Saturday, March 31, 2007
Pharoah Sanders... Shelly Manne... Louis Armstrong/Duke Ellington... Herbie Hancock... Big Bill Broonzy... Muddy Waters... David Murray...Art Blakey
Shelly Manne and his Men at the Blackhawk – one of the great live albums. I was going to post this a couple of weeks ago but saw on the same day that Rab had posted the complete album on his jazz site. I try to keep clear of clashes if possible... but that site has gone now anyway – trolled! So here is some prime West Coast jazz from 1959 – a crisp recording that picks up the nuances of Manne's drums, the subtlety of Monty Budwig's bass especially. Kamuca and Gordon are well up to the mark. Feldman the expatriate Brit plays a thoughtful and swinging solo. A buoyant three four...
Louis and Duke – a relaxed swing through 'Mood Indigo,' introduced by Duke's astringent piano. Armstrong bites off short sharp phrases as the trombone and clarinet supply the famous obbligato. Star of this track is really Barney Bigard, whose clarinet is all over it.
Herbie Hancock and a track from 'Headhunters,' 'Chameleon.' A pumping squelchy bass riff drives it off, shades of Bootsy Collins. Slowly adding intruments and the melody as wa wa guitar-like sounds clip in and out (these were done by Hancock on synths). Lone horn Bennie Maupin battles out front. Something infectious about this track as it bubbles along – a true meeting of jazz and funk. Herbie reins back until he rips out a high, squealing synth keyboard line. A drum break as the bass re-enters and locks the groove down again and the drums have it against a choppy riff in the background. Another long episode – synth strings introduce electric piano. The synth strings rise up as a long wave in places to envelope the constituent parts. Maupin comes back for some r and b type blowing. I had this album way back in the seventies but I think I like it more now, oddly – and I don't like fusion as such. But there is something warm and soulful as well as intelligent and snappy about this track...
In the thirties and forties in Chicago, country blues men who had made the run up North were forging their own fusions. Here's Big Bill Broonzy playing 'You're going to need my help someday.' Some nicely stinging guitar here, locking in with the piano... Big Bill arrived in Chicago in the Twenties and was a massive influence on many of the blues community there. One of whom ironically was to overshadow him eventually...
Muddy Waters came up from Mississippi to Chicago in 1943, where he eventually perfected his own take on amplified blues. Here is a track from 1950 – 'Louisiana Blues.' Muddy's voice shadowed by Little Walter'sharp and his own electric slide guitar, underpinned by Ernest Crawford's acoustic bass. Hard-driving music...
David Murray with his Octet and 'Flowers for Albert,' his tribute to Albert Ayler. A ragged, folksy/calypso feel to the theme in keeping with the subject's music. (The missing link to Sonny Rollins?). This is from his album 'Murray's Steps,' and is not the earlier recording.
Art Blakey recorded 'Free for All' in the middle of the sixties avant gard turmoil – staking his own ground out while opening up his band to the new influences. Powered by the brutal, battering drums of the leaders this is a wild ride. Wayne Shorter up first, buttressed by the trombone and trumpet in places to spur him further onwards. Curtis Fuller solos next, his brusque trombone negotiating the maelstrom, followed by the bright, brash Hubbard, soaring to glory over his frontline compadres sporadic riffing. Some clever arranging (and composing) especially with this particular band from the young Shorter and this track is no exception – but the drums have it – taking a bassdrumstompingsnareshatteringcymbalshimmering solo at the end to put the signature firmly on the music... One of those tracks I put on occasionally to lift my spirits... This is JAZZ...
Pharoah Sanders
Pharoah Sanders (tenor & soprano saxophones, alto flute, fife, bailophone, brass bell, bells, maracas, cow horn, percussion); Michael White (violin, percussion); Lonnie Liston Smith (bailophone, piano, electric piano, claves, ring cymbals, percussion, background vocals); Cecil McBee (bass, finger cymbals, percussion, sound effects); Clifford Jarvis (drums, maracas, bells, percussion); Roy Haynes (drums); Chief Bey, Majid Shabazz, Anthony Wiles, Nat Bettis (percussion); James Jordon (ring cymbals) (Again, details in full as so many instruments here, abbreviations would be a nightmare! Cow horn?).
Red Black and Green
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Shelley Manne
Shelly Manne (d) Joe Gordon (t) Richie Kamuca (ts) Victor Feldman (p) Monty Budwig (b)
Blue Daniel (alternative take)
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Louis Armstrong/Duke Ellington
Louis Armstrong (v, t) Duke Ellington (p) Trummy Young (tr) Barney Bigard (cl) Mort Herbert (b); Danny Barcelona (d).
Mood Indigo
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Herbie Hancock
Herbie Hancock (Fender Rhodes piano, Clavinet, synthesizer); Bennie Maupin (soprano & tenor saxophones, saxello, bass clarinet, alto flute); Paul Jackson (marimbula, bass); Harvey Mason (drums); Bill Summers (congas, shekere, balafon, agogo, cabasa, hindewho, tambourine, log drum, surdo, gankoqui, beer bottle)
Chameleon
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Big Bill Broonzy
You may need my help someday
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Muddy Waters
Louisiana Blues
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David Murray
David Murray (ts) Bobby Bradford, Butch Morris(t) Craig Harris(tb), Henry Threadgill (saxophones), Curtis Clark(p) Wilber Morris (b) Steve McCall (d).
Flowers for Albert
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Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers
Art Blakey (d) Wayne Shorter (ts) Freddie Hubbard (t) Curtis Fuller (tr) Cedar Walton (p) Reggi Workman (b)
Free for all
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Thursday, March 29, 2007
Catherine Warner R.I.P... Abdullah Ibrahim... Band of the Royal Marines... Chris McGregor and the Brotherhood of Breath...
And to celebrate her Afrikaner roots... here's a version of 'Sarie Marais,' the first song I ever knew, as it was sung incessantly by a young mother to her baby in a strange land and indelibly imprinted on my mind... the military band is appropriate – my father met my mother in time of war...
O bring my trug na die ou Transvaal,
Daar waar my Sarie woon.
Daar onder in die mielies
By die groen doringboom,
Daar woon my Sarie Marais.
... and to blast it out... here are the greatest band to come out of S.A., loaded up with the cream of Brit jazzers – Chris McGregor and the Brotherhood of Breath... recorded live in Bremen, 1973... 'Wood Fire.'
Abdullah Ibrahim
Abdullah Ibrahim (p) Johnny Dyani (b)
Namhanje
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Band of the Royal Marines
Sarie Marais
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Chris McGregor/Brotherhood of Breath
Harry Beckett, Mark Charig, Mongezi Feza (t) Nick Evans Malcolm Griffiths (tr) Mike Osborne, Evan Parker, Dudu Pukwana Gary Windo (saxes) Chris McGregor (p) Harry Miller (b) Louis Moholo (d).
Wood Fire
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Monday, March 26, 2007
Cannonball Adderley...Bud Powell...Charlie Parker...Matthew Shipp...Mark Ribot...Big Bill Broonzy...Bert Jansch...Thelonious Monk...Pharoah Sanders...
Back a step or two... the flowering of bebop... Fats Navarro, the early Sonny Rollins and Bud Powell, from a session in 1949 under the pianist's name. A steady almost un-boppy tempo as they play the theme. Bud solos first, sounding on sparkling form, Haynes in close support. Fats next - clarity and fire, a brief solo before one from Rollins and the out theme. An odd balance: because of the recording time available, Powell's longer solo means the horns have but a short space to make an impact.
Charlie Parker and company – some company – at Massey Hall in 1953. This live recording is fascinating because it allows everyone to stretch out more than the old 78 recordings – which may have given a distorted sense of what bop was about, with everything crammed into three minutes and often moving at speedy to blistering tempos. Here, on 'Night in Tunisia' – the longer recording time gives more space. Bird takes the first solo – note the rooster crow – smears, growls and bluesy timbre – as well as the amazing technique. Diz follows – bravura high wire stuff, rising effortlessly up the register and sky-diving from the top. Bud next, the thud of the bass obscuring somewhat (Mingus overdubbed the parts as the original tape wasn't up to scratch). But you can hear his lines ring through the murk. It ends rather scrappily but who cares – Diz takes a short coda accompanied by a fast run on bass before they go out. Sublime...
If that was old bop – here's Matthew Shipp with some nubop... opening on a plaintive sax cry – almost a lament for the old music...then a vamp from William Parker - who holds the album together with his unflappable strong bass as the drums come clattering in. An interesting experiment in bringing hip hop rhythms into jazz, programmed beats colliding with real-time drums and the improvisations of Daniel Carter and the leader. Shipp has done some interesting recordings with the English duo Spring Heel Jack – later this week I may put up some of their live stuff...
Marc Ribot playing a John Zorn piece, taken from the album 'Masada Guitars.' Just Ribot on acoustic... slowly developing over a repeating riff – gritty and dissonant with a some string-bending that reminds of Bert Jansch – who probably pinched it from Bill Broonzy...
... who was much loved in Europe, especially in the U.K. Big Bill played his part of country blues man to the hilt – amusingly, as he had been one of the first up in Chicago to use amplification and was long gone from the cotton fields. But everyone has to make a living... was it 'authentic?' Do we care? Country blues has - oddly? - been one of the favourite musics of white people down the years, who were and are not close enough to the cultural nuances that Afro-Americans seemed to shy away from, in the urban areas at least. Although this is a broad generalisation: the blues has never totally died... But certainly white people kept an interest in the more archaic forms going – I'm thinking of all the old blues singers who were resurrected in the sixties – Skip James, Son House etc... Maybe Miles was right when he said once: 'Blues? Let the white folks have them.' And I am reminded of the dismissive phrase with regard to Irish traditional music that the late and great Liam Lawlor who used to run my favourite bar in Dublin way back employed on many occasions: 'Immigration Music. Ha!' (He had made his money during a long sojourn in New York before returning to the Emerald Isle and regarded all folk music with a baleful eye, preferring jazz). Further, one could say that English traditional music was only resurrected by middle class researchers and players, at several removes from the sources – most people have no interest in or knowledge of it... Speculation aside, I got into blues after I discovered jazz – and it's still a music I return to often... This is Big Bill singing 'When I've been drinking.' Listen for the rooster crow...
... and above mention of Bert Jansch – why not post an early track of his which shows how the acoustic blues guitar styles were mutated into the Anglo-American folk world. 'Strolling down the highway.' A youthful boho dream of freedom matched to the joyful bounce of the guitar – Jansch and others created something new out of a wild mix of blues, jazz and indigenous folk musics... Jack Kerouac meets Gypsy Davy in 1965...
I just found this, synchronicity striking: a movie by the late Alan Lomax...
Blues, then – here's Monk, playing solo on 'Functional.' I can hear earlier pianists like Jimmy Yancey in the sparse opening and in the intermittent refracted fragments of boogie left hand... Monk, like Parker, seemed able to move back into the past and refer to earlier forms while simultaneously playing advanced harmonies – and exploring the sonic qualities – potential as well as inherent - of their instruments...
Something spiritual... Pharoah Sanders and 'Let us go into the house of the Lord.' Coming out of the fire of free-jazz, the pentecostal voices channeled through split notes, high register squeals and deep growls here subsumed in a more tranquil vision... a track with much surface movement but underpinned by a strong rolling unhurried wave that carries it all home... from the 1970 album 'Summum, Bukmun, Umyun,' which apparently is Arabic for 'Deaf, Dumb and Blind,' and refers to a passage in the Koran.
In the Videodrome...
Pharoah Sanders
Lennie Tristano in Berlin
...and with Warne Marsh and Lee Konitz
Oliver Nelson with Art Farmer, Lee Konitz and co in Europe...
Cannonball Adderley
Cannonball Adderley (as) Nat Adderley (ct) Barry Harris (p) Sam Jones (b) Louis Hayes (d)
Them Dirty Blues
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Bud Powell/Fats Navarro
Fats Navarro (t) Sonny Rollins (ts) Bud Powell (p) Tommy Potter (b) Roy Haynes (d)
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Charlie Parker
Charlie Parker (as) Dizzie Gillespie (t) Bud Powell (p) Charles Mingus (b) Max Roach (d)
A Night in Tunisia
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Matthew Shipp
Matthew Shipp (p) Daniel Carter (s, fl) Chris Flam (synthesizer, programming) William Parker (b) Guillermo E. Brown (d).
NuBop
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Marc Ribot (g)
Kedem
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Big Bill Broonzy
When I've been drinking
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Bert Jansch
Strolling down the highway
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Thelonious Monk (p)
Functional
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Pharoah Sanders: soprano saxophone, cow horn, bells, tritone whistle, cowbells, wood flute, thumb piano, percussion; Woody Shaw: trumpet, maracas, yodeling, percussion; Gary Bartz: alto saxophone, bells, cowbell, shakers, percussion; Lonnie Liston Smith: piano, cowbell, thumb piano, percussion; Cecil McBee: bass; Clifford Jarvis: drums; Nathaniel Bettis:bylophone, yodeling, African percussion (Details given in full as I can't be bothered to figure out all the abbreviations!).D
Let us go into the house of the Lord
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Sunday, March 25, 2007
Club Sporadic...Saturday 24th March 2007...Hulot...Plexus...Whitedog...
A damn cold day... what is it about the occurrences of the Club Sporadic that confound global warming and always induce bad weather? Still... on y va... With only two acts on the night and one of them, the house band Plexus, down to two members, a minimal feeling in the air... But Whitedog's ambiance set up the evening and kept things rolling via the usual eccentric mix - Eddie Condon's dixieland to James Brown via Cecil Taylor and Bert Jansch anyone? (Plus some of his own murky electronica patched in...). Plexus started - a set dominated by a spartanly ominous drum beat that the two electric guitars duelled over and round - with some laptop towards the end dropping in disembodied voices of american poets - Charles Olson and William Carlos Williams (well, you had to be there, as they say...). After some interval music - a return for local band Hulot - on their second public appearance, I think, with a couple of new songs - that choppy guitar and deep driving bass booting it along over the drum machine - with its ever-present memories of the Three Johns among others. In the English rock tradition - a peppy set, short sharp songs. A contrast to some of the more outré bands we put on... but the Sporadic has always been a broad field of performance... Hulot are becoming one of our favourites... and people danced (see above).
Teledu and Warner (the Old Firm) came back on for more guitar madness... after some laptop looping and droning, a duel electric thrash that became more abrasive and loud... we enjoyed it... a practice really for the upcoming Damo Suzuki gig at the Quad Studios in Leicester next month (28th April - when Plexus will be joining with Black Carrot to become Damo's 'Sound-Carriers' for the night.
Thursday, March 22, 2007
Steve Coleman... Alice Coltrane... Nels Cline/Wally Shoup/Chris Corsano... Billy Bang... Ornette Coleman...
Dig infinity... as the late Lord Buckley once said... The late Alice Coltrane with her son Ravi and I noticed in checking the album details that on American Amazon one reviewer suggested that the album was 'good music for making sandwiches.' Very Zen – or just a put-down? Opening on piano, swirling through the treble and a deep bass note heralds the saxophone of Ravi...soulful meditation reminiscent of the father in ballad mood... the tempo firms up – her piano has quite a bit of bite... his soprano is intriguing, given the burden of history that is lashed to it... a welcome late return, but sadly, Alice died a couple of months ago...
Billy Bang from 1998, fronting a quartet. This is a burner – 'Bama Swing.' Bang always plays with a deep fire and intensity... this track is within conventional post-bop parameters and swings mightily - yet violin and D.D. Jackson's piano piano edge out into wilder territory here and there... Bang is an interesting representative of the 'loft jazz' era which he immersed himself in after his traumatic tour of duty in Vietnam – a driven man... here is a good interview with Fred Jung which explains more...
I mentioned Wally Shoup in a recent post – here he is with Nels Cline and flavour of the month drummer Chris Corsano – who gets around... from playing with Sunburned Hand of Man to free jazz wahooers like Paul Flaherty... this is short and fiery, the guitar tracking the alto's squeals on 'Lake of Fire Memories.' High frequency buzzing finally joined by Corsano's torrential drums underneath...
Some Ornette, from a more obscure album: 'Chappaqua Suite.' The music originally commissioned for Conrad Rooks' film that he never used in the end, preferring some Ravi Shankar. If I remember, he said that it was too good for his movie... about right. On a movie trivia note, according to the cast list, Ornette appeared in the film - as 'Peyote Eater.' Far out... This is track two, which would have been the complete second side of the first album in the original 2 lp set. Ornette bluesy across the steady bass and drums – and the vertical stripes of the ensemble that lay long-held dissonant chords behind him as he dances around and across... echoes of the third stream in this scoring (by Eric Dolphy – who also did similar work on John Coltrane's Africa/Brass sessions – which I must dig out again soon...), but the drums on the bottom and Ornette on the top with it all held together by David Izenson's bass give this music a pulse and vitality that much of the third stream lacked. A back-beat creeps in – to be turned round and about – as Ornette roams the wide open spaces – the ensemble are used very spartanly throughout, more brief punctuation than continual grammatical overlay... Moffett is especially good, booting it all along in grand style...
In the Videodrome...
Corsano with Sunburned...
...Patton and Zorn...
... a clip from 'Chappaqua' featuring the Fugs...
Steve Coleman
Steve Coleman (as) Ravi Coltrane (ts) Jonathan Finlayson, Ralph Alessi (t) Gregoire Maret (hca) Dana Leong (tr) Mat Maneri (vi) Craig Taborn (key) Anthony Tidd (el-b) Drew Gress (b) Dafnis Prieto (d) Ramon Garcia Perez (perc) Yosvany Terry (shekere) + various vocalists
Plagal Transitions
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Alice Coltrane
Alice Coltrane (p) Ravi Coltrane (ts, ss) Charlie Haden (b) Jack DeJohnette (d)
Translinear Light
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Nels Cline (g) Wally Shoup (as) Chris Corsano (d)
Lake of Fire Memories
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Billy Bang (v) D.D. Jackson (p) Akira Ando (b) Ronnie Burrage (d)
Bama Swing
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Ornette Coleman
Ornette Coleman
Ornette Coleman (as) David Izenson (b) Charles Moffett (d) Pharoah Sanders: tenor saxophone; 11 piece orchestra, arrangements by Eric Dolphy
Chappaqua Suite Part Two
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Monday, March 19, 2007
Four pianists... Bud Powell... Keith Jarrett... Thelonious Monk... Cecil Taylor...
To start somewhere near the beginning of modern jazz piano as we know it... here's the sublime Bud Powell, playing one of his own compositions 'The Fruit.' Apparently a defiant retalition to a frequent insult – embraced and turned back on the insulter... diamond sharp playing, a joyful feel to theme and the variations that flow from it. Bebop piano – but because he is playing solo, more left hand than usual which sounds an echo of the earlier tradition.
Keith Jarrett, with bass and drums, from a live date at the Blue Note, playing 'How Deep is the Ocean?' A pensive, slow beginning, floating the notes out... to be joined by bass down deep and lightly accenting drums, soft but complex flurries from the brushes... A couple of minutes in and they hit a strong groove – cymbals and bass locking it up as Jarrett starts to extend his line, accompanied by the usual sighs and grunts. Peacock takes it up, skidding into a rapid-fire solo.
Thelonious Monk at Newport in 1955 – with Pee Wee Russell, another odd-ball who did not fit into the box assigned to him. A dream band for someone like myself who tries to track the continuities as well as the disruptions. I have been listening to a ridiculous amount of Monk recently – a frequent binge – and discovered anew a lot of tracks I'd forgotten about... Thus is one of them... Charlies Rouse leads off on the solos. Monk comps strongly – full chords, stabbing accents and leading fragments until he drops out to let Rouse have his head (doing the Monk dance round the piano, maybe?). Then Pee Wee – Monk back at the keyboard. He worries at a phrase like a terrier with a rat... playing high which suits sonically as the chalumeau register might get buried in this mix, although he dips down lower occasionally when Monk again drops out. Pee Wee does not seem remotely fazed by the tune or the company, displaying a wonderfully diagonal approach to melody that chimes with the leader's conceptions. Then Monk... bending and stretching the theme, chucking in the patented down-keyboard runs, the glorious asymmetry of it all – and swinging so strongly. Bass up next, spinning off the theme as the piano prods sporadically before leaving the field once more – then Buggin's turn for Dunlop – a strong drummer who gives us his thoughts in crisp fashion. A great shame that Russell never recorded a whole album with Monk...
And because of the Monk orgy - here's another one...
'Ugly Beauty' wasn't the only waltz that Monk recorded - he had performed a wonderful jolting version of 'Carolina Moon' in 6/4 in the forties for Blue Note – but I think it is the only one he wrote – a late composition taken into the studios for the 'Monk Underground' album released in 1968. Monk opens it up then the horns join for the rather stately theme... which has echoes of some of his other compositions... Rouse solos as Monk lays some thick, ringing verticality... Monk comes out after him in a rushing spill of notes... the bass double times in – some intricate games here between drums and piano. Saxophone again, then bass - deep and slow this time as Riley shimmers in the background. Then sax again before the theme returns...
Cecil Taylor from 1960 – playing the Richard Rogers song, 'This nearly was mine.' Another waltz... etched delicately to begin with in the treble as Neidlinger slowly moves underneath... the melody slowly peeking out – with a sudden lurching crashed chord, movement now in the low piano register and the drums emerge to spell the rhythm. Taylor leaves acres of space here – unusually, perhaps – fragments of melody in between sharp, biting harmonies, slowly filling up the sonic area with wild runs and thumping chords, then receding. Putting the ballad/song form on notice while dancing round it, widening the circle... this is Taylor in wonderful transition, on the cusp of abandoning the old forms altogether, showing glimpses of what was to come. I have always thought that the avant-garde of the fifties had to wait to be liberated by the drums - this is on the edge of that freedom – Charles keeps the three four going but lightly enough for Taylor to allow his pianistic/improvisational conception to come through without undue strain - yet wider, more expansive forms were looming, underpinned by the revolutions of Sunny Murray et al... two broad directions to follow – dump the piano, like Ornette had already – or embrace it, like Cecil did and explode the conventional jazz sound world with clusters, atonality in rhythm and melody and surging rhythmic smashes and grabs at the unfettered essence of what 'jazz' piano was truly capable of... but this is a beautiful version of a beautiful song, Cecil showing a tenderness that was not always so naked...
Also: on this rather excellent site there are a couple of stimulating and thought provoking posts that refer to and comment on other blogs that have been engaged in recent debate about the jazz avant-garde and the balance of musicians and innovators on the Afro-American and the white and European scenes. Plus a link to a recent Cecil Taylor interview... here also... scroll down
Bud Powell
The Fruit
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Keith Jarrett (p) Gary Peacock (b) Jack DeJohnette (d)
How deep is the ocean?
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Thelonious Monk
Thelonious Monk (p) Charlie Rouse (ts) Pee Wee Russell (cl) Butch Warren (b) Frankie Dunlop (d)
Nutty
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Thelonious Monk
Thelonious Monk (p) Charlie Rouse (ts) Larry Gayles (b) Ben Riley (d)
Ugly Beauty
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Cecil Taylor (p) Buell Neidlinger (b) Dennis Charles (d)
This nearly was mine
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Re downloads...
Thursday, March 15, 2007
Charles Mingus...Paul Bley... Art Tatum/Ben Webster... Evan Parker/Anthony Braxton/Paul Rutherford...John Zorn
Mingus here again... on bass for Paul Bley's first record date, in 1953 at the age of 21 – with Art Blakey. Mingus leads in briefly before the piano takes the blues theme. One notices the space in Bley's lines as the choruses roll out. Some fluent playing from Charles who displays his melodic credentials. Blakey is almost unobtrusive until he lets out on of those crashing press-rolls at the end of the bass solo – which seems to enervate Bley who plays more fulsomely – moving into block-chords towards the end of the track.
A quartet... recorded in 1956. A few weeks before he died, Art Tatum went in to the studios with Ben Webster. One of the tracks produced was 'Have you met Miss Jones.' Tatum still polarises opinion: many think he played too many notes... I like Art, can forgive him the overkill as that was essentially part of his style as a virtuoso whose imagination poured out in torrents. Interestingly enough, if you stripped out most of the notes, I suspect that you would come near to Thelonious Monk's playing. Supported solidly by Red Callender and Bill Douglas who have enough sense to keep out of the way, this is Ben on almost minimal tenor – more concerned with sound and timbre, that inimitable and unmistakable sound – a whooshing, heavily romantic voice – and Tatum on cascading piano... a different kind of elegance and grace...
More Art... solo now, playing 'Smoke get's in your eyes.' A beautiful balance on this track, I would argue – between almost laid-back and reflective playing of the sad, winsome melody – and the wonderful disruptions that suddenly burst to the surface, knocking the steady stride into more complicated asymmetries, those bubbling cross-keyboard runs tangling up the melody in an exhaustive interrogation...
From pianos to no pianos... A trio of improvisors caught together in 1993 – Anthony Braxton, Evan Parker and Paul Rutherford... 'The Honker.' A three way conversation starts to unfold slowly, three lines divurging, coming together, commenting and complementing... Rutherford is a rather undersung hero – here he especially displays his mastery of the improvised trombone vocabulary, his gruff voice fleshing out the higher and sharper timbres of the saxophones... a long track, necessarily, because of the ideas, information to be imparted by the combined imaginations and techniques...
John Zorn does not like to be tied down (stylistically, I hasten to add...)... his Spy V Spy album crashed Ornette Coleman songs into the hardcore aesthetic... his album 'Weird Little Boy,' released in 1998, takes this further, on this track, 'A Lungfull of Water,' using heavy metal/noise guitars and soundscapes criss-crossing to produce a dark ground where the the instruments distort and howl until finally splintering into a final shatter... tracing a line out of jazz into the noise world where many current cross-fertilisations are continuing to produce some of the most stimulating music around... a long way from the 32bar standard chord progression...
According to this article:
'Every performer on the recording has at some point professed their distaste for the project. Most vocal on this subject was Trey Spruance:
"At the risk of sounding ironic which I do NOT intend, The Weird Little Boy thing absolutely sucks, and buying it would be a waste of anyone's hard-earned money. I have to apologize to anyone who may have bought it for the reason that I play on it. Sorry!",
Chacun à son goût...
In the Videodrome...
Evan Parker and Tony Hyams here...
... Ornette...
Ken Vandermark in Poland...
Charles Mingus (p)
I can't get started
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Paul Bley
Paul Bley (p) Charles Mingus (b) Art Blakey (d)
Spontaneous Combustion
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Art Tatum/Ben Webster
Art Tatum (p) Ben Webster (ts) Red Callender (b) Bill Marshall (d)
Have you met Miss Jones?
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Art Tatum (p)
Smoke gets in your eyes
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Evan Parker (ts, ss) Anthony Braxton (as, sops) Paul Rutherford (tr)
The Honker
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John Zorn
John Zorn (key, as, samplers Trey Spruance (g, d, key) Mike Patton (d, v) Chris Cochrane (g)
Lungfull of water
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Tuesday, March 13, 2007
Derek Bailey... Peter Kowald...
I arrived back from France on Saturday night and have been exhausted since... normal service will be resumed this week, hopefully... for now -a long, spiky track from Derek Bailey – appropriately entitled 'Paris,' given my recent trip (although I was in Brittany – but near enough...). This is the guv'nor at his purest – just an acoustic guitar, recorded live in 1980.. the crabbed lines, cracked harmonics, sudden plunging runs and rapidly strummed dissonances... the ghost of jazz guitar lurks somewhere – but a long way away – the use of open strings takes his playing nearer to 'folk' techniques, oddly, rather than playing in position up and down the neck as a jazz guitarist would usually do. Bright, astringent – a steely joy...
Another live recording, performed at the 2002 Vision Festival in New York, this time on acoustic bass – from Peter Kowald - who unfortunately died later the same year... starting on a long and deep arco note and spinning radically outwards into a see-sawing phrase that he proceeds to mutate and turn and turn about... almost conversational at times, a mirror of the human voice... ...
Derek Bailey (g)
Paris
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Peter Kowald (b)
Improvisation
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Wednesday, March 07, 2007
Shelly Manne... Art Pepper/Zoot Sims... Elmo Hope... JJ Johnson/Kai Winding... Ludacris... Ray Charles... Steve Coleman... Terry Riley...
Applause and a slow, stomping piano intro from the rarely-sited Brit emigré, Victor Feldman, before the overlapping horns play tag across the 12 bar structure. 'Breakdown Blues,' from a live date by Art Pepper - and Zoot Sims, who was his early hero before he fell under the spell of John Coltrane. Zoot was 'have horn – will travel,' content to roam the world in later years and pick up local backing bands as he went. Much loved at Ronnies in London, for example.... One wonders if it was the vaudeville family he was born into as much as the musician's life that made Zoot Sims as peripatic as he was? Cool name as well: John Haley Sims is o.k. but - Zoot... says it all... (This old Downbeat article gives the origins of the nickname... and more... ). One of the 'Four Brothers,' out of Lester, a consummate swinging improviser. He solos first. Pepper next, a more emotive sound – but Art, after all, carried more emotional baggage. One is struck by his sound – quite a ways from Bird, he always prided himself on his inviduality. The drums prod accurately behind - Billy Higgins in the chair. Piano comes in on a rolling motif. Block chords, octave doubling, a full sound. Ray Brown takes a chorus or two, showing his technique from top to bottom – horn lines transposed. The saxes return to ride it out, supported by orchestral piano from Feldman.
'Georgia on my mind.' A gentle introduction on piano – then the two trombones enter on a slow, lazy Hoagy-ish stroll – theme and comments intimitately entwined. Kai Winding and J.J. Johnson were a very successful if unusual outfit in their day – there have not been many combos fronted by two trombones. Twinkling piano takes it out...
A brisker version: Elmo Hope's quartet, with Frank Foster on tenor. The obscure Hope and the underrated Foster give this a good reading. Tenor solo first – Hope following him all the way - a fulsome piano backing. The drums coming through more strongly to prod him along as the solo progresses. Hope plays an expansive and full melodic line with some chasing double timed phrases. Foster returns briefly then Hope again before ending.
Ray Charles of course recorded a definitive version of 'Georgia.' Let us not be too obvious and play it – just a fragment – which is looped for the main theme of Ludacris and Field Mob's take on 'Georgia.' A clever hip hop take expanding on the basic shell - Ray sampled - which is woven in and out of the track – call and response, anyone? This track is not rated in some circles but, despite its occasional clumsiness, I like the meshing of the old and new...
Not to leave without something from the Genius... here he is playing 'What'd I Say.' I saw Ray Charles several times in the sixties and this was always the climax of the show... wild shit...
Those 'social rhythms' – where jazz and rhythm and blues cross-feed. I was never that enamoured of Steve Coleman's admittedly brave attempts to bring in contemporary strands of pop music into jazz – but here's an energetic blow out from a stellar band under his name:
'Coleman's goal here was to find the common link among all the currents in 20th century creative black music...' (From a review of the album here... scroll down...).
Marvin 'Smitty' Smith makes a brave stab at giving the funk rhythm enough flexibility for jazzers to play over – conjoined to the great Ed Blackwell. 'Pass it on.' A muscular tenor solo from Von Freeman – then Kenny Wheeler (?) - yes indeed – unfazed by the clamour he rips out some high note bravura as if to the manner borne and sounds as if he was enjoying himself... Dave Holland up next – bouncing off a vamp for a brief strum. All in then for a mutual blow before they go back into the theme. Throw in old-school (the venerable) Tommy Flanagan to the mix and what should be a mess works very well... Uplifting...
Improvisation comes in many colours – which is a clumsy but well-intentioned lead in the Terry Riley and 'Rainbow in Curved Air' from 1969. Keyboard skirling like amphetamine bagpipes over an insistent vamp. One of the loci where jazz and improvisation specifically meet minimalism and Eastern musics. Play back to back with any Alice Coltrane... I suspect that this album was more influential than it has been given credit for... tracking the electronic ripples is fascinating...
In the Videodrome...
Zoot plays 'My Old Flame...
Shelly Manne from 1970... Coop in tenor
Brother Ray...
and again in Japan...
Shelley Mann
Mike Wofford (p); Frank Strozier (as); Conte Candoli (t); Monty Budwig (b); Shelly Manne (d)
Bleep
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Art Pepper/Zoot Sims
Art Pepper (as) Zoot Sims (ts) Victor Feldman (p) Ray Brown (b) Billy Higgins (d)
Breakdown Blues
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Elmo Hope Quartet
Frank Foster (ts), Elmo Hope (p), John Ore (b), Arthur Taylor (d)
Georgia on my Mind
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J.J. Johnson, Kai Winding (tr); Bill Evans (p); Paul Chambers (b); Roy Haynes (d);
Georgia on my mind
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Ludacris/Field Mob
Georgia
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Steve Coleman
Steve Coleman (as) Von Freeman (ts) Kenny Wheeler (t) Kevin Eubanks (g) Tommy Flanagan (p) Dave Holland (b) Marvin Smitty Smith, Ed Blackwell (d)
Pass it on
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Terry Riley
Rainbow in Curved Air
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Saturday, March 03, 2007
Jackie McLean... Sonny Rollins... Gil Evans... John Zorn... Phil Woods/Johnny Griffin... Roscoe Mitchell...
Sonny Rollins at the Village Vanguard in 1957. Stomping in an uppish asymmetrical dance across the standard 'I've got you under my skin.' Recorded twenty years before the last track, it seems more free, somehow – just Rollins with bass and drums as he explores the nooks and crannies of the tune with Don Bailey's steady bass and La Roca up in the mix behind him, parrying his lines. Rollins, a supreme melodicist, his solo pulling out fragments of theme and tossing them this way and that while always retaining an architectural coherence that sees way beyond the next few bars and chords. 8 bar trades with the drummer strike fire... Bailey come in for a fast stroll over the four four with fragments of horn sporadically inserted and insistent hihat. One of the great live recordings?
Gil Evans:
'The brisk Monk favorite is tagged here with a polyphonic, multi-horn blowout that simultaneously recalls New Orleans Dixieland while pointing the way toward the avant garde movements of the ‘60s.' (From here...).
Gil opens the track with some of his dissonant bluesy rippling piano clusters. Johnny Coles plays a restrained, delicately coloured solo – followed by Steve Lacy, who knew Monk's material well – and proves it here. The ensemble gathers power behind the trombone solo – before Gil returns for some more Monkish stabs. Band again – soaring steadily into that 'polyphonic, multi-horn blowout,' striped here and there by Evans' piano – which returns again for more solo work. Interesting resonances – Gil playing off Monk but adding his own colour...
More homage – from John Zorn to Ornette, from his album 'Spy vs Spy.' A two horn assault on 'Mob Job,' with the two drummers clattering away across a very spacy mix and Mark Dresser in floating bass support. This album was famous for its all-out grabbing of Coleman's material by the throat – a hardcore rock aesthetic from start to finish. Yet – the essence remains – that free floating theme across doubled rhythms which is a well-known Ornette tactic is gainfully employed here, for example... in fact, more reverence than meets the immediate ear, perhaps – how can you out-Ornette, after all? One of those pivotal albums that display connections beyond jazz that were not so obvious once - but now, given the growing links between noise rock and improv...
Another oddity... Phil Woods and Johnny Griffin, playing 'Hand in Glove.' Both saxophonists had of course played with Monk – an interesting link, further strengthened by the presence of the drummer on this session, Ben Riley. Woods first, riding lithely across the changes. Mr Griffin next, in affable mood, it seems. Followed by Cedar Walton, a bright solo, in keeping with the overall mood of the piece, interposing a quote from 'Coming through the Rye' towards the end in grand bop fashion. Alto and tenor swap lines in friendly combat. Nothing angst-ridden or earth-shattering perhaps – just first-class musicians on a bouncing, breezy date. Quality...
Roscoe Mitchell and a quintet from 2005. A swirling storm as the ensemble criss-cross each other's lines on 'Take One.' So much acoustic ground is covered that it seems like a bigger band. Mitchell sounds like an angry, buzz-sawing giant wasp, Corey Wilkes trumpet is declamatory but further back in the mix than the saxophone, giving an odd balance(but he sounds like a find), the piano of Craig Taborn Taylor-esque in its relentless barrage of notes across the registers. The storm ebbs to leave trumpet and drums – then just drums... the resonations of the cymbals cutting crisply through the now-cleared air... Fiery stuff...
Jackie Mclean/The Great Jazz Trio
(Jackie Mclean (as); Hank Jones (p); Ron Carter (b); Tony Williams (d) ).
Confirmation
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Sonny Rollins
(Sonny Rollins (ts) Don Bailey (b) Pete LaRoca (d) ).
I've got you under my skin
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Gil Evans
Collective personnel for album:
Gil Evans (p); Johnny Coles, Louis Mucci, Ernie Royal, Clyde Reasinger, Allen Smith, Danny Stiles (t); Frank Rehak, Joe Bennett, Tom Mitchell, Bill Elton, Curtis Fuller, Dick Lieb, Jimmy Cleveland, Rod Levitt (tr); Julius Watkins, Bob Northern, Earl Chapin (fr h); Harvey Phillips, Bill Barber (tu); Cannonball Adderley, Eddie Caine, (as); Gerald Sanfino, Phil Bodner, Al Block (f, cl); Steve Lacy (ss); Chuck Wayne, Ray Crawford (g); Paul Chambers, Dick Carter, Tommy Potter (b); Philly Joe Jones, Art Blakey, Dennis Charles, Elvin Jones (d) ).
Straight no chaser
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John Zorn
(John Zorn, Tim Berne (as); Mark Dresser (b); Michael Vatcher, Joey Baron (d) ).
Mob Job
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Phil Woods/Johnny Griffin
(Phil Woods (as); Johnny Griffin (ts); Cedar Walton (p); Peter Washington (b); Ben Riley (d) ).
Hand in Glove
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Roscoe Mitchell Quintet
(Roscoe Mitchell (as); Corey Wilkes (t); Craig Taborn (p); Jaribu Shahid (b); Tani Tabal (d) ).
Take One
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