Art Farmer’s always lyrical, inviting flugelhorn fit nicely into this quartet and quintet setting matching him with an Italian ensemble. They covered standards, such bop anthems as  Dizzy Gillespie’s "Blue 'N' Boogie" and Charlie Parker "Ah-Leu-Cha," plus Pieranunzi originals "Little Moon" and the title track. Pieranunzi’s light, enticing piano phrases made a nice contrast with Farmer’s effortless, shimmering solos, while bassist Furio Di Castri and drummer Roberto Gatto handled rhythm details smoothly, and special guest Massimo Urbani chipped in with vigorous alto sax solos on three cuts. A solid, often delightful session.  -  Ron Wynn

Tracks
01. Isis (Enrico Pieranunzi)
02. Ah-Leu-Cha (Charlie Parker)
03. Love Walked In (George Gershwin/Ira Gershwin)
04. Blue ‘N’ Boogie (Dizzy Gillespie/Frank Paparelli)
05. Soul Dance (Enrico Pieranunzi)
06. Nancy (James Van Heusen)
07. Au Privave (Charlie Parker)
08. Little Moon (Enrico Pieranunzi)

ENRICO PIERANUNZI  piano
ART FARMER  flugelhorn
FURIO DI CASTRI  bass
ROBERTO GATTO  drums
MASSIMO URBANI  alto saxophone

Recorded February 9/11, 1980 at Emmequattro Studios, Roma

SOUL NOTE  121021 - 2

PHIL WOODS - Song For Sisyphus (1977)

$
0
0

This recording features an early version of altoist Phil Woods' Quintet, the second of two albums that includes guitarist Harry Leahey. With pianist Mike Melillo, bassist Steve Gilmore and drummer Bill Goodwin completing the group, the Woods band's sound and musical philosophy were very much in place. The great altoist performs a few boppish tunes, some group originals (two songs by Melillo) and a couple of ballads. Highlights of the lesser-known but worthy recording include "Nuages,""Change Partners" and a cooking version of "Shaw Nuff."  -  Scott Yanow

Tracks 

1. Song For Sisyphus (Phil Woods)
2. Last Night When We Were Young (E.Y. Harburg, H. Arlen)
3. Nuages (Django Reinhardt)
4. Change Partners (Irvin Berlin)
5. Monking Business (Mike Melillo)
6. Summer Afternoon (Mike Melillo)
7. When My Dreams Come True (Irvin Berlin)
8. Shaw Nuff (C. Parker, D. Gillespie)

PHIL WOODS  alto and soprano saxophones
STEVE GILMORE  bass
BILL GOODWIN  drums
HARRY LEAHEY  guitar
MIKE MELILLO  piano



Recorded at RCA Studios, N:Y:, November 9, 1977
GRYPHON  G - 782 

TRILOK GURTU - Bad Habits Die Hard (1996)

$
0
0


Tracks

1. 21 Spices (Trilok Gurtu)
2. Bad Boys (Andy Emler)
3. Returning Home (Trilok Gurtu)
4. Siddhi
5. Watapa
6. Bad Habits Die Hard
7. Carlinhos (Trilok Gurtu)

CHRIS MINH DOKY bass, voice
DAVID GILMORE guitar, voice
ANDY EMLER piano, e-piano, synthesizer, voice
TRILOK GURTU drums, tabla, voice, percussion
BILL EVANS tenor & soprano saxs (3)
MARK FELDMAN violin

Recorded at Stadtgarten, Cologne, October 1995
CMP CD 80

JAN GARBAREK / BOBO STENSON QUARTET - Dansere (1976)

$
0
0

Among the many stylistic twists and turns negotiated by Jan Garbarek early in his career, the subtle shift in direction from the previous, spectacular  Witchi-Tai-To to  Dansere was probably the most decisive. In fact, Dansere, recorded in 1975, was one of the first examples of what would come to be known as the "ECM sound," not so much for the usual crystalline recording quality but for a creeping, languidly pastoral sensibility that would become more and more prominent both in  Garbartek’s own work as well as in the label's releases in general. Still, that granola and Birkenstock aura is subdued enough in this album to grudgingly recommend it to fans of his earlier work. Bassist Palle Danielsson, while less angular and experimental than  Arild Andersen, provides a solid and propulsive foundation for Garbarek and Stenson, the former tending to increasingly rein in his playing as the influence of Albert Ayler, so prominent in his first albums, continued to wane. Instead, one can hear traces of Keith Jarrett, with whom Garbarek had recently been working and, indeed, much of Dansere compares favorably with Jarrett’s quartet work from around the same time. Fans of his subsequent work with the Hilliard Ensemble might find this relatively tough sledding while lovers of albums like Tryptikon could well hear excessive smoothness, but it stands up decently enough on its own merits.  -  Brian Olewnick


Tracks
1. Dansere (Jan Garbarek)
2. Svevende (Jan Garbarek)
3. Bris (Jan Garbarek)
4. Skrik and Hyl (Jan Garbarek)
5. Lokk (Etter Thorvald Tronsgard))
6. Til Vennene (Jan Garbarek)

JAN GARBAREK  saxophones
BOBO STENSON  piano
PALLE DANIELSSON  bass
JON CHRISTENSEN  drums

Recorded November 1975 at Talent Studio, Oslo

ECM  1075   /   829 193 - 2

MARK TURNER QUINTET - Yam Yam (1995)

$
0
0

This early quintet outing is a strong showcase for Mark Turner the composer. It's also an important chapter in the special relationship between Turner and guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel. The two would later work mainly in piano-less settings, but here they are joined by pianist Brad Mehldau, who adds his advanced harmonic insight to the session. One could rightly bill the record as “Turner and Rosenwinkel with the Brad Mehldau Trio," as the rhythm section consists of bassist Larry Grenadier and drummer Jorge Rossy, Mehldau’s longtime collaborators. The disc boasts five strongTurner originals, including "Zurich," which would resurface on 2001's Dharma Days. (This version features guest tenorists Seamus Blake and Terrence Dean.) Rosenwinkel weighs in with "Cubism," a similar version of which he included on 2000s The Enemies of Energy. The two remaining non-Turner pieces are Mehldau’s hard-swinging "Subtle Tragedy" and a bright five/four rendition of John Coltrane’s "Moment's Notice. "Yam Yam reveals much about the evolution of all these players, and is therefore well worth the attention of serious fans.  -  David R. Adler


Tracks
1. Tune NUmber One (M. Turner)
2. Cubism (K. Rosenwinkel)
3. Yam Yam I (M. Turner)
4. Moment’s Notice (J. Coltrane)
5. Isolation (M. Turner)
6. Subtle Tragedy
7. Zurich (M. Turner)
8. Blues (M. Turner)
9. Yam Yam II (M. Turner)

MARK TURNER  tenor saxophone
KURT ROSENWINKEL  guitar
BRAD MEHLDAU  piano
LARRY GRENADIER  bass
JORGE ROSSY  drums
SEAMUS BLAKE  tenor saxophone
TERENCE DEAN  tenor saxophone

Recorded December 12, 1994 in New York City, NY, USA

Criss Cross Jazz  1094

MARK TURNER - In This World (1998)

$
0
0

My first reaction on hearing Mark Turner was gratitude. Here was someone on intimate terms with music. I heard someone who had assimilated a wealth of information, but was already looking inward to express himself. There was nothing strident about his playing. He possessed an enviable equanimity regarding improvisation, allowing the ideas to take shape on their own. These kinds of musical assets probably have to do with a basic, unchanging faith that Mark has in the creative process itself, and they were in place when I first heard him, in 1992.
What is it that gives a musician his or her personal “style”? Often, it’s the rhythmic and melodic qualities that draw us in: phrases that stagger “behind the beat”, an inspired improvisation we say “could have been a whole new song.” Less talked about, perhaps because the terminology becomes more specialized, is the specific harmonic imprint a player can leave. The twelve-tone scale is always compelling to us. It’s a timeless set of elements containing the potential for infinite variants. What a musician keeps and throws away within all that is what gives him a subjective voice - a calling card of sentiment. Melody, because of its monophonic simplicity, is perceived on an objective level - a “good” melody is gauged on its universality. But when these tones mix together, the experience becomes fragmented as each listener finds empathy with the harmonic implications of a particular body of work. When we are “moved” in this way, it is on a deep, inner-level.
So it was Mark Turner the harmonist that moved me initially, and still does. His own compositions communicate this most immediately. Take the opening track, “Mesa.” Over a pedal point of B we hear the saxophonist and piano play the melody in unison, out of time, coyly giving the impression of mystery. This beginning only appears artless. Three tonal centers are spelled out - B, E flat and G, respectively. Functioning less as melody, these parallel note-groups serve as a harmonic blueprint for the rest of the tune. The relationship between three tonal areas a major third apart from each other, and the crunchy impressionism of the major third and fourth of each row grinding together, are exploited, and the result is a harmonic landscape throughout this “Mesa” that is very much Mark: opting for mediant relationships instead of dominant-tonic, and casting a mixolydian blur on the dominant seventh chord with the added fourth, he conjures a world of half-lights and shadows, filled with achy, suffused longing.
Not just harmonic, but melodic and rhythmic empathy exists in a band that improvises collectively, and it’s something that’s often in place at the gate, the gravitating force that brings musicians together initially. With perseverance, players cultivate this, and develop a unique musical language together, as is the case with Mark’s personnel choice for this recording. Kurt Rosenwinkel and Mark have played together in bands that both of them have led for several years, and their rapport is evident: witness the uncanny fluidity in the unison melody they play on “Bo Brussels,” and their closely linked improvisatory approach in this setting. Kurt, and Jorge Rossy as well, met Mark in their school days at Berklee in 1990. Check out Jorge’s wonderfully lopey rhythmic addition on “She Said, She Said” (he’s checked out his Ringo!), and his textures on “Bo Brussels.” Larry Grenadier and I started playing with Mark a couple years later. Larry’s role here is characteristic: a foundation that is strong yet elastic in matters of rhythm. He has the ability, so appropriate for Mark’s compositions, of supplying a churning pedal point, while simultaneously catching wisps and shards of harmony that the soloist is implying. Brian Blade is someone we all admire for his ability to transcend his instrument through his constantly compositional approach. Not once is he just marking time, taking up space. Instead, he spontaneously builds a drum part with its own organic logic. In matters of form, he is often a sort of guide through Mark’s compositions, plotting courses through different sections, occasionally putting a firecracker under our collective ass when appropriate. Listen to the way he steers the ship through Scylla and Charybdis with Odyssean cunning on mark’s “In This World.”
Whether it’s the up-tempo treatment of Mancini’s “Days of Wine and Roses,” or a reading of Duke Pearson’s beautiful ballad, “You Know I Care,” Mark Turner’s sound on the horn is unmistakable: warm, capable of profound gentleness, never saccharine, it’s a recipe for seduction. He uses his technical command of the altissimo register as a means to an expressive end. In these upper limits of the tenor saxophone, he often plays with an easy affability, not distorted or harsh. This juxtaposition of extremity and grace conveys an alluring kind of emotional baldness. Mark’s output involves very little affectation. He doesn’t court the theatrics often associated with his instrument. Disarming in its sincerity, there is a unique lack of need to represent irony or unexpectedness in his playing. Musicians in our age group (myself included) frequently employ these sentiments to add flux to the plot of their musical storytelling. Mark seems to have already moved beyond this in many ways, playing with a direct candor usually reserved for older players.
To close on a different note, a little about Mark Turner, the person: it’s been my observation that this graceful straight-forwardness is something Mark carries into affairs outside of music. Comforting, that.
– Brad Mehldau, 1998


Tracks
01. Mesa (mark Turner)
02. Lennie Grove (Mark Turner)
03. You Know I Care (Duke Pearson)
04. The Long Road (Mark Turner)
05. Barcelona (Mark Turner)
06. In This World (Mark Turner)
07. Days of Wine and Roses (Henry Mancini / Johnny Mercer
08. Bo Brussels (mark Turner)
09. She Said, She Said (John Lennon / Paul McCartney)

BRAD MEHLDAU  piano, Fender Rhodes
BRIAN BLADE  drums
JORGE ROSSY  drums (2, 9)
LARRY GRENADIER  bass
MARK TURNER  tenor saxophone
KURT ROSENWINKEL  guitar (6,8,9)

Recorded June 3-5, 1998 New York

Warner Bros. Records   947074

RAY BROWN & JIMMY ROWLES - As Good As It Gets (1977)

$
0
0

Although the title of this CD reissue has a bit of bragging, this is an excellent duet set which features bassist Ray Brown and pianist Jimmy Rowles. There are many subtle surprises on the set including Rowles' striding on "Like Someone in Love" and Brown's melodic lead on "Honey." Other highlights include "Sophisticated Lady," Rowles'"Looking Back," a playful version of "Love" and "Rosalie." Delightful music.  -  Scott Yanow 

Tracks

01. Sophisticated Lady (Ellington/Mills/Parish)
02. That's All (Brandt/Haymes)
03. Like Someone in Love (Burke/VanHeusen)
04. Looking Back (Benton/Hendricks/Otis)
05. Honey Love (Gillespie/Simons/Whiting)
06. Love (Gabler/Kaempfert)
07. Alone Together (Dietz/Schwartz)
08. Rosalia (Porter)
09. Manha de Carnaval (Bonfa/Maria)
10. Who Cares? (Gershwin/Gershwin)

RAY BROWN  bass
JIMMY ROWLES  piano

Recorded at Coast Recorders, San Francisco, CA
Concord Jazz  CD  4066  /  CJ - 66

CHARLES LLOYD - Voice In The Night (1999)

$
0
0




Voice in the Night is a welcome homecoming for reedman Charles Lloyd. He hasn't recorded in a guitar-based group since his two tremendously underrated (and rockish) albums for A&M in 1972-73. Here, he also pleasingly revisits a good deal of his earlier (and still his most personable) material: "Forest Flower," from the famed quartet days of the late 60s, "Voice in the Night" and in the "Pocket Full of Blues" medley, "Island Blues" and "Little Sister's Dance."
With the advantage of hindsight, Lloyd seems to sound warmer, somewhat romantic - and a touch more inspired than usual — with a guitar. Pianists seem to bring out Lloyd's more aggressive Coltrane-ish side and often permit him to easily dabble in longer, spacier themes with exotic instrumentation. Even though he sticks to tenor throughout here (his exceptional flute playing is sorely missed coupled with John Abercrombie's sensistive accompaniment), Lloyd sounds just right here: swinging and having fun too.
This all-star aggregate, featuring Abercrombie on guitar, Dave Holland on bass and Billy Higgins on drums, recalls the other supergroup Lloyd captured on 1965's superb Of Course, Of Course (Columbia, not on CD). The earlier date featured iconoclastic guitarist Gabor Szabo, an excellent foil for any of Lloyd's moods (Szabo came to the Chico Hamilton group Lloyd directed at Lloyd's insistence in the early 1960s), with bassist Ron Carter and drummer Tony Williams. Lloyd, Abercrombie and Holland bring a far different, mellowed perspective to this music.
Voice in the Night suffers none of the austerity that rules much of ECM's recordings and a few of Lloyd's previous five ECM releases. Aside from toe-tapping interplay on the familiar songs, Lloyd and company offer lovely covers of Strayhorn's "A Flower is a Lovesome Thing" and, surprisingly, last year's Burt Bachrach/Elvis Costello hit, "God Give Me Strength." Quite often, though, the most interesting moments come on Lloyd's newest material: the off-kilter calypso of "Dorotea's Studio,""Homage" (a sterling Abercrombie showpiece) and "Requiem." However, anyone familiar with Lloyd's magisterial "Forest Flower" from the Chico Hamilton days, or, more likely from the famed quartet days, will certainly want to hear the beautiful version Lloyd, Abercrombie, Holland and Higgins offer here. It's worth the price of admission.
Here's hoping the somewhat reclusive Lloyd is planning a sequel to Voice in the Night. This is a quartet that offers much to explore.  -  Douglas Payne

Tracks
01. Voice In The Night (Charles Lloyd)
02. God Give Me Strengh (Elvis Costello / Burt Bacharach)
03. Dorotea's Studio (Charles Lloyd)
04. Requiem (Charles Lloyd)
05. Pocket Full Of Blues (Charles Lloyd)
06. Homage (Charles Lloyd)
07. Forest Flower: Sunrise/Sunset (Charles Lloyd)
08. A Flower Is A Lovesome Thing (Billy Strayhorn)

CHARLES LLOYD tenor saxophone
JOHN ABERCROMBIE guitar
DAVE HOLLAND double-bass
BILLY HIGGINS drums, percussion

Recorded May 1998 at Avatar Studio, New York
ECM 1674 559 445-2


MARION BROWN - Back To Paris (1980)

$
0
0

Marion Brown is frequently typecast as a free jazz player, yet this live set recorded in 1980 at Le Dreher in Paris is actually quite accessible.  Brown and his band -- pianist Hilton Ruiz (who studied with Mary Lou Williams), Jack Gregg, and drummer Freddie Waits - seem quite inspired throughout this set of mostly originals. His opener, "Sunshine Road," blends Latin rhythms, gospel, and post-bop. His fragile-sounding alto sax is perfect for his lovely ballad "November Cotton Flower"; it is far removed from avant-garde and free jazz. The Brazilian flavor of his melodic "La Placita" could get any nightclub audience up and dancing. But best of all is his hilarious send-up of "Body and Soul," with Ruiz’s stride piano and Waits playing at march tempo behind him. Sadly, this recommended Free Lance CD may be difficult to acquire due to the demise of the label.  -  Ken Dryden

Track
1. Sunshine Road (M. Brown)
2. November Cotton Flower (M. Brown)
3. La Placita (M. Brown)
4. Body and Soul (F. Eyton/J. Green/E. Hevman/R.Sour)
5. Sweet Earth Flying (M. Brown)

MARION BROWN  alto saxophone
HILTON RUIZ  piano
JACK GREGG  bass
FREDDIE WAITS  drums

Recorded live February 14, 1980 Le Dreher Club, Paris, France
Free Lance  FRL  CD  002


HENRI TEXIER QUARTET & JOE LOVANO - Paris Batignolles (1986)

$
0
0

Bassist Henri Texier leads an all-star quintet bolstered by the presence of special guest Joe Lovano on tenor sax in this live 1986 recording. While Texier either wrote or co-wrote many of the selections, he amply features his musicians while not taking much of the solo spotlight for himself. The leader's energetic post-bop cooker "Zentral Motiv is a potent opener, highlighted by strong solos from Lovano and Louis Sclavis on soprano sax. The eerie "Baton Rouge" is a slow-to-develop group improvisation, with guitarist Philippe Deschepper prominent in the mix and explosive bursts bySclavis on bass clarinet. The four-part suite "Grillage" blends several different contributions by the quintet's members. "Paris Batignolles" is a joyous celebration, with the blend of reeds almost suggesting an accordion. This fun-filled concert is warmly recommended.  -  Ken Dryden


Tracks
1. Zentral Motive (Henri Texier)
2. Baton Rouge (Deschepper/Lovano/Sclavis/Texier)
3. La Louisiane (Joe Lovano)
4. Grillagel Seul Contre Tous/Jall/Grillage/Cavale (Mahieux/Sclavis/Texier)
5. Paris Batignolles (Henri Texier)
6. Noises (Henri Texier)

JACQUES MAHIEUX  drums
JOE LOVANO  tenor saxophone
HENRI TEXIER  doublé bass, cymbals, chinese gong, bendir
PHILIPPE DESCHEPPER  guitar, piccolo-guitar
LOUIS SCLAVIS  bass clarinet, soprano saxophone, baritone saxophone

Recorded live May 21, 1986 at “LE TEMPS DU JAZZ” International Jazz festival of Amiens in le Grande Théâtre de la Maison de la Culture.
LABEL BLEU – LBLC  6506   France

http://www.label-bleu.com/flash.htm

DAVID TORN - Cloud About Mercury (1987)

$
0
0

This 1987 production signifies experimental guitarist David Torn's second effort for Germany-based ECM Records. Here, the artist exhibits a sound, style, and methodology that are clearly his own, amid superb support by Bill Bruford (drums), Tony Levin (Chapman Stick/bass), and Mark Isham (trumpets). Torn generates gobs of excitement via his cunningly articulated phraseology, while also incorporating North African and East Indian modal concepts into these power-packed performances, fabricated upon climactic opuses and steamy crescendos. The guitarist's rippling harmonics and off-kilter voicings make for an engaging listening experience, especially when he trades sprightly fours with Isham atop the often-circuitous rhythms. Simply put, Cloud About Mercury looms as one of the finest jazz fusion dates of the '80s, and should be deemed a mandatory purchase for aficionados of this genre.  Glenn Astarita


Tracks
1. Suyafhu...Snapping the Hollow Reed (David Torn)
2. The Mercury Grid (David Torn)
3. 3 Minutes of Pure Entertainment (David Torn)
4. Previous Man (Torn/Isham/Levin/Bruford)
The Network of Sparks
5. a) The Delicate Code (David Torn)
6. b) Egg Learns To Walk (Torn/Isham/Levin/Bruford)
c) Suyafhu Seal (David Torn)

DAVID TORN electric and acoustic guitars
TONY LEVIN Chapman Stick, synthesizer-bass
BILL BRUFORD drums, synthesizer-drums, percussion
MARK ISHAM trumpet, piccolo trumpet, flugelhorn, synthesizer on (1)


Recorded March 1985 at Audio International, London
ECM 1322

MARIA SCHNEIDER ORCHESTRA - Concert In The Garden (2004)

$
0
0

Maria Schneider's first three albums were all Grammy nominated. Yet there was a four-year wait for her fourth CD. Schneider records infrequently because she writes for large ensembles, which are subject to the harsh constraints of jazz economics. Schneider hopes she has found a solution to this dilemma: Concert in the Garden will be sold exclusively through mariaschneider.com. Her new album is more ambitious (consisting of three extended compositions), more tilted toward the classical side of Schneider's jazz/classical balance, and more influenced by Spanish, flamenco and Brazilian forms than any of her previous works.
Because Schneider's music is so subtly shaded, longer pieces are challenged to sustain narrative interest and urgency over time. The 12-minute opening title track is not entirely successful in this regard. The solos from guitarist Ben Monder and pianist Frank Kimbrough are not strong enough to provide sufficient contrast to the piece's slow, hovering progress. But the other two works, "Three Romances" and "Buleria, Solea y Rumba," are revelatory in their complete realization. The first romance, "Choro Dancado," is a meticulous tapestry of formal motives, one of which inspires an epic, sideways, sliding tenor saxophone solo by Rich Perry. The second, "Pas de Deux," gathers intensity so gradually that you do not feel it coming. Suddenly, the piece is no longer quiet, and Ingrid Jensen (on flugelhorn) and Charles Pillow (on soprano sax) are almost wailing-if wailing can be conducted with such elegance. The last romance, "Danca Ilusoria," is one long, exhaustively elaborated, through-composed line, with jewel-like solos embedded in it from Frank Kimbrough and trombonist Larry Farrell. "Buleria, Solea y Rumba" begins softly, but Donny McCaslin's plaintive tenor saxophone cries carry on over the orchestra's whispers in a gradual twisting ascent that pulls the band with him and reaches an exhilarating catharsis.
Maria Schneider expects her audience to be able to concentrate, to follow her intricate, finely woven designs, defined through small details and slight shifts of color. For the listener, the rewards of this attention are the epiphany of perceiving complex diverse elements that cohere into a single arc, a whole-and the experience of being authentically moved by understated emotion.  -  Thomas Conrad, JazzTimes


TRACKLIST
1. Concert In The Garden
      Ben Monder (guitar) 
      Gary Versace (accordion)
      Frank Kimbrough (piano)
2. Three Romances - Part 1 Choro Dancado
       Rick Perry (tenor)
       Frank Kimbrough (piano)
3.
Three Romances - Part 2 Pas De Deux
       Ingrid Jensen (flugelhorn) 
       Charles Pillow (soprano)          
4. Three Romances - Part 3 Danca Ilusoria
        Frank Kimbrough (piano)
        Larry Farrell (trombone) 
5. Buleria, Solea Y Rumba
        Donny McCastlin (tenor)
        Greg Gisbert (flugelhorn)

JAY ANDERSON  bass
GONZALO GRAU  cajón (5)
GARY VERSACE  accordion (1)
JEFF BALLARD  cajón, cajón quinto (5)
CLARENCE PENN  drums
BEN MONDER  guitar
FRANK KIMBROUGH  piano
ANDY MIDDLETON  tenor saxophone (3) (4)
RICK PERRY  tenor saxophone, flute
KEITH O’QUINN  trombone
LARRY FARRELL  trombone
PETER McGUINESS  trombone (3) (4)
ROCK CICCARONE  trombone
GREG GISBERT  trumpet, flugelhorn
INGRID JENSEN  trumpe, flugelhorn
LAURIE FINK  trumpet, flugelhorn
TIM RIES  alto & sopranos saxophones, clarinet, flute, alto & bass flute
CHARLES PILLOW  alto & soprano saxs, clarinet, flute, alto flute, oboe, english horn
SCOTT ROBINSON  baritone sax, flute, clarinet, bass & contrabass clarinet (2)
DONNY McCASTLIN  tenor & soprano saxophones, clarinet, flute
LUCIANA SOUZA  voice (1) (2) (3)
MARIA SCHNEIDER  conductor

Music composed and arranged by Maria Schneider
Recorded at Avatar Studios, New York, March 8-11, 2004

ArtistShare - 0001

LESZEK MOZDZER, LARS DANIELSSON, ZOHAR FRESCO - The Time (2005)

$
0
0

The Trio story started during the XIth International Jazz Festival - Jazz in the Old Town in Warsaw – July 2004. Especially for this festival Leszek Możdżer invited the Swedish bassist and cellist Lars Danielsson and Israeli percussionist Zohar Fresco as a Dream Team they have performed debut repertoire which was more than enthusiastically accepted by both the audience and the reviewers.
After being widely applauded the Trio has decided to record their repertoire. In this way the first Trio studio album was released in September 2005 – Możdżer Danielsson Fresco – The Time – OM CD 001. Supported by the concert tour that took place in all major cities of Poland
Leszek Mozdzer, is a giant of jazz scene in Poland, that can be only compared to Tomasz Stanko in terms of artistic output and influence.
Lars Danielsson is widely known in Europe as one of the most creative and succesful double bass players in mainstream jazz.
Zohar Fresco is least known of the three, native of Israel, but of Turkish origin he is very well acquainted with both western and oriental persussion instruments which makes him invaluable addition to the trio
The creative drive behind many of the compositions on this album is down to either Mozdzer of Danielsson, but the sense of collective musicianship means that the character of each piece is very much dictated by a unity of sound and equality of contribution which rises above the common jazz tradition of composed hook, followed by a row of more or less tediously ego-trip solos.
The music on this album is very communicative, melodic, easy-to-listen. Songs comprise original comnpositions but also improvisations on medieval song, Nirvana's Smells Like Teen Spirit or Komeda's Svantetic. The music is very coherent, rewarding and delivered with best possible quality.


Tracks
01. Asta (Lars Danielsson)
02. Incognitor (Leszek Mozdzer)
03. Sortorello (anonymous, 13th century)
04. Tsunami (Leszek Mozdzer)
05. The Time (Leszek Mozdzer, Zohar Fresco)
06. Asta II (Lars Danielsson)
07. Easy Money (Leszek Mozdzer)
08. Smells Like Teen Spirit (David Grohl, Chris Novoselic, Kurt Cobain)
09. Svantetic (Krysztof Komeda)
10. Suffering (Lars Danielsson)
11. Trip To Bexbach (Leszek Mozdzer)
12. Asta III (Lars Danielsson)
13. Suffering (Lars Danielsson)

LESZEK MOZDZER piano
LARS DANIELSSON double bass, cello
ZOHAR FRESCO percussion, vocal

Recorded at producer´s studio in AAD system.
Mastered at Sanctuary Studios Ltd, London
Outside Music OMCD 001

AIR - Air Song (1975)

$
0
0


Air, the improvisational collective of Henry Threadgill on reeds, woodwinds, and lots of other stuff, bassist Fred Hopkins, and drummer/percussionist Steve McCall, was the first major group after the Art Ensemble to come out of Chicago. The feel of Air's sound is one where the collective improvises and creates without an individual soloist or group leader anchoring the proceedings. On the first two recordings, this debut outing in particular, this concept worked well. There are four long pieces here, all of them based on minimal themes with variations entering into the fray simultaneously and opening the door to a free for all that pays attention to both dynamics and texture. The interplay between the three members is almost always inventive, engaging, and full of warmth and humor. There is little excessive indulgence to be found on these improvisations, and the degree of musicianship with these men is off the chart. Communication in the new jazz often amounted to little more than cats trying to make one another louder. Air proved that the signal of development is in the listening and expressing oneself based on what has been played as a soloist and as part of the whole. A lovely and auspicious debut. - Thom Jurek, All Music Guide



Tracks
1. Untitled Song
2. Great Body of the Riddle or Where the Dodge Boys when my Clay started to slide
3. Danca of the Beast
4. Air Song

HENRY THREADGILL alto, tenor & baritone saxophones, flute
FRED HOPKINS bass
STEVE McCALL drums

All compositions by Henry Threadgill
Recorded September 10, 1975 at P.S. Recording Studios, Chicago
Trio Records (Japan)

ENRICO PIERANUNZI QUARTET/QUINTET Featuring ART FARMER - Isis (1981)

$
0
0

Art Farmer’s always lyrical, inviting flugelhorn fit nicely into this quartet and quintet setting matching him with an Italian ensemble. They covered standards, such bop anthems as  Dizzy Gillespie’s "Blue 'N' Boogie" and Charlie Parker "Ah-Leu-Cha," plus Pieranunzi originals "Little Moon" and the title track. Pieranunzi’s light, enticing piano phrases made a nice contrast with Farmer’s effortless, shimmering solos, while bassist Furio Di Castri and drummer Roberto Gatto handled rhythm details smoothly, and special guest Massimo Urbani chipped in with vigorous alto sax solos on three cuts. A solid, often delightful session.  -  Ron Wynn

Tracks
01. Isis (Enrico Pieranunzi)
02. Ah-Leu-Cha (Charlie Parker)
03. Love Walked In (George Gershwin/Ira Gershwin)
04. Blue ‘N’ Boogie (Dizzy Gillespie/Frank Paparelli)
05. Soul Dance (Enrico Pieranunzi)
06. Nancy (James Van Heusen)
07. Au Privave (Charlie Parker)
08. Little Moon (Enrico Pieranunzi)

ENRICO PIERANUNZI  piano
ART FARMER  flugelhorn
FURIO DI CASTRI  bass
ROBERTO GATTO  drums
MASSIMO URBANI  alto saxophone

Recorded February 9/11, 1980 at Emmequattro Studios, Roma

SOUL NOTE  121021 - 2

JOE ZAWINUL - The Rise & Fall Of The Thrid Stream (1967) & Money In The Pocket (1966)

$
0
0

This transitional recording sees Joe Zawinul moving from the role of jazz pianist to that of a synthesist in the broad sense of the word. The recording, made up of advanced hard bop and post bop themes, includes -- with varying degrees of cohesion -- passages for cello and violas. The strings never completely meld with the jazz instrumentation, but they also don't get in the way. The title suggests Zawinul sees little value in partitioning music under such headings as "Third Stream" (a rubric for the fusion of jazz and classical music). This view would be famously exemplified in the influential projects with which Zawinul would soon be involved. Zawinul sticks with acoustic piano except for "Soul of a Village", where he improvises in a soul-jazz vein on Fender Rhodes over the tamboura-like droning of a prepared piano. On other tracks, his playing is similar to the sweeping grandeur of Mc Coy Tyner. Elsewhere, he is in more of a Keith Jarrett or Bill Evans space. There's good work from Jimmy Owens on trumpet and William Fischer on tenor sax, along with a top-flight rhythm section comprising bassist  Richard Davis and either Freddie Waits or Roy McCurdy on drums.What's interesting about this music is the insight it provides on directions Zawinul would soon take with Miles Davis on the ethereal In a Silent Way, on the impressionistic 1971 eponymous release Zawinul, and then with the borderless fusioneering of Weather Report. These later projects are the realization of ideas that Zawinul was beginning to form on this 1967 session.  -  Jim Todd



Tracks
01. Baptismal (William Fischer)
02. The Soul Of A Village-Part I (William Fischer)
03. The Soul Of A Village-Part II (William Fischer)
04. The Fifth Canto (William Fischer)
05. From Vienna With Love (Friedrich Gulda)
06. Lord, Lord, Lord (William Fischer)
07. A Concerto Retitled (William Fischer)
08. Money in The Pocket (Joe Zawinul)
09. If (Joe Henderson)
10. My One And Only Love (Guy Wood/Robert Mellin)
11. Midnight Mood (Joe Zawinul)
12. Some More Of Dat (Sam Jones)
13. Sharon’s Waltz (Rudy Stephenson)
14. Riverbed (Joe Zawinul)
15. Del Sasser (Sam Jones)


JOE ZAWINULpiano, electric piano
WILLIAM FISCHER– tenor sax, arrangements (1-7)
JIMMY OWENStrumpet (1-7)
ALFRED BROWNviola (1-7)
SELWART CLARKEviola (1-7)
THEODORE ISRAELviola (1-7)
KERMIT MOORE– cello (1-7)
RICHARD DAVISbass (1-7)
ROY McCURDYdrums (1-7)
FREDDIE WAITSdrums (1-7)
WARREN SMITHpercusión
BOB CRANSHAWbass (8)
ROY McCURDYdrums (8)
CLIFFORD JORDANtenor sax (8)
BLUE MITCHELLtrumpet (8,9,11,12,14)
JOE HENDERSONtenor sax (9,11,12,14)
PEPPER ADAMSbaritone sax (9,11,12,14)
SAM JONESbass (9,11-15)

LOUIS HAYESdrums (9,11-15)

RHINO / ATLANTIC  8122-71675 - 2

ENRICO RAVA - Plot (1976)

$
0
0

Like its cover, Enrico Rava’s The Plot is a storybook with much to delight our hungry eyes and ears. Its dramatis personaewill be familiar to the ECM enthusiast: John Abercrombie as the guitarist, Palle Danielsson as the bassist, Jon Christensen as the drummer, and Rava himself as the trumpeter who leads them on a profoundly satisfying adventure. Our tale begins with the airy bass line of “Tribe.” Abercrombie’s restrained wails and Christensen’s splashing cymbals spread their arms wide in a loose net across the page. Rava spins outward from its center like a spider, checking every tether to make sure it is securely fastened to the surrounding flora. Only then does he jump off, held by a single lifeline, almost invisible in the air, as he soars in his improvised freefall. Rava then takes us “On The Red Side Of The Street,” where focused solos and curiosity comingle incognito. What begins as erratic reverie in “Amici” turns into a protracted groove in which Rava unleashes a most potent narrative omniscience. To this, Abercrombie adds own staccato punctuation. The next chapter introduces us to “Dr. Ra And Mr. Va.” These mysterious alter egos paint a world of black and white, but describe it with the most colorful language at their disposal. Rava’s brassy pirouettes bring lively energy to the climax, instigating an ecstatic call and response with Abercrombie. We then come to a sepia illustration, Rava’s “Foto Di Famiglia,” a duet for acoustic guitar and trumpet. A plaintive stroll through half-remembered places long since transformed by the passage of time and gentrification, it is the counterpart to “Parks” on 1975’s The Pilgrim And The Stars. A brief interlude, it is usurped by the 15-minute epilogue, from which the album gets its name. It eases into our hearts with a somber yet soulful trumpet solo against an awakening rhythm section. The synergy builds to a non-abrasive intensity, threaded by Abercrombie’s hieroglyphic chords before shifting to his fuzz box sound, careening through the night like some cosmic wayfarer whose only guides are the sounds of Rava’s winding paths. And as the final page turns to reveal its blank reverse, we want nothing more than to reread this forgotten classic immediately.  –  between sound and space



Tracks
1. Tribe (Enrico Rava)
2. On The Red Side Of The Street (Enrico Rava, Graciela Rava)
3. Amici (Enrico Rava)
4. Dr. Ra And Mr Va (Enrico Rava)
5. Foto Di Famiglia (Enrico Rava, John Abercrombie)
6. The Plot (Enrico Rava)

ENRICO RAVA trumpet
JOHN ABERCROMBIE electric and acoustic guitars
PALLE DANIELSSON bass
JON CHRISTENSEN drums

Recorded August 1976 at Talent Studio, Oslo
ECM 1078 / 523 282 - 2



LEE KONITZ, PAUL BLEY, BILL CONNORS - Pyramid (1977)

$
0
0

This music, above all, celebrates the supremacy of improvisation over
composition and the melodic line over the harmony. In his biography, 
Stopping Time,Bley(1999) confessed to “…never having been a lover of chords
– I always thought that a chord was a vertical melody played simultaneously – if a
chord couldn’t be Stripped down and each note made to line up to make a
meaningful melody, it wasn’t a good chord…”

In 1974 Paul Bley and painter Carol Goss founded Improvising Artists
Incorporated (IAI). Bley acted as the audio producer and Goss was the art
and video director. Their agenda was to record musicians with mainstream
backgrounds in free settings, and the roster of artists included Sam Rivers,
Dave Holland, Sun Ra, Lee Konitz, and Jimmy Giuffre, among
others. The musicians who recorded the twenty or so records released by IAI
were more than happy to work with Bley, whose approach as a producer was
to stay out of the way as much as possible.  (time will tell – conversations with
Paul bley. Norman Meehan, 2003)

Tracks
1. Pyramid (Bill Connors)
2. Out There (Lee Konitz)
3. Talk To Me (Bill Connors)
4. Tavia (Lee Konitz)
5. Longer Than You Know (Paul Bley)
6. Play Blue (Paul Bley)

LEE KONITZ - alto & soprano saxophone
PAUL BLEY - acoustic & electric piano
BILL CONNORSacoustic & electric guitar


Recorded  June 11, 1977  at Electric Lady Studios,  New York City
Viewing all 2642 articles
Browse latest View live