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GIANLUIGI TROVESI - Dedalo (2002)

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Tracks
01. Hercab
02. Herbop - Fragment
03. Herbop
04. Dance For A King - Fragment 1
05. Now I Can
06. Dance For A King - Fragment 2
07. From G To G
08. Scotch
09. Dance For The East No. 2
10. Dance For A King - Fragment 3
11. Dedalo
12. Hercab - Live Version

HARALD ROSENSTEIN  alto & soprano saxophones
HEINER WIBERNY  alto & soprano saxophones
JENS NEUFANG  baritone saxophone
LUCAS SCHMID bass trombone, tuba
TOM RAINEY  drums
PAUL SHIGIHARA  guitar
ROLF RÖMER  tenor saxophone, bass clarinet
FULVIO MARAS percussion, effects
FRANK CHASTENIER  piano
OLIVIER PETERS tenor saxophone, flute
BERNT LAUKAMP trombone
DAVE HORLER  trombone
LUDWIG NUSS  trombone
ANDY HADERER  trumpet
JOHN MARSHALL  trumpet
KLAUS OSTERLOH  trumpet
RICK KIEFER  trumpet
ROB BRUYNEN  trumpet
MARKUS STOCKHAUSEN  trumpet, flugelhorn
GIANLUIGI TROVESI  alto sax, bass clarinet, clarinet
THE WDR BIG BAND

All compositions by Gianluigi Trovesi
Recorded at WDR Studio 4 on May 28-30, 2001
Tracks 11 and 12 recorded live at Moers New Jazz Festival, June 1, 2001
Enja Records - ENJ-94192

ANDREW HILL - Pax (1965)

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Pax is one of those seminal Andrew Hill albums that sat locked in Blue Note's vaults for a decade before the first five cuts here were finally released as part of a double-LP package in 1975 entitled One for One. The final pair, recorded at the same time, didn't see the light of day until they appeared on the limited-edition Mosaic Select Blue Note recordings a decade after that. The personnel on this disc is a dream band: Hill with Joe Henderson, Freddie Hubbard, Richard Davis, and Joe Chambers. All of the these players but Hubbard had played with Hill before, and the telepathy is simply synchronistic. The opening cut, "Eris," is a sprawling blues clocking in at nearly 11 minutes. Full of Hill's knotty harmonics, and truly fiery playing by Hill and Hubbard, it's one of Hill's finest moments on record from the mid-'60s. "Calliope" is an off-kilter, medium tempo swing jam. There is a sense of time being stretched here that is simply uncanny. Of the two final tracks, being heard here by the general populace for the first time -- though this too is a limited edition in the Connoisseur Series (so the label can make you buy it again later in some other form) -- one was recorded sans horns. "Roots 'N' Herbs," (not Wayne Shorter's ) and the Afro-Cuban percussion and hypnotic bassline make it a curious midtempo ballad even as its meter shifts and floats and then becomes free before it enters the more conventional rock & roll backbeat rhythm pattern that Hill picks up on and stretches to the breaking point before it exhausts itself. The final cut is an interesting alternate of "Euterpe," which is not al that different from the first. In all, however, this is a semi-rough and wonderfully rowdy Hill date that deserves serious aural exploration.  -  Thom Jurek


Tracks
1. Elis (Andrew Hill)
2. Pax
3. Calliope
4. Euterpe
5. Erato
6. Roots ’N’ Herbs
7. Euterpe

RICHARD DAVIS  bass
FREDDIE HUBBARD  cornet
JOE CHAMBERS  drums
JOE HENDERSON tenor saxophone
ANDREW HILL  piano

Music composed by Andrew Hill
Recorded on February 10, 1965 at the Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey
Tracks 1-5 originally issued in 1975 on Blue Note BNLA 459
Tracks 6 & 7 originally issued on Mosaic MD7-161
Blue Note - 0946 3 58296 2 4

CLIFFORD JORDAN - In The World (1969)

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Whether at the helm of a record date or as a sideman, Clifford Jordan was known for giving his all. These studio recordings were originally made for Strata East, a label known for its adventurous spirit. The tenor saxophonist leads two separate groups. The sextet selections include trombonist Julian Priester, pianist Wynton Kelly, bassists Wilbur Ware and Richard Davis, drummer Albert Heath, and trumpeter Don Cherry. Jordan's pensive "Vienna" is given an extended workout, with Cherry's somewhat abstract playing fitting in rather well. The second piece, Jordan's "Doug's Prelude," is also a bit brooding, showcasing the leader, Priester, and Kelly.  -  Ken Dryden


Tracks
1. Vienna
2. Doug’s Prelude
3. Ouagoudougou
4. 872

RICHARD DAVIS  bass
WILBUR WARE  bass 
WYNTON KELLY  piano
JULIAN PRIESTER  trombone
DON CHERRY  trumpet
KENNY DORHAM  trumpet
AL HEATH  drums
ED BLACKWELL  drums
ROY HAYNES  drums

Music composed by Clifford Jordan
Recorded Spring 1969
STRATA-EAST Dolphin Series  PCD - 23842  Japan

KENNY GARRETT, JOHN SCOFIELD, MICHAEL BRECKER, DAVID FRIESEN - Old Folks (1999)

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This West Wind album, recorded at various studio sites in Seattle, WA, Portland, OR, Berkeley, CA, and New York City between 1987 and 1994, has Kenny Garrett as the leader, but a closer reveal might more accurately hand that title to David Friesen. The bassist is on five of the nine tracks, in duet performances with John Scofield, Michael Brecker, or Denny Zeitlin, while Garrett does lead the other four selections in larger ensemble contexts. Extraordinary musicianship is present throughout, making for an interesting musical experience, and with great appeal for fans who enjoy any of these talented musicians.

Longtime friends Scofield and Friesen reunite for a somber take of "Old Folks" and a brighter "True Blue," Brecker's tenor sax joins the bassist for a great, spirited version of the Sonny Rollins classic "Airegin" and the heavy duty, hip neo-bop original "Signs & Wonders," with the two occasionally merging in tandem phrases. A final track for bass and piano with the brilliant Zeitlin allows them to interpret the great Wayne Shorter composition "Speak No Evil" over nine minutes with a symmetry and balance unparalleled in most duet recordings, especially over long lengths of time via the wonderfully inventive acoustic keyboardist. Garrett leads a sextet with less dominant trombonist Julian Priester, a pronounced Bill Frisell and sublimated Robben Ford on electric guitars. They do the sly Duke Ellington evergreen "Wanderlust" proud under a deep bassline by Anthony Cox, while the outstanding track of the album "The Oyster Dance" slips from 7/8 time to fractured beats at will in a funky yet scattered method quite reminiscent of Thelonious Monk. Another quintet with Steve Nelson and Mulgrew Miller offers up a different sonic challenge, as they do pianist Miller's "Wingspan" in hard bop fashion with Garrett's alto alongside Nelson's vibraphone in fully charged bright moments, while "Sonhos Do Brasil" offers a contrasting, sleek, and softer bossa nova style, with percussionist Rudy Bird as special guest. The listening skills of the larger ensembles is quite evident, while Garrett -- at this time a 27-year-old phenom -- is still learning his craft but growing very quickly in the company of these well-chosen super-pro partners. Drummers Jerry Granelli and Tony Reedus are especially notable for rhythmically moving things along quite nicely for Garrett and friends. This material deserves high marks simply for the great musicians participating, and though uneven, retains full intrigue in one-of-a-kind session status, any of which could have been full-blown concepts -- one of which (sigh) might have been a Garrett-Brecker project that is not here.  -  Michael G. Nastos


Tracks
1. Old Folks (Dedette Lee Hill/Willard Robison)
2. WanderlustJohnny Hodges/Duke Ellington)
3. True Blue (David Friesen)
4. Airegin (Sonny Rollins)
5. Signs and Wonders (David Friesen)
6. Speak No Evil (Wayne Shorter)
7. Wingspan (Mulgrew Miller)
8. The Oyster Dance
9. Sonhos Do Brasil (Kenny Garrett)


KENNY GARRETT alto saxophone
BILL FRISELL  banjo, guitar
ANTHONY COX  bass
CHARNETT MOFFETT  bass
DAVID FRIESEN  bass
DENNY ZEITLIN  grand piano
JOHN SCOFIELD  guitar
JERRY GRANELLI  drums
TONY REEDUS  drums
ROBBEN FORD  guitar
RUDY BIRD  percussion
MULGREW MILLER piano
MICHAEL BRECKER  tenor saxophone
JULIAN PRIESTER  trombone
STEVE NELSON  vibraphone

Recorded May 11, 1987 & April 16, 1994
West Wind - WW 2120  Germany


CHARLIE MARIANO & QUIQUE SINESI - Ecos Del Alma (2007)

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Charlie Mariano and Quique Sinesi present 12 new compositions of their current duo. The music of the duo is somewhere between jazz & world and tries to to put a certain stress on the melodic compositions of the argentinian guitar player Quiqu Sinieso who already worked together with Dino Saluzzi.


Tracks
01. Y Amó A Su Hermano Hasta El Fin...(Dino Saluzzi)
02. Saluzziana (Quique Sinesi)
03. Crystal Bells (Charlie Mariano)
04. El Rio (Quique Sinesi)
05. 17th Cross (Charlie Mariano)
06. Malambosplatz (Quicke Sinesi)
07. La Solitaria (Quique Sinesi)
08. Turquouise (Charlie Mariano)
09. De-fa-ra (Quique Sinesi)
10. Halliana (Quique Sinesi)
11. Sleep My Love (Charlie Mariano)
12. Ecos Del Alma (Quique Sinesi)

CHARLIE MARIANO  alto saxophone
QUIQUE SINESI  7-strings Spanish guitar, charango (6,7), electric guitar-citar (5)

Recorded in Hansahaus Studios, Bonn in October 2005
BHM Productions. BHM 1020-2.  Germany


CHARLIE MARIANO'S BANGALORE feat. RAMAMANI - Bangalore (1998)

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Tracks
1. Sweet Seventeen (R. A. Ramamani)
2. Pulse (Dr. K. Raghavendra)
3. Aathma (Amit Heri)
4. Bangalore (Charlie Mariano)
5. Charlie's Birthday Song (R. A. Ramamani)
6. Where Ah Yah Goin'? (Amit Heri)
7. Encounter (Amit Heri)
8. Konversation (R. A. Ramamani)

CHARLIE MARIANO  Alto saxophone
DAVE KING  electric bass
JACOB WILLIAM  electric bass
AMIT HERI  guitar
S. SUDASHAN  dholak
T. N. SHASHIKUMAR  tavil
V. K. RAMAN  flute
R. A. RAJAGOPAL ghatam, konakkol
G. OMKAR  idiophone, konakkol
B. N. CHANDRAMOULI kanjira, konakkol
LOUIS BANKS  keyboards
T. A. S. MANI mridangam
DR. K. GAGHAVENDRA  veena
R. A. RAMAMANI  vocals

Recorded at Arvind Studios, Bangalore, January 10 & 11, 1998
Intuition Records - INT 3246-2

DAVID TORN - Prezens (2007)

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Prezens is the first recording guitarist and producer David Torn has recorded under his own name for ECM Records in the 21 years since his Cloud About Mercury was issued. His sonic explorations have always been at least as much an interest to him as his playing. As a result he has stretched to the limits of what the guitar can, or even perhaps should, do in realms where it sounded like he was playing anything but his chosen instrument. Most recently, Torn has performed in Tim Berne's Science Friction and Hard Cell ensembles and played with Drew Gress and Dave Douglas. Torn enlists Berne and the other members of his Science Friction band: keyboard wizard Craig Taborn and drummer Tom Rainey, minus guitarist Marc Ducret. The end result, while wildly adventurous and full of astonishing improvisations, is also full of some of Torn's most "inside" playing. The opener "AK" begins with a Frippertronics phrase hypnotically asserted by use of a digital delay before giving way to a mutational Delta blues riff, repeated endlessly before opening up to a kind of muted question mark phrase. Rainey's cymbals enter along with an extended line by Berne while Taborn digs into the B-3 with the guitar riff playing under the mix as a guide; the band takes off, exploring the edges of the open chord, never leaving its rhythmic pulse behind for long. Taborn's soloing is deep in the pocket, reminiscent of John Patton, and Berne begins to play all around the blues, his sense of time perfect. Rainey shuffles around them all, stuttering cymbals and snares. When Torn comes back in with the riff, it's a sick distorted mess worthy of a solid heavy metal intro and he layers a screaming minimal solo on top of that. Whoa! The brief "Rest and Unrest" with its spoken word vocal walks the line between Ali Farka Touré's guitar sound and Torn's own mitigated soundscape world once more echoing the blues.

Mutant synth lines and layered and stretched voices become a rhythmic interlude. "Structural Foundations of Prezens" begins with Berne blowing soft and low with a pulsing electronic sound behind him as Torn enters on both electric and acoustic guitars, manipulated of course to accent the atmospheric "ballad" until all hell breaks loose at just under seven minutes. Here Rainey's triple-timed drumming is sampled back as loops playing breaks and Torn and Berne interplaying with one another take the track into uncharted territory. Nothing is what it initially seems here. Each track begins as one thing and ends as quite another. Improvisation is at a premium, though all of it comes out of established heads: blues and other folk forms initiate proceedings and Torn deals out as much atmosphere as he does leadership in the directions he wants to go, which is why most of these cuts (all but four, actually) have co-writing credits. Check out "Sink" and "Neck Deep in the Harrow" for prime examples. The open spaces of "Even More Other" present music as an "other" to sonic manipulation, yet it all comes out structured somehow, tempered into a cohesive whole thanks to Rainey's big tom tom work. The slide acoustic guitar Torn uses on "Miss, Place, The Mist..." is Eastern in mode and both Rainey and Taborn treat it as such with distorted loops, sampled strings, and overdubbed slide lines as Berne enters and winds it all around at the nadir. The set concludes with "Transmit Regardless," which is a kind of anthem for this band in the sense that while Torn is listed as the leader, and there is no doubt about his mark as a creative director, this group plays like a band throughout, no matter how abstract and strange things get. Rock, jazz, electronica, formal sound sculpture and strategy are all woven into a wonderfully expansive collective mind of improvisation. Deep listening, careful attention, and willful abandon to the process of creation are all present in spades. Prezens is one of those recordings where free improvisation and composition find an uneasy but cooperative working relationship making for one compelling listen after another.  -  Thom Jurek


Tracks
01. Bulbs (Berne/Rainey/Taborn/Torn)
02. Rest & Unrest (David Torn)
03. Structural Functions Of Prezens (Berne/Rainey/Taborn/Torn)
04. Bulbs (Berne/Rainey/Taborn/Torn)
05. Them Burled Standing (David Torn)
06. Sink (Berne/Rainey/Taborn/Torn)
07. Neck-Deep In The Harrow... (Berne/Rainey/Taborn/Torn)
08. Ever More other (David Torn)
09. Ring For Endless Travel (David Torn)
10. Miss Place, The Mist (Matt Chamberlain/David Torn)
11. Transmit Regardless (Berne/Rainey/Taborn/Torn)

TIM BERNEalto saxophone
TOM RAINEYdrums
CRAIG TABORN mellotron, electronics, organ, e-piano
DAVID TORN  guitars, sampler, live sampling, effects
MATT CHAMBERLAIN  additional drums (track 10)

Recorded March 2005 at Clubhouse Studios, Rhinebeck, NY
ECM Records. ECM 1877. /. ECM Records - 170 9875

STEVE LACY 6 - We See. Thelonious Monk Songbook (2002)

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No doubt Steve Lacy possesses laudable chops in concert with a sweet, ringing tone. His Thelonious Monk influences have shaped his rather storied musical career, which is an ideology evidenced here on We See, Thelonious Monk Songbook. Naturally, Lacy's enactment of meter, depth, and space signify aspects of his Monk-based preferences and stylizations. Essentially, this a relatively straightforward set consisting of moderate to up-tempo swing vamps, accelerated by the saxophonist's gleaming choruses and Monk-like permutations. Lacy and associates perform these works with a deeply personalized and undeniably buoyant demeanor. A minor shift in strategy, however, resides within Lacy's collaboration with vibist Sonhando Estwick and trumpeter Hans Kennel. With that, the sextet pursues sequential soloing opportunities as this effort shines forth with the qualities that might parallel the birth of a sun-drenched summer's day.  -  Glenn Astarita


Tracks
01. We See
02. Shuffle Boil
03. Evidence
04. Reflecctions
05. Ruby My Dear
06. Eronel
07. Monk's Mood
08. Thelonious
09. Misterioso
10. Well You Needn't
11. Hanky-Panky (Steve Lacy)

STEVE LACY soprano saxophone
STEVE POTTS alto & amp; soprano saxophones
HANS KENNEL  trumpet, flugelhorn
SONHANDO ESTWICK  vibes
JEAN-JSCQUES AVENEL  double bass
JOHN BETSCH  drums

Music composed by Thelonious Monk, except "Hanky-Panky" composed by Steve Lacy
Recorded on September 1 & 2, 1992 at Mohren - Saal Willisau, Switzerland
HATOLOGY 05692


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

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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

GEORGE LEWIS - Shadowgraph, 5 (Sextet) (1977)

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A CD re-issue of the 1978 disc. Contains: "Monads" for an ensemble (with Anthony Davis, piano; Douglas Ewart, bass clarinet; Leroy Jenkins, violin; G. Lewis, alto and tenor trombones; Roscoe Mitchell, soprano sax; Abdul Wadud, cello) ...fleeting melodic fragments amidst pointillistic (but not "abstract" !) textures, constantly re-defined and varied; "Triple Slow Mix," a trio for two pianos and sousaphone ...a steady and slowly varied bass passacaglia surrounded by either extremely fast pointillistic playing or banal almost-quotes as if from music "literature," like a blasé music student in his practice room just trying to make it through the day...every once in a while someone shouts "hey !""Cycle" (with Lewis on Moog synthesizer)...humorous and touching solos of mid-range sounds, you smile and you don't know why; "Shadowgraph, 5 (Sextet)" for the previous large ensemble, also with Muhal Richard Abrams, piano, and G. Lewis also on sound-tube ...someone near us is explaining something but we don't quite get it ...perhaps it's something "foreign" ...a tapestry of gestures, quick shadows of the initial event.  -  Gene Tyranny


Tracks
1. Monads
2. Triple Slow Mix
3. Cycle
4. Shadowgraph 5 (Sextet)

ANTHONY DAVIS  piano
LEROY JENKINS  violin
ABDUL WADUD  cello
MUHAL RICHARD ABRAMS  piano
ROSCOE MITCHELL  soprano, alto & baritone saxophones, flute, cassette recorder
GEORGE LEWIS  alto & tenor trombones, sousaphone, moog synthesizer, wagner tuba  
DOUGLAS EWART  bass clarinet, clarinet, flute, bamboo flute, bassoon 

All music composed by George E. Lewis
Recorded at Generation Sound Studios, New York City
Black Saint 120016-2   Italy

JOE ZAWINUL - Zawinul (1971)

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Conceptually, sonically, this is really the first Weather Report album in all but name, confirming that Joe Zawinul was the primary creative engine behind the group from the beginning. It is also the link between WR and Miles Davis' keyboard-laden experiments on In a Silent Way; indeed, the tune "In a Silent Way" is redone in the more complex form in which Zawinul envisioned it, and Miles even contributes a brief, generous tribute to Zawinul on the liner. Two keyboardists -- Zawinul and the formidable Herbie Hancock -- form the underpinning of this stately, probing album, garnishing their work with the galactic sound effects of the Echoplex and ring modulator. Earl Turbinton provides the Wayne Shorter-like beams of light on the soprano sax, spelled by Wayne himself on "Double Image." The third founder of WR, Miroslav Vitous, checks in on bass, and hard-bopping trumpeter Woody Shaw proves to be perfectly adept at the jazz-rock game. Two short-lived standards of the jazz-rock era, the aforementioned "Double Image" and "Doctor Honoris Causa," are introduced here, yet it is mood pieces like "His Last Journey" and "Arrival in New York" that with the help of tape-speed manipulation, establish the lasting, murky, reflective ambience of this CD.  -  Richard S. Ginell



Tracks
1. Doctor Honoris Causa
2. In A Silent Way
3. His Last Journey
4. Double Image
5. Arrival In New York

JOE ZAWINULelectric piano
HERBIE HANCOCKelectric piano
GEORGE DAVISflute
WOODY SHAWtrumpet
EARL TURBINTONsoprano sax
MIROSLAV VITOUSbass
WALTER BOOKERbass
JOE CHAMBERSdrums
BILLY HARTpercussion
DAVID LEEpercussion
JIMMY OWENStrumpet (on 3)
HUBERT LAWSflute (on 4)
WAYNE SHORTERsoprano sax (on 4)
JACK DeJOHNETTEmelodica (on 3) percussion (on 4)

Music composed by Joe Zawinul
Recorded at Atlantic Recording Studios, New York August 6 & 12, 1971
Atlantic - 7567-81375-2


COUNG VU - Bound (2000)

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Trumpeter/composer Cuong Vu has rapidly become one of the rising stars or perhaps bright voices within the burgeoning and thoroughly adventurous New York City "Downtown Scene" modern jazz circuit. Born in Vietnam and reared in Seattle, WA. Mr. Vu displays remarkable versatility as a musician who exhibits a true renaissance spirit, emanating from influences that span classical, pop and jazz genres. With his debut release titled Bound, Vu melds lustrous tonalities and lyrically rich lines with the often turbulent and thoroughly striking support provided by fellow New York City based virtuosos, drummer Jim Black, electric bassist Stomu Takeishi and keyboard whiz Jamie Saft.
On the opener, "Two," Vu articulates poignant, expressive lines in linear fashion atop steaming rhythms and Jamie Saft's endearing yet gritty and heavily amplified Fender Rhodes electric piano. Here, Saft recreates that early '70s jazz/fusion Fender Rhodes sound while simultaneously injecting foxy idiosyncrasies along with a sinewy style of execution. Vu's composition "Still Ragged" features the trumpeter's ripping lines and expansive phraseology atop solid backbeats as this piece playfully evolves into a free-jazz romp, propelled by Saft's swirling arpeggios and percussive block chords while performing on the acoustic piano. Vu's vocalizing on the title track offers the listener a slight diversion via his airy, melodic vocals that intertwine with Saft's ethereal electronic treatments as the musicians eventually increase the throttle thanks to the vigorous rhythms and heated exchanges. "Acid Kiss" boasts a funk/rock '70s vibe complete with a counterbalancing pulse, roaring forward motion and Vu's resonant mid-register phrasing as the band generates tons of impact while performing with spirited conviction.

Bound is an impressive freshman release from a musician who possesses "boundless" creativity. Along with his venerable associates, Cuong Vu fuses an assortment of disparate elements such as devising harmonious extended notes and/or themes that might parallel a symphonic opus or austere trumpet concerto in conjunction with his acute improvisational sensibilities. Overall, Bound is brimming with ingenuity yet also packs a heavyweight punch! Highly recommended.  -  Glenn Astarita


Tracks
1. Two (Cuong Vu)
2. Our Bridge (Cuong Vu)
3. Still Ragged (Cuong Vu)
4. Bound (Cuong Vu/Holly Palmer)
5. Drift (Coung Vu)
6. Acid Kiss (Count Vu)
7. The Burn (Holly Palmer/Scott Will)

STOMU TAKEISHI  e-bass
JIM BLACK  drums, percussion
JAMIE SAFT  piano, keyboards
CUONG VU  trumpet, vocals

Recorded 22-23 August 1999 at Frak Booth, Brooklyn NY.
OmniTone - 12002

GEORGE RUSSELL SEXTET feat. JAN GARBAREK - Trip To Pillardguri (1970)

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"I've known George Russell for some thirty years, and the one constant thing about him is that he is continually changing, growing, testing himself and the universe of sound. Also constant is his extraordinary civility. A soft-spoken man with clear ideas and no malice toward those who disagree with the way he hears, George tempers his calm with just enough irony to deal with any dissonance he himself has not created.   Then there is the man's music.  From this external calm has always come such extraordinary musical energy." 
(source: from the CD's liner notes by Nat Hentoff, 1970)


Tracks
1. Theme (Jan Garbarek)
2. Souls (George Russell)
3. Event III (George Russell)
4. Vips (Jan Garbarek)
5. Stratusphunk (George Russell)
6. Esoteric Circles (Jan Garbarek)
7. Man On The Moon (Ornette Coleman)

ARILD ANDERSEN  bass
JON CHRISTENSEN  drums
TERJE RYPDAL e-guitar
JAN GARBAREK  tenor saxophone
STANTON DAVIS  trumpet, flugelhorn

Recorded live at Estrad, Sodertalje, Sweden, March 1970
Soul Note - 121029-2

GARY BURTON & PAUL BLEY - Right Time, Right Place (1990)

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Although they have utilized the talents of some of the same musicians through the years (most notably Steve Swallow) and both recorded for ECM, vibraphonist Gary Burton and pianist Paul Bley had not recorded before this 1990 Copenhagen session. The combination generally works, with some of Burton's romanticism and melodic approach rubbing off on Bley during the date (the usually somber pianist actually sounds a little lighthearted during "Isn't It Romantic") while the vibist sometimes emulates Bley's emphasis on space. On their six duets, Burton and Bley do not take turns soloing per se as much as alternate being the lead voice. Their unaccompanied features (three apiece) are generally in the same introspective but exploratory mood, making this a quiet program of thought-provoking if occasionally sleepy music.
Reviewby Scott Yanow


Tracks
01. Ida Lupino (Carla Bley)
02. Isn't It Romantic? (Richard Rodgers/Lorenz Hart)
03. Laura's Dream (Astor Piazzola)
04. Carla (Paul Bley)
05. Olhos de Gato (Carla Bley)
06. Alcazar (Paul Bley)
07. Rightly So (Paul Bley)
08. Nothing to Declare (Paul Bley)
09. You Don't Know What Love Is (Gene DePaul/Don Raye)
10. Eidertown (Steve Swallow)
11. Turn Out the Stars (Bill Evans)

GARY BURTON  vibraphone
PAUL BLEY  piano

Recorded, March 29th 1990 at Studio 3, Denmarks Radio, Copenhagen
SONET Records  SNTCD1038

DAVID MURRAY OCTET - Dark Star (1996)

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The avant-garde tenor and bass clarinetist David Murray had an opportunity to sit in with the Grateful Dead in 1993 and was quite impressed. With Jerry Garcia's death, Murray was inspired to put together this tribute album but often it sounds as if two bands were playing at once without closely listening to each other. Murray and the horns (which include veteran altoist James Spaulding, the very impressive high-note acrobatics of trumpeter Hugh Ragin, either James Zoller or Omar Kabir on second trumpet and the adventurous trombonist Craig Harris) romp through some rowdy and very emotional ensembles while organist Robert Irving III. (a Miles Davis alumnus) leads the rhythm section through groovin' R&B riffs that seem to ignore the lead voices. The results are often quite silly as the horns screech and squawk while the rhythm churns on. There are two exceptions. The 16-minute "Dark Star" builds slowly to a ferocious level and finds the group acting as one while the closing "Shoulda Had Been Me" is a tenor-guitar duet between Murray and Bob Weir that works quite well. So overall this is a mixed bag, most highly recommended to listeners who have a high tolerance level and a strong sense of humor.  -  Scott Yanow


Tracks
1. Shakedown Street (J. Garcia/R. Hunter)
2. Samson And Delilah (Trad. arr. David Murray)
3. Estimated Prophet (R. Weir/J. Barlow)
4. Dark Star (B. Kreutzmann/R. Weir/j. Garcia/P. Lesh/R. Hunter/R. McKernan)
5. China Doll (J. Garcia/R. Hunter)
6. One More Saturday Night (R. Weir)
7. Shoulda Had Been Me (R. Weir/B. Cockburn/M. Nash)

JAMES SPAULDING  alto saxophone, flute
FRED HOPKINS  bass
RENZELL MERRITTdrums
BOB WEIR  guitar
ROBERT IRVING III  organ, synthesizers, piano
CRAIG HARRIS trombone
HUGH RAGIN  trumpet
JAMES ZOLLER  trumpet
OMAR KABIR  trumpet
DAVID MURRAY  tenor saxophone, bass clarinet

Recorded at Clinton Studios, NY, January 17-18, 1996
Astor Place - TCD 4002 


JIM HALL, JOE LOVANO, GEORGE MRAZ, LEWIS NASH - Grand Slam (2000)

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Grand Slam features an all-star quartet with guitarist Jim Hall, saxophonist Joe Lovano, bassist George Mraz, and drummer, Lewis Nash. Recorded live at the Regattabar in Cambridge, Massachusetts from January 20-22, 2000, this diverse, creative set features seven songs written by Jim Hall and Joe Lovano that range from unaccompanied to orchestral. This group's debut reveals the edge and tenderness in their music and also describes various periods of the guitarist's career. The title track, "Slam," reflects Hall's years with the Jimmy Giuffre 3, the great trio that defines cool jazz and folk jazz for many people. "Say Hello to Calypso," with its bebop melodic inventions, creates a strong impression reminiscent of his tenure with Sonny Rollins. The group's ability to captivate listeners is equally prevalent on "All Across the City,""Chelsea Rendezvous," and "Blackwell's Message," Joe Lovano's memorial to drummer Ed Blackwell. This 60-minute debut for Telarc Jazz is serious music, but not music out of the embrace of sheer exuberance. It smiles and sings!  -  Paula Edelstein


Tracks
01. Slam (Jim Hall)
02. Chelsea Rendez-Vous (Joe Lovano)
03. Border Crossing (Jim Hall)
04. Say Hello to Calypso (Jim Hall)
05. Blackwell's Message (Joe Lovano)
06. All Aross the City (Jim Hall)
07. Feel Free (Joe Lovano)

GEORGE MRAZ  bass
LEWIS NASH  drums
JIM HALL  guitar
JOE LOVANO  tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, alto clarinet

Recorded at the Regattabar, The Charles Hotel, Cambridge, Massachusetts, January 2000
Telarc - CD-83485  




JIMMY GIUFFRE, PAUL BLEY, STEVE SWALLOW - Conversation with a Goose (1996)

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El trabajo precursor de este Conversations… fueron Fusion y Thesis (ambos de 1961), aunque en esta ocasión Swallow toca el bajo eléctrico. La música se construye explorando la palabra que manda: Contrapunto, pero de dos clases: uno hacia la mezcla y el otro hacia la separación. Los instrumentos se dividen estando juntos, se bifurcan, y en esa libertad más abierta la música encuentra puntos notables de belleza. El extremo son los pasajes aislados, sin acompañamiento: como el solo de Giuffre en Echo Thorugh the Canyon. Las composiciones son en su mayoría cortas, pasajes, bosquejos de ideas, emparentadas, en su vuelo, más con el blues o con la música clásica que con el free jazz. El frenetismo y la variación están en esas ediciones contínuas, en el conjunto, más que en en el fondo de cada pieza breve. Incluso esta idea se intuye en Cobra, de 10 minutos, pero que sugiere cambios de título permanentes, como el resto del disco. Conversations with a Goose es muy bueno. Implica ver más donde ya se ha visto mucho.  -  Marcos Maggi




Jimmy Giuffre, Paul Bley, and Steve Swallow had reunited four years prior to this recording session before a live and very enthusiastic audience. On this date, they had been touring together on and off for four years and were as telepathic as in 1961 when they recorded Fusion and Thesis with Creed Taylor at Verve (yeah, the same guy who aesthetically ruined Wes Montgomery and Grover Washington, Jr.). The differences were few but marked: For one, on this date Swallow plays electric bass -- an instrument that Giuffre has enjoyed in his bands since the late '70s. Bley's playing -- trademark as ever with those big spaces in the middle of a dense passage -- is like liquid here; he pours himself through the group tunes and, on his solos, slips through the keys in a fierce contrapuntal assertion of thematic development. Swallow is the most understated and elastic of bassists. He understands implicitly that the place of rhythm in this trio is between interplay, not underscoring it. The set opens with the title track written by Bley. Giuffre moans an intro on the clarinet and Bley answers with his theme, which is a variation on a Harold Arlen tune and Thelonious Monk's "Pannonica." Giuffre seemingly pays no mind and creates a modal tone bridge for Swallow to create a wedge for himself. Being in 4/4, it feels like a blues, and in Bley's right hand it is, but Giuffre finds the contrapuntal element to be more expressive and follows along just after the beat in a semi-quaver that suggests an intervallic shift, but the meter is the same. Giuffre's solo actually quotes (for six notes) Carla Bley's "Jesus Maria" from the group's 1961 Fusion album. On Giuffre's "Calls in the Night," thematic development is very gradual, though the piece is only six minutes long. Bley plays counterpoint with himself and Giuffre and Swallow are forced to follow scalular chromatics until the tune opens up and then all three members form a contrapuntal mode where the aesthetic is microtonal and the improvisation is a harmonic shift in dynamic, not the other way around. Giuffre's sheer number of tones and colors is staggering; they seem limitless -- it is impossible to tell what has been predetermined and what is improvised given the formlessness of his approach. Swallow's "Watchin' the River" is an actual chromatic study in scale and interval. Bley and Giuffre offer separate nodes of harmonic invention as Swallow, playing at the top of the instrument's register and getting a guitar effect, creates the tune's body from chromaticism to institute a theme that can be opened in any number of directions. Bley chooses a serialist approach and Giuffre chooses melodic invention before Bley gives in and trades eights with both men. It's breathtaking to listen to the intricate interplay and staggering communication inherent in a music this understated and free. Conversations With a Goose may not be a muscular recording in the way that Hat's Berlin 1961 was, or in the aggressive nature of Free Fall's two group pieces. That said, it is far more challenging and exhilarating to listen to because this trio used Free Fall as a starting point toward a peak it seems they had yet to reach. Onward and upward.  -  Thom Jurek



Tracks
01. Conversation with a Goose (*)
02. The Flock Is In (Paul Bley)
03. Echo Through The Canyon (*)
04. Three Ducks (*)
05. Waitchin' The River (*)
06. Campfire (Steve Swallow)
07. Cobra (*)
08. Among the High Rocks (Jimmy Giuffre)
09. White Peak (*)
10. Calls In The Night (Jimmy Giuffre)
11. Lonely Days (*)
12. Jungle Critters (*)
13. Restless (*)

JIMMY GIUFFREclarinet, soprano sax
PAUL BLEYpiano
STEVE SWALLOWelectric bass



(*) Composed by Jimmy Giuffre, Paul Bley and Steve Swallow

Recorded on May 27, 1993 at Mu Rec Studio, Milan

Soul Note 121258 - 2    Italy 


















DAVE DOUGLAS - A Thousand Evening (2000)

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The fifth and final chapter of John Carter’s project to musically portray the history of African Americans deals with the past hundred years. Because the music (despite titles such as "Sippi Strut" and "52nd Street Stomp") does not refer to earlier styles and instead stays unremittingly avant-garde, this set is a bit of a disappointment. Some of the playing by the octet (particularly trumpeter Bobby Bradford and trombonist Benny Powell) is quite excellent but the singing of Teerry Jenoure gets jarring within a short time. This music is easier to respect than to love.  -  Scott Yanow 

LYM 
Enero 7, 2011
me too love the music of John Carter who remains in my opinion one of the most important afroamerican musician of the past forty years, and one of the most underrate if not neglected. I have Castles, this one, Night Fire, Dahuwe, A Suite Of early... When I began downloading from the net Carter has been (togheter with Lacy, Jenkins Braxton and Threadgill) one of the first and most requested by me. I've found nearly his complete discography but some weeks ago my hard drive broke down with a lot oj J C music. Here You can find other titles: http://inconstantsol.blogspot.com


Tracks
1. Sippi Strut
2. Spats
3. City Streets
4. And I Saw Them
5. 52nd Street Stomp
6. Hymn to Freedom

JOHN CARTER clarinet
BOB BRADFORD trumpet
ANDREW CYRILLE drums
MARTY EHRLICH bass clarinet, flute
FRED HOPKINS bass
TERRY JENOURE violin, vocal
BENNY POWELL trombone
DON PRESTON keyboards and electronics

GOSPEL MUSICIANS - Yes My Jesus Lives
BILL MARSHALL organ

Recorded at A&R Recording Studio, NYC, April1989
All compositions composed and arranged by John Carter
GRAMAVISION R2 79422

DENNY ZEITLIN & DAVID FRIESEN - Live at the Jazz Bakery (1999)

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Duets in an intimate setting can frequently bring out the best of performers sans drummer. Pianist Zeitlin and bassist Friesen dish out the introspection and interplay in spades, sowing crops from years of jazz fertilization to offer this lengthy program done over two evenings at the Jazz Bakery in L.A. While they all too infrequently appear on recordings as leaders, together here they make memorable music in a special setting and format, quite an event for fans of these two veterans. Starting off with John Coltrane's always evergreen "Equinox," Zeitlin takes charge with his sometimes ruminating, tinkling, chiming, or cascading lines while Friesen's strummed chordal notions give the piece motion. It's clear they share musical values, and the total sound is heightened by their innate abilities to listen and respond, abilities reflected in the response of their enthusuastic audience after every piece. "Nefertiti" is taken at an unusual triple-time pace, settling to easy 4/4 swing on Friesen's clear-as-a-bell bass solo. You'd expect a great deal of ornate serenity from these two, and you get it during Friesen's "Other Times, Other Places," but not in the restless Zeitlin's 17-minute "Tryptych," during which he goes into rambling, rippling chords, a quite animated solo mid-flight, and unison bass-left hand piano lines. This is not so much exploratory as it is long-winded, playful, and zen-like. A fairly urgent "Epiphany" of the pianist's penning for what seems a brief six minutes merges to the easily swung, poignant yet airy standard "The Touch of Your Lips" expounded upon gloriously by Zeitlin and replete with echoes of "It Might as Well Be Spring.""Upon the Swing" written by Friesen, extends just over ten minutes. It starts frantic and deliciously boppish, settles into rubato pensitivity, and moves back and forth with "Secret Love" inferences favored by Zeitlin. The show concludes with the tranquil, peaceful statement "Goal in Mind." Typical of the bulk of Friesen's spiritual-oriented compositions, the piece is a good way to send 'em home as relaxed as the performers themselves. Enough has never been written about these two. They are true masters who play off each other's strengths in subtle, forceful, and real-world ways. May they always play as well as they are captured on this precious recording. Highly recommended.  -  Michael G. Nastos


Tracks
01. Equinox (John Coltrane)
02. Nefertiti (Wayne Shorter)
03. Other Times, Other Places (David Friesen)
04. Triptych (Denny Zeitlin)
05. Epiphany (Denny Zeitlin)
06. The Touch of Your Lips (Ray Noble)
07. Upon the Swing (David Friesen)
08. Goal In Mind (David Friesen)


DAVID FRIESEN  bass
DENNY ZEITLIN  piano

Recorded live at the Jazz Bakery, Los Angeles, May 10 & 11, 1996
Intuition Records - INT 3257 2.   Germany

JOHN LINDBERG - Bounce (1997)

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Even though bassist John Lindberg is the leader of this set and contributed all seven compositions (along with presumably the frameworks), the main star of the outing is trumpeter Dave Douglas. Douglas both extends the hard bop/post-bop tradition and plays quite free in spots. The date opens with Lindberg and Douglas exploring "Firewood Duet," drummer Ed Thigpen (who sounds right at home in this adventurous setting) makes the group a trio on "The Terrace," and then Larry Ochs (mostly on tenor) makes the group a quartet on half of the remaining selections. Whether sounding fairly free (although well-planned) or throughly composed, this is a consistently fascinating set. Lindberg's colorful writing and Douglas' versatile solos make Bounce a highly recommended acquisition for open-minded jazz listeners.  -  Scott Yanow


Tracks
01. Firewood Duet
02. The Terrace
03. Bounce
04. Fortuen on a Sphere
05. Common Goal
06. Eleven Thrice
07. Off Right

JOHN LINDBERG   double-bass
DAVE DOUGLAS   trumpet
ED THIGPEN   drums
LARRY OCHS  saxophones   

All compositions by John Lindberg
Recorded on February 24, 1997 at Mu Rec Studio, Milan, Italy
Black Saint - 120192-2

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