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JOHNNY GRIFFIN - The Cat (1991)

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~ Johnny is one of the all-time great tenor saxophonists. Not only could he easily negotiate the tricky harmonic changes and swift tempos of modern music, but he could masterfully interpret tender ballads. All of that and more are on display in this wonderful 61 minute CD from 1990. By the time of this recording Johnny was no longer the fire-breathing young tenor player; he had matured into the swinging saxman featured here.
~ The Cat: a funky little tune that makes one think of Monk meets "The Pink Panther Theme". Nice solos by Griffin, Michael Weiss (piano), and Curtis Fuller (trombone).
~ Wistful: another Monkish quirky tune, this one in waltz time with Griffin and Weiss stating the theme in unison. Weiss presents a fine solo, after which Weiss and Griffin play an intricately woven duet.
~ What Do You Do?: slow-to-medium tempo tune featuring a lot of unison Griffin-Nelson playing, and fine solos by Griffin and Steve Nelson on vibes.
~ Chicago Calling: a medium-up tempo romp showing that Johnny could still play at breakneck speeds when necessary. Nice solo by Weiss and excellent support and solo from bassist Dennis Irwin.
~ Woe Is Me: a lament with Johnny telling a sad story on the tenor.
~ The Count: a groovy lyrical tune featuring Griffin, Fuller, Nelson and Weiss
~ 63rd Street Theme: a blazing exhibit of Johnny Griffin's strength and technique.
~ Hot Sake: drummer Kenny Washington gets a chance to show his talent on this up-tempo takeoff on "What is This Thing Called Love?".
~ Waltz for Me: a hauntingly beautiful melody showing Johnny Griffin at his tender best.
~ A highly recommended, excellently recorded CD by the Little Giant from Chicago.  -  D.R.L.


Tracks
1. The Cat
2. Wistful
3. What Do You Do?
4. Chicago Calling
5. Woe Is Me
6. The Count
7. 63rd Street Theme
8. Hot Sake
9. Waltz for Ma

DENNIS IRWIN bass
KENNY WASHINGTON  drums
MICHAEL WEISS piano
CURTIS FULLER  trombone 
STEVE NELSON  vibraphone 
JOHNNY GRIFFIN  tenor saxophone

Recorded October 1990 at BMG Studios, New York City
Antilles - 422-848 421-2


MICK GOODRICK, DAVID LIEBMAN, WOLFGANG MUTHSPIEL - In The Same Breath (1995)

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Breathe in, breathe out, breathe out. When Liebs’ sweetly purling soprano saxophone infiltrates the Mick ‘n Wolfie guitar duo, what seemed a perfectly natural process suddenly becomes an out-of-body experience. Goodrick and Muthspiel have honed a mesmerizing mutual plectral hypnosis that levitates and transmigrates with each tune, whirling round and round the globe. They began it in small rooms like Ryle’s Upstairs in Somerville, MA, and have taken it at least halfway ’round the Northern Hemisphere, as this album was recorded in Germany. When they invite in a third electronically adventuresome master instrumentalist, worlds collide and subside, pulses escalate.

As saxophonist/teacher/writer Dave Liebman explains, concisely, with creative syntax: “The soprano immersed within the strings; the single line within the polyphony; the similar range of color for all three; the intensity and diversity of the rhythm-quite a large universe!” The three ply smooth and near waters (M. Davis’ “Nardis”) as well as those stormy and distant (“The Crusher”), two gorgeous waltzes (by Muthspiel and Kurt Weill). They sing in clear, brave voices in many tongues… Oh, let’s let Liebs tell it: “The trio’s range of expression moves from “Liebeslied” (swirling and harmonic) to “The Crusher” (textural) to “Mothers and Daughters” (polytonal) to the classic “Nardis” (swinging) to “Hope” (lyrical) to “Ad Liebitum” (rhythmical). This is one of the most pleasant and listenable recordings that I have ever been part of.”  -  Fred Bouchard


Tracks
1. Hope (Wolfgang Muthspiel)
2. Nardis (Miles Davis)
3. Throughout (Bill Frisell)
4. Mothers and Daughters (Dave Liebman)
5. Visiones (Wolfgang Muthspiel)
6. The Crusher (David Liebman)
7. Liefdeslied (Wurt Weill)
8. The Three Stages
9. As Liebitum (Mick Goodrick)

MICK GOODRICK  guitar
DAVID LIEBMAN  soprano saxophone, wooden flute, piano
WOLFGANG MUTHSPIEL  guitar, electric nylon string guitar, guitar synth, violin

Recorded at Studio Zerkall, Germany, March 1995
CMP Records  CMP CD 71

NIELS HENNING ØRSTED PEDERSEN - Jaywalkin' (1974)

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A virtuoso bassist who graced hundreds of recordings during his career (which began in his teens), Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen's debut as a leader is a bit of a mixed bag. His band includes guitarist Philip Catherine (who alternates between electric and acoustic instruments), drummer Billy Higgins, and pianist Ole Kock Hansen, the latter unfortunately playing an electric keyboard, which causes many of the songs in which he takes part to sound dated. Playing in settings ranging from solo to quartet and including six originals, the best tracks are the acoustic arrangements. Pedersen's unaccompanied solo interpretation of the standard "That's All" is majestic, while a trio settings of Antonio Carlos Jobim's "A Felicidade" and a breezy original bossa nova ("My Little Anna") with the full band are also enjoyable. But the electric piano sucks the life out of an otherwise excellent take of Charlie Parker's "Cheryl" (which Catherine sits out), while the funky originals "Jaywalkin'" and "Interlude" also don't make much of an impression. Fortunately, Pedersen rarely utilized electric piano on future sessions as a leader.  -  Ken Dryden


Tracks
01. Summer Song (NHØP)
02. Sparkling Eyes (NHØP)
03. A Felicidade (NHØP)
04. Jaywalkin' (NHØP)
05. My Little Anna
06. Yesterday's Future (NHØP)
07. Interlude NHØP)
08. Cheryl (Charlie Parker)
09. That's All (Alan Brandt/Bob Haymes)
10 - Summer Song # 5 )NHØP)

NIELS HENNING ØRSTED PEDERSEN  bass
PHILIP CATHERINE  guitar
OLE KOCK HANSEN  piano
BILLY HIGGINS  drums

Recorded September 9 & 10 and December 10, 1975
SteepleChase Records  SCCD-31041

AIR - 80º BELLOW '82 (1982)

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Comprised originally of Henry Threadgill on reeds, bassist Fred Hopkins, and drummer Steve McCall, Air emphasized equality of roles by the instruments (without any clear-cut leader) and a smooth mixture of advanced arrangements and free improvisations. In 1971, Threadgill was asked to arrange some of Scott Joplin's songs for a production at Columbia College in Chicago. He teamed up with Hopkins and McCall as the trio Reflection. A few years later, in 1975, the musicians came together again as Air, touring Europe, Japan, and America and recording 11 records for such labels as Nessa, India Navigation, Black Saint, Novus, and Antilles. This was Air's ninth LP and the final one featuring drummer Steve McCall. The avant-garde trio stretches out on three of the saxophonist's originals and Jelly Roll Morton's "Chicago Breakdown." This blues-oriented set is more accessible than many of Air's previous recordings without watering down the explorative nature of this always-interesting group.


Tracks
1. Chicago Breakdown (Ferdinand "Jelly Roll" Morton)
2. The Traveller (Henry Threadgill)
3. 80º BELOW '82 (Henry Threadgill)
4. Do Tell (Henry Threadgill)

HENRY THREADGILL   alto saxophone
FRED HOPKINS   bass
STEVE McCALL   drums, percussion

Recorded at Right Track Recording, January 23 & 24, 1982
Antilles J33D-20008

MATTHEW SHIPP - One (2006)

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Matthew Shipp, the studiously disruptive free-jazz pianist from Delaware, has hovered in and out of accessibility since the early 1990s. In the past he has followed a good many wayward paths, but lately he has also hooked his distinctive ruminations to the grooves of the dancefloor.

This set is the pure distillation of Shipp, however: a solo acoustic piano album of a dozen originals. It's much better than the 2001 solo album Songs, balancing the pianist's stern, blockish manner of assembling thematic materials and doggedly dissecting them with some surprisingly free-flowing episodes. Some pieces are minimal variations on chord-cycles, but some have a songlike bounce.

Gamma Ray is a rugged swinger over a walking bassline; Electro Magnetism is like slower Cecil Taylor; and there are several flintily haunting reflective pieces. The piano's sound quality sets the teeth a little on edge - but the music is strong, independent and very varied.  -  John Fordham


Tracks
01. Arc
02. Patmos
03. Gamma Ray
04. Milky Way
05. Blue In Orion
06. Electro Magnetism
07. The Encounter
08. The Rose Is A Rose
09. IEOU
10. Abyss Code
11. Zero
12. Module
               
MATTHEW SHIPP  piano

All music composed by Matthew Shipp
Recorded on August 18, 2005 at Leon Lee Dorsey Studios, New York City
Thirsty Ear Recordings, Inc.  Thirsty Ear - THI57166

ROSCOE MITCHELL & THE SOUND ENSEMBLE - Live At The Knitting Factory (1987)

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This live set with his Sound Ensemble features several compositions and approaches that Roscoe Mitchell explored with some regularity in the late '80s. The dervish-like, circular breathing on soprano sax that was a central element of the album The Flow of Things from the prior year is heard again on "Almost Like Raindrops," though with less ferocity. In fact, much of this recording has a surprisingly laid-back feel. "Nonaah," which is often performed in an agitated frenzy, is cast in a dreamlike, floating space. Even the usual "free blowout" pieces like "The Reverend Frank Wright" lack the propulsive cohesiveness that the same band has displayed before. Some of this may be due to the rather boom-y sound quality that often relegates Barefield's guitar work and Shahid's bass to the background while bringing the drums to the fore. The same holds true for the oddly similar "You Changed the Texture on Me" that follows directly; on the one hand, it's a pleasure to hear Mitchell's imaginative and forceful alto playing (as well as some fine work by trumpeter Ragin), but there is little sense of the group dynamics that were paramount on records like Snerdy McGurdy and Her Dancin' Shoes. The odd inclusion of two excerpted solos and what appear to be two snatches of longer group improvs also heighten the aura of disjuncture. Humdrum Mitchell is still more exciting than a lot of the better offerings from his peers though, so fans of his will still want to hear this album. It's just a little disappointing after fine efforts like the aforementioned The Flow of Things.  -  Brian Olewnick


Tracks
1. Almost Like Raindrops
2. Bass Solo From the Composition Sing
3. Nonaah
4. The Flight of Birds
5. Trumpet Solo From the Composition Rock Out
6. The Reverend Frank Wright
7. You Changed the Texture on Me
8. Beyond the Fast Lane
9. The Stick & Ston

ROSCOE MITCHELL  soprano and alto
HUGH RAGIN trumpet, piccolo-trumpet, flugelhorn
A. SPENCER BAREFIELD  guitar, piano
JARIBU SHAHID bass, congas
TANI TABBAL  drums

Recorded on November 11, 1987 at the Knitting Factory, N.Y.
Black Saint - 120120 2

OLIVER LAKE, JULIUS HEMPHILL - Buster Bee (1978)

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During the mid- and late '70s, countless duo recordings were released by members of the jazz avant-garde. While the driving force behind this strategy was economic (two could travel much more cheaply than six or more), this necessity also forced the artists to construct new and challenging strategies for playing, especially when the combination of instruments was less than traditional. At the time of this recording, Hemphill and Lake already formed half of the World Saxophone Quartet, but Buster Bee allows them an unusual intimacy that fosters some lovely playing and interaction. They stick to the higher reeds (and flutes), imbuing the pieces with an airy quality as they effortlessly interweave lines and ideas. All of the tracks are composed (though allowing for substantial improvisation) and are a pleasingly varied bunch, from the jaunty title track to the achingly elegiac "Fertility." Both players are near the top of their game, with subtle liquid phrasing giving way to impassioned cries on a moment's notice. Recommended.  -  Brian Olewnick


Tracks
1. Buster Bee (Julius Hemphill)
2. Vator (Oliver Lake)
3. Fertility (Jlius Hemphill)
4. 'S' (Julius Hemphill)
5. A Stand (Oliver Lake)
6. Flesh Turns Chi (Oliver Lake)

JULIUS HEMPHILL  alto saxophone, soprano saxophone
OLIVER LAKE  alto saxophone, flute

Recorded at Eastern Sound, Toronto, March 1, 1978
Sackville Recordings - SKCD2-3018

MUSIC REVELATION ENSEMBLE - Knights of Power (1996)

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James Blood Ulmer's sporadic and ever-evolving Music Revelation Ensemble has featured at one time or another everyone from David Murray and Roland Shannon Jackson to John Zorn and the late George Adams. The results have been spotty as well, but when Blood is on in this band, his true jamming unit, there's none better. This disc is one example of that power with a rhythm section consisting of Amin Ali on bass and Cornell W. Rochester on drums, and two guests saxophonists who go by the names Arthur Blythe (whose landmark Lennox Avenue Breakdown facilitated Ulmer getting a Columbia Records contract in the 1970s) and Hamiet Bluiett, splitting the eight tunes between them. Funk is the root key of everything here, slipped grooves and underhanded bass riffs kick the tunes off before a melody line gets stated played jointly usually by Ulmer and either Blythe or Bluiett, and then it's off to the stratosphere while never losing the groove. Ulmer's guitar work on this disc is truly astonishing as he plays lead and rhythm at the same time, chasing the train and keeping the groove. Standouts on the set are "The Day Of" and "Confusion," as well as "Father of Flame." On each of these selections, Ulmer and his rhythm section create wide spaces for the horn players to move around in. Once the saxists are established in their improvisations, Ulmer will stab through the mix with another idea of dimensional scale and either Blythe or Bluiett will be given the responsibility of opening that up. Blood eventually comes in for his solo and understates it while introducing yet another length of the harmolodic lyrical chain. In each case, it's amazing that the band finds its way back to the root, the groove never having been absent. Along with No Wave, this is the best of the Music Revelation Ensemble's recordings; it kicks ass.  -  Them Jurek


Tracks
1. The Scandal Monger
2. The Day Of
3. Convulsion
4. Noise and Clamor
5. The Elephant
6. Father of Flame
7. Quarish
8. Back Biter

ARTHUR BLYTHE  Alto saxophone
HAMIET BLUIETT  baritone saxophone
CORNELL W. ROCHESTER  drums
AMIN ALI  bass
JAMES BLOOD ULMER  guitar

All music composed by James Blood Ulmer
Recorded at Eastside Sound, NYC on April 15 & 16, 1995
DIW/COLUMBIA CK 67101 


HELGE LIEN TRIO - Asymmetrics (2003)

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The ominous cover art and brooding band photo on the cover of the Norwegian Helge Lien trio’s second DIW release, Asymmetrics, promises a stormy affair, but true to the title, the nine tracks surprise and deliver instead a restrained, at times even gentle mood without, however, sacrificing intensity.

Pianist Lien, bassist Frode Berg and drummer Knut Aalefjaer craft a set of five Lien originals and four standards that surges from dark riffing (Lien’s “Mann Av Huse Forbi”) and powerful bop (Davis’ “Nardis”) to delicate lyricism (Wolf’s “Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most”). On “Autumn Leaves” they combine their approaches, producing a delicious friction of the traditional and modern. Berg and Aalefjaer set up a jagged interplay on the intro to which Lien weds a respectful, yet rather swift rendition of the melody. Later Berg follows Lien’s lead in a swinging bowed solo, one that Aalefjaer tries his best to disrupt with surprising accents.

Such swift changes encapsulate the trio’s two-pronged method: cleave close to tradition to keep the music accessible, but push the limits enough to give the improvisations an edge. Lien’s “Furulokka” unabashedly expresses a rich sentimentality. Lien luxuriates the lullaby melody with subtle dissonances, while Berg quietly counterpoints and Aalefjaer paints the background with airy cymbal splashes and broad gong strokes. On other pieces, like “Mann Av Huse Forbi” and “Hypotek,” Lien strips the melodic content to a naked core, and Berg and Aalefjaer accordingly create a spare pulse. Such a minimalism results in a contemplative restraint layered with a dark urgency.

Amongst all the press heaped on the Norwegian fusions of electronica and jazz, Lien’s elegant acoustic space has been overlooked. A shame, but unfortunately not a surprise. Unlike the dance floor pleasing throb of some, the Helge Lien trio’s subtle refraction of the piano trio takes time to appreciate, and will definitely reward repeated listening.


Tracks
1. Spiral Circle (Helge Lien)
2. Mann Av Huse Forbi (Helge Lien)
3. Nardis (Miles Davis)
4. Nav Og Natt (Helge Lien)
5. Beneath It All
6. Autumn Leaves
7. Furuklokka (Helge Lien)
8. Hypotek (Helge Lien)
9. Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most

HELGE LIEN  piano
FRODE BERG  bass
KNUT AALEFJAER  drums, percussion

Recorded at Rainbow Studio, Oslo on June 2 & 3, 2003
DIW Records   DIW - DIW-630

HELGE LIEN TRIO - Spiral Circle (2002)

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Tracks
1. Liten Jazzballong [Small Jazz Balloon] (Helge Lien)
2. No Mountains (Helge Lien)
3. En Ganske Liten Runding [Quite a Small Circle] (Helge Lien)
4. Quiet Now (Denny Zeitlin)
5. Quiet Now (Wayne Shorter)
6. Psalm (Helge Lien)
7. Take Five (Paul Desmond)
8. Som I en Stein [As in a Stone] (Helge Lien)

FRODE BERG  bass, Chinese ball & cup
KNUT AALEFJAER  drums
HELGE LIENpiano

Recorded February 16 & 17, 2002 at Rainbow Studio, Oslo, Norway
DIW - DIW-627  

JAKI BYARD - On The Spot (1967)

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This album mostly features pianist Jaki Byard (who plays alto on "A-Toodle-oo, Toodle-oo") with a quartet comprised of trumpeter Jimmy Owens, bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Billy Higgins in 1967. With a repertoire stretching from "I Fall In Love Too Easily" and the boppish "Second Balcony Jump" to "GEB Piano Roll" and even "Alexander's Ragtime Band," the music serves as a perfect outlet for Jaki Byard's eclectic talents; a highlight is the Byard-Chambers duet "P.C. Blues." The recording is rounded off by a leftover track ("Spanish Tinge") from a 1965 live session featuring Byard, bassist George Tucker and drummer Alan Dawson.  -  Scott Yanow


Tracks
01. A-Toodle-Oo, Toodle-Oo (Jaki Byard)
02. I Fall In Love Too Easy (Sammy Can/Jule Styne)
03. Olean Visit (Jaki Byard)
04. Spanish Tinge (Jaki Byard)
05. Alexander's Ragtime Band
06. On the Spot (Jaki Byard)
07. GEB Piano Roll (Jaki Byard)
08. Second Balcony Jump (Billy Eckstine/G. Valentine/Gerald Valentine)
09. P.C. Blues (Jaki Byard)
10. Snow Flakes (Jaki Byard)

GEORGE TUCKER  bass (4)
PAUL CHAMBERS  bass
ALAN DAWSON  drums (4)
BILLY HIGGINS  drums
JAKI BYARD  piano, alto saxophone
JIMMY OWENS trumpet, flugelhorn, tambourine

Recorded in Englewood Cliffs, NJ; February 16, 1967
"Spanish Tinge" recorded at Lennie's-on-the-Turnpike, West Peabody, MA; April 15, 1965
Prestige Records,  Prestige - P-7524  /  Original Jazz Classics - OJCCD-1031-2

JAKI BYARD - To Them, To Us (1981)

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Jaki Byard was captured alone in a Milan studio for this delightful session. As usual, he displays his formidable technique with an ever-present twinkle of humor. Everything from early jazz ("Tin Roof Blues") to classic renditions of Ellington masterpieces (an introspective "Solitude" and a rollicking "Caravan") to the surprisingly enjoyable arrangement of the usually saccharine Chuck Mangione hit "Land of Make Believe" is worth repeated hearings. Another surprise is his hilarious but solid reworking of another pop smash, "Ode to Billie Joe." Several strong Byard originals round out this highly recommended CD.  -  Ken Dryden


Tracks
1. To Them, to Us (Jake Byard)
2. BL + WH = 88 (Jaki Byard)
3. Tin Roof Blues (Brunies/Mares/Melrose/Pollack/Roppolo/Stitzel)
4. Land of Make Believe (Chuck Mangione)
5. Solitude (DeLange/Ellington/Mills)
6. Caravan (Ellington/Mills/Tizol)
7. Ode to Billie Joe (Bobby Gentry)
8. Send One Your Love (Stevie Wonder)
9. Excepts from Trumpet Concerto (Jaki Byard)

JAKI BYARD solo piano

Recorded May 27, 1981 at Bergonzzi Studio, Milano
SOUL NOTE Records   SN 1025 CD 

JAKI BYARD - Sunshine Of My Soul (1978)

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This High Note Jaki Byard date titled Sunshine of My Soul is not a reissue of the 1967 issue by Prestige. In fact, it was recorded by Todd Barkan in 1978 at the Keystone Korner in San Francisco and produced for release on compact disc by Joe Fields. This is Byard solo, working magic as few other pianists have ever been able to and embodying most of the jazz tradition in his set. From the beautiful, ragged "Tribute to the Ticklers" that opens the set through his medley of Charles Mingus'"Fables of Faubus" and "Peggy's Blue Skylight," to the "Boogie Woogie In and Out" and "Besame Mucho," Byard was an encyclopedia who could effortlessly invoke anything he wanted to -- and here he does. Effortlessly winding blues figures and stride epistles around modal interludes, angular meditations on pop tunes (the Blood, Sweat & Tears' hit "Spinning Wheel") and fiery, bop-drenched left-handed runs, he makes it all swing with the elegance of a master and the funkiness of a barroom pianist more often than not, especially in compositions of his own creation (check "Sunshine"). Byard was a true giant of jazz and this set, in excellent sound, displays all of the reasons.  -  Thom Jurek


Tracks
01. Tribute to the Ticklers
02. Charles Mingus Medley
03. Hazy Eve
04. Spinning Wheel
05. Excerpts from Songs of Proverbs
06. Boogie Woogie In and Out
07. Emil
08. Bésame Mucho
09. Sunshine
10. Two Different Worlds
11. European Episodes

JAKI BYARD  solo piano

Recorded at The Keystone Korner, San Francisco, CA in June, 1978
HighNote Records, Inc.   HighNote HCD 7169

BARRY HARRIS SEXTET - Luminescence (1967)

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Bebop sessions were comparatively rare in 1967, but pianist Barry Harris and his sextet on this CD reissue perform with the sincerity and enthusiasm that was more closely associated with this music in 1957. The trumpetless group (which also consists of baritonist Pepper Adams, tenor saxophonist Junior Cook, trombonist Slide Hampton, bassist Bob Cranshaw and drummer Lenny McBrowne) performs four of Harris' joyful originals (most of which are based on common chord changes), the ballad "My Ideal" and two Bud Powell tunes, "Dance of the Infidels" and "Webb City." Everyone is in fine form, particularly Harris and Adams, and the pianist's arrangements perfectly fit (and uplift) the music. Highly recommended to bebop collectors.  -  Scott Yanow


Tracks
1. Luminescence (Barry Harris)
2. Like This (Barry Harris)
3. Nicaragua (Barry Harris)
4. Dance of the Infidels (Bud Powell)
5. Webb City (Bud Powell)
6. My Ideal (Newell Chase/Leo Robin/Richard A. Whiting)
7. Even Steven (Barry Harris)

BARRY HARRIS piano
BOB CRANSHAW  bass
LENNY McBROWNE  drums
PEPPER ADAMS  baritone saxophone
SLIDE HAMPTON  trombone
JUNIOR COOK  tenor saxophone

Recorded in New York City; April 20, 1967
Prestige - P-7498  /. Original Jazz Classics - OJCCD-924-2

DAVE HOLLAND & MARC JOHNSON - Solos & Duets (1985)

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MARC JOHNSON SOLO
1. 7/4 Kids Zoo (Marc Johnson)
2. Love Theme From Spartacus (Alex North)

DAVE HOLLAND SOLO
3. Homecoming (Dave Holland)
4. Vassarlean (Charle Mingus)
5. Jumping' In (Dave Holland)

DAVE HOLLAND-MARC JOHNSON DUO
6. Walk-A-Way (Dave Holland/Manvin "Smitty" Smith)
7. C17 (Dave Holland)
8. Sunrise - Chanson Pour La Nuit (Dave Holland)
9. Mr PC (John Coltrane)

DAVE HOLLAND  bass
MARC JOHNSON  bass

Recorded live at the 8th Jazzhaus Festival, Musikhochschule Köln, November 9th 1985


CHICK COREA, DAVE HOLLAND, BARRY ALTSCHUL - A.R.C. (1971)

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This album features pianist Chick Corea, bassist Dave Holland and drummer Barry Altschul during the brief period that, along with Anthony Braxton, they were members of the fine avant-garde quartet Circle. The music heard on this set is not quite as free as Circle's but often very explorative. Four of the six songs are Corea originals which, in addition to Holland's "Vedana" and Wayne Shorter's "Nefertiti," form a very viable set of adventurous jazz, recorded just a few months before Corea changed direction.  -  Scot Yanow



Tracks
1. Nefertiti (Wayne Shorter)
2. Ballad For Tillie (Altschul/Corea/Holland)
3. A.R.C. (Chick Corea)
4. Vadana (Dave Holland)
5. Thanatos (Chick Corea)
6. Games (Chick Corea)

CHICK COREA  piano
DAVE HOLLAND  bass
BARRY ALTSCHUL  drums

Recorded January 11, 12 and 13, 1971 at Tonstudio Bauer, Ludwigsburg
ECM Records - ECM 1009. /. ECM Records - 833 678-2

MARK DRESSER - Force Green (1994)

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This set of eight adventurous compositions by bassist Mark Dresser has some otherworldly sounds, some free improvising and plenty of spacey stretches. The latter is due to the flexible and chancetaking singing of Theo Bleckmann, who often functions as part of the ensembles and sticks to wordless improvising. The group also includes trumpeter Dave Douglas (who sometimes sounds traditional and in other spots is as adventurous as Bleckmann, pianist Denman Maroney and drummer Phil Haynes. The music is stimulating but sometimes disturbing, easier to respect than to love.  -  Scott Yanow


"Very much the bassist's record, but only in the proper sense that he steers the music… the total effect is of an ensemble rather than a loose coalition of individuals, which is what the music requires."  -  The Penguin Guide to Jazz on CD



Tracks
O1. Focus
02. Force Cuisine
03. Ediface
04. Bosnia
05. For Miles
06. Castles for Carter

MARK DRESSER  bass
PHIL HAYNES  drums
DENMAN MARONEY  piano
DAVE DOUGLAS trumpet
THEO BLECKMANN voice

Recorded on September 8-9, 1994 at Sorcerer Sound Studio 
Soul Note - 121273-2.  Italy

HELGE LIEN TRIO - Hello Troll (2008)

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It's nearly impossible to keep up with the Norwegian jazz scene. Considering the country's population is about one-quarter the size of New York City's Greater Metropolitan Area, the vibrancy, diversity and sheer amount of music coming out of this small country is astounding. Pianist Helge Lien and his trio may be unknown to most North Americans, but they've already got five albums to their name and have racked up achievements, including a 2002 Norwegian Grammy nomination. Hello Troll is Helge Lien Trio's sixth release, and a terrific introduction to its many strengths.

Lien's trio, along with bassist Frode Berg and drummer Knut Aaleflæt, has been together long enough to possess the same kind of telepathy that's made e.s.t.'s final disc, Leucocyte (ACT, 2008) such a career-defining record. Collective improvisation is a significant component; still, like its Swedish counterpart, the trio is predisposed to form, melody and groove. Unlike e.s.t., however, Hello Troll is an all-acoustic affair, recorded by legendary ECM engineer Jan Erik Kongshaug at the legendary Rainbow Studio in Oslo with his characteristic attention to detail, clarity and transparency.

Shades of Dave Holland pervade the opening "Gamut Warning," where a potent bass vamp drives nearly five minutes of extended soloing by Lien, but a challenging 7-8-7-9 metric shift keeps everyone on their toes. Lien's slow-build, where space is a strong component in keeping the tension high even as the dynamics ebb and flow, is relentless despite its ultimate fade to black. "Axis of Free Will" possesses some of Brad Mehldau's cerebralism and oblique lyricism but, like that pianist's trio—especially since drummer Jeff Ballard came aboard—there's an unmistakable energy and visceral interaction between the three members that still makes it an exciting ride.

Swing may be one of the definers of the American tradition, but it's the rubato temporal elasticity of time, even as the music aims for a deeper melodism, that distances Lien's trio from any references to young American piano trios. The pensive "Radio" has form, with changes that run through its seven-minute exploration of democratic exploration, but time is fluid, with nary a pulse to be found. Berg's arco, during the tune's dark, classically informed melody, creates more texture than harmony, while Aaleflæt also plays colorist.

The Latin-informed "Troozee" works within more conventional form despite its odd meter. Time, changes and melody set up another lengthy solo from Lien, running the gamut from long, serpentine lines to repeat motifs which help build thematic tautness that ultimately demand release. The title track plays with an idiosyncratic cued intro, leading to a powerful, chord-driven groove that dissolves into total free play before gradually regaining form, another example of the trio's empathic improvisational acumen.

In a manner that doesn't create a muss or a fuss, Helge Lien Trio delivers an impressive set while avoiding any signs of self-indulgence or unnecessary demonstration. Well worth watching, the 2008 Kongsberg Jazz Festival got it right when they awarded the trio the celebrated DnBNor Musicians Award.  -  John Kelman


Tracks
1. Gamut Warning
2. Axis Of Free Will
3. Radio
4. Troozee
5. Diverted Dance
6. It Is What It Is, But It Is
7. Hello Troll
8. Snurt
9. In The Wind Somewhere

FRODE BERG  bass
KNUT AALEFJAER  drums
HELGE LIEN piano

All music composed by Helge Lien
Recorded 24-25 of February 2008
Ozella Music  OZ 021 CD
mail@ozellamusic.com
www.ozellamusic.com 

GARY BURTON QUINTET with EBERHARD WEBER - Ring (1974)

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Gary Burton is in a class all his own. On the vibraharp he is pliant yet unbreakable with a certain flair for the understatedly powerful. Among the present company, he is perfectly at ease. No one tries to overpower him, and despite his melodic dominance he never looms for too long, receding into as many shadows as he casts. There’s not a single pretentious note to be heard; the flow between and within tracks barters its way across smooth waters. This is a nocturnal album all the way.

In the opening “Mevlevia,” flanged guitar provides a yielding current of sound upon which Burton and Weber are able to lie back and drift. “Unfinished Sympathy” is more than just a clever play on words, but is also a gorgeous vehicle for Goodrick’s rolling solos. Its structure is built around a recurring guitar motif, which indeed feels unfinished as it circles around a flower it can never pollinate. It is a short and sweet diversion into a vaguely grasped thought. “Tunnel Of Love” is a languid journey toward something that is apprently fated but which is actually uncertain. A warm bass solo arises from the murky surface that surrounds us, threading our path with its own braided thread. A lilting guitar in the background plucks steady notes from the air, balancing them atop slowly rolling spheres. “Intrude” begins with a drum solo that flitters like a dragonfly skirting the edge of its known domain. A certain jouissance works its way from the outside in before petering out into the last few drops of cymbal, at which point the ensemble kicks in with a six-stringed groove tugged along by bass and the now recumbent drums. The delicacy from before is implicitly maintained, even as the static builds in charge, at last defused by a premature spark. “Silent Spring” feels like the most composed piece in this set, and in that sense it refuses to take its own simple pleasures for granted. The bass flickers its way into recognition like a blown-out candle in reverse, telling what it knows to be untrue, a musical fabrication in disguise. “The Colors of Chloë” produces another superb bass solo in the midst of a first-rate groove, which seems to climb up and down stairs before settling on the black and the white of its own private chessboard.  -  Tyran Grillo


Tracks
1. Mevlevia (Mick Goodrick)
2. Unfinished Sympathy (Mike Gibbs)
3. Tunnel Of Love (mike Gibbs)
4. Intrude (Mike Gibbs)
5. Silent Spring (Carla Bley)
6. The Colours Of Chloë (Eberhard Weber)

GARY BURTON  vibraharp
MICK GOODRICK  guitar
PAT METHENY  electric 12-string guitar, guitar
STEVE SWALLOW  bass
EBERHARD WEBER  bass
BOB MOSES  percussion

Recorded July 23-24, 1974 at Studio Bauer, Ludwigsburg
ECM Records   ECM 1051  /  ECM 78118-21051-2


GARY BURTON - Dreams So Real. Music of Carla Bley (1976)

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Performing the intricate music of Carla Bley is no mean feat, but if anyone is up for the challenge, it would be vibraphonist Gary Burton. Signifying a high watermark in his career in the mid-'70s, Dreams So Real teams Burton with his fellow professor at the Berklee College of Music Mick Goodrick, along with recently graduated student Pat Metheny. Add the peerless electric bass guitarist Steve Swallow and always proficient drummer Bob Moses, and you have the makings of a short-lived supergroup capable of playing Bley's memorable, melancholy music. While generally regarded as one of many Burton/Metheny pairings, it is Goodrick's individualism (it was he who primarily tutored Metheny) that needs more recognition. With Goodrick on electric six-string and Metheny on electric 12-string guitar, the sonorities they establish allow Burton to freely discourse on Bley's prickly angular melodies. The brittle and fractured combo track "Ictus/Syndrome" -- closer to a three-piece suite -- goes from a frantic neo-bop meter to straight-ahead swing with a clearly inspired Burton rambling into the bright signature rondo sound that Metheny and Swallow have always owned. "Syndrome" might also be familiar to Bley's fans as "Wrong Key Donkey.""Doctor" merges the vibes and guitars into a guided prognosis of hypertension within slowly elevated blood pressure levels. "Intermission Music," inspired by golden age films, is a beautiful waltz vehicle for the guitars rhythmically, and for Swallow and Moses melodically. With the bandmembers at their most passionate, the title track is a lighthearted but cerebral ballad, "Vox Humana" a simplified tango, while "Jesus Maria" evokes the delicate epic strains of Bley's personalized sound with Burton playing it alone. While the singing sound of Metheny is in its infant stages, it is easily recognizable and clearly realized. Generally regarded as one of Burton's top three recorded dates, it has stood the test of time. Perhaps some day, a complete collection of the vibist playing Carla Bley's many other compositions can be compiled to complement this surface-scratching but very important album.  -  Michael G. Nastos


Tracks
1. Dreams So Real
2. Ictus/Syndrome
3. Jesus Maria
4. Vox Humana
5. Doctor
6. Intermission Music

STEVE SWALLOW  bass
BOB MOSES  drums
MICK GOODRICK  guitar
PAT METHENY  electric 12 String Guitar
GARY BURTON  vibraphone

All music composed by Carla Bley
Recorded December 1975 at Studio Bauer, Ludwigsburg
ECM Records - ECM 1072  /  ECM Records - 833 329-2

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