Showing posts with label Barry Guy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barry Guy. Show all posts

Sunday, October 21, 2012

EVAN PARKER, PAUL DUNMALL, BARRY GUY, TONY LEVIN - Birmingham Concert (1996)








Label: Rare Music – RM 026
Format: CD, Album Country: UK Released: 1996
Style: Free Improvisation
Recorded By – Paul Westwater
Recorded By, Mastered By – Dave Bernez
Recorded at Birmingham Midland Institute on March 5, 1993
New Design by ART&JAZZ Studio SALVARICA – 2012
Artwork and Complete Design by Vitko Salvarica


"Life is really unpredictable. Just in time to prepare for the publication of this album, came the news of the death of David S. Ware. It wouldn't, of course, any nothing unusual, that my planned post, it was not covered with beautiful memories of a particular event, and the memory of the second anniversary of the death of one of my favorite British drummer Tony Levin.
In that spirit, I wrote a few words, and made, specially designed for the occasion, a new look album.
Of course, because of the urgency of the situation, I am respond quickly, and pay tribute to the great creator David S. Ware, but, by then I had to "Birmingham Concert" moved for a few hours later.

Well, if it was meant to be, that we have two "memorial posts" in the series, then so be it".


Note:

Recently, digging through my music library looking for something else of course, I am stumbled on this brilliant album, and promptly forgot his original intention. The memories and emotions began to haunt my mind, and with each new listening, I was totally fascinated by Tony's masterful drumming.

For several months, it will be twenty years from the legendary concert (one of my favorites of this quartet), and two years since the death of Tony Levin.
Tony Levin, an internationally respected free jazz drummer, has died aged 71, on 3 February 2011.

In honor of Tony Levin and this unique concert, I decided to create a completely new design of the album.

Salute, and enjoy the music.
Vitko


Review:

In many ways, this is the kind of "typical" all-star, British, free improv session heard during the '90s: robust, muscular playing by an impressive cast. In concept, it's not very different from dozens of others; its special quality lies in both the intensity of the performance and in the choice of players, particularly the pairing of saxophonists Parker and Dunmall. The former, by this time, was an eminence grise of the movement, a veteran who, while still capable of surprising developments, had essentially established his language and who had already influenced a younger generation of players. Dunmall, while hardly a youngster, was in the process of cementing his own identity and his approach contrasts deliciously with his elder's. Parker tends to attack matters from a fairly intellectual stance, achieving his own brand of ecstasy, one suspects, through a rigorously applied system that, at its best, explodes from its own hermeticism. Dunmall appears to take a more intuitive, less formal approach, using a larger sound that comes across as pastorally romantic to Parker's urbanity. This makes for a fine tension as each player coaxes or accedes to the other, constantly shifting the balance of the general tenor of the improvisation. And this is without even mentioning the contributions of the extraordinary Barry Guy on bass, a musician of awesome sensitivity to the playing of his bandmates as well as one capable of producing sublime and innovative music of his own. Finally, Tony Levin is entirely adequate drummer, to ignited just the right amount of extra fire and invention to propel this session into even higher realms. 
As is, Birmingham Concert is a fine release and is easily recommended to any fans of the musicians involved.

~ Brian Olewnick, All Music Guide




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Friday, September 7, 2012

FUTTERMAN-JORDAN QUINTET - Nickelsdorf Konfrontation (1995)



The Joel Futterman - 'Kidd' Jordan Quintet
Nickelsdorf Konfrontation
SILKHEART - Cat. No.: SHCD143


Liner Notes

Nat Hentoff wrote the following in his liner notes for Joel Futterman's 1984 album, Inneraction, "True musicians have an irrepressible urge and a need to share their strongest, most delicate, most spontaneous feelings." In his fourth release for Silkheart Records, Futterman still displays that irrepressible urge. However, over the last decade the urge has been transformed and channeled into a highly focused, disciplined school of through-composed, what the Germans once called durchkomponiert, improvisational music. Thought of in less analytical terms, Futterman is continuing to define the once sole purview of Coltrane - that musical tradition of playing extended sets without repeating oneself. Long misunderstood though, Trane's vision, and now Futterman's, is not about playing 'free' or playing 'out'. And it is not about predetermined notions of what jazz is, or was, or should be. It is about musicians composing in the moment, resolving one phrase with the next, and through the process of continuous resolution, arriving at a place not yet discovered.

Just as Joel Futterman's vision has evolved over the past decade, so too have his musical associations. This CD features his strongest co- leader since Jimmy Lyons, Edward 'Kidd' Jordan on tenor saxophone. In fact, one reviewer termed their association, the 'Twin Axis of Power'. These two musical soul mates are finally delivering Trane's long sought promise for his music: that sense of being, derived from the compositional clarity of musicians truly interacting musically in the moment. Like Futterman, 'Kidd' Jordan has labored most of his professional life in relative obscurity to all but the most avid jazz fans. Living and working from New Orleans for more than 40 years, he has developed a very personal musical conception based on a fundamental philosophy. As 'Kidd' describes it, "Jazz is an improvised music. It is in constant change." This philosophy is in large part why he and Futterman have found such a complementary resonance in their musical concept of continuous movement and resolution within the context of the jazz tradition.

If resolving the dichotomy seemingly rested between improvisation and composition was not enough, this first release by Futterman and Jordan also displays a seamless resolution of two dissimilar jazz traditions: the European tradition steeped in atonality, and the American tradition steeped in the blues.

From the European jazz tradition, this recording features two of its most prominent proponents, veteran Barry Guy on bass and Mats Gustafsson on tenor and baritone saxophones. Guy, whose London Jazz Composers Orchestra recently marked its 25th anniversary, clearly not only understands the vision of his co-leaders, but is able to articulate that understanding in an extended musical context. In doing so, he brings to this music a highly refined concept of pulse, as opposed to time, within the framework of a virtuoso technique. Mats Gustafsson, one of Sweden's foremost new music performers is the enfant terrible of the group. Mats is always pushing and reaching for that next level of sound. In this recording, his continuous pursuit of the unknown provides a selective counterpoint to the cool refined sound of 'Kidd' Jordan that keeps the music's tonality continuously moving forward .

Rounding out the quintet is Alvin Leroy Fielder, Jr., on drums and percussion. Alvin, like the co-leaders, is a remarkably under-documented drummer in the finest American jazz tradition. A scholar of the Amencan jazz drumming tradition, especially that of Ed Blackwell, and one of the onginal members of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM), Alvin has finally found a musical resting place in the Futterman - Jordan home. In this recording's first and umcharacteristically (for Futterman) short selection, Hear With You, the listener is treated to the whimsical side of Futterman and 'Kidd' as they run the quintet through its paces. The close interplay the co-leaders exhibit in this opening miniature - trading phrases on and off the beat with one another as well as with the rest of the group only serves to set up the listener for what is yet to come.

Futterman and Jordan have been performing together for about a year and Soul Mates personifies the closeness they have developed during this period. The piece also reflects the development of their compositional philosophies which are based on taking the best of the American jazz tradition and pushing the tradition beyond the paradigms that have bound it up since the late sixties. What seemingly begins as a harmonically interesting extended performance with 'Kidd' stretching the upper registers of his horn and Joel virtually using every inch of the piano, slowly but inexorably resolves to a beautiful ballad in the finest jazz tradition. It is this concept of continuous resolution in Soul Mates that provides a picture window view of not only where these two musicians have been, but more importantly, where they are going. While there is no question that the echoes of Trane, Shepp, Ayler, and Coleman are present in Jordan's compositional conceptions, the operative word is 'echoes'. Although there are few such 'echoes' in Futterman's playing, due largely in part to his self imposed isolation for the past two decades, this duet is clearly spawned from the finest mainstream of the American jazz tradition.

By contrast, Meeting Place, a trio with Futterman, Guy, and Gustafsson is squarely in the mainstream of the modern European jazz tradition. This piece showcases the very physical 'in your face' style that has become a trademark of Mats' playing, but done so in a sophisticated compositional structure. The five-part structure serves to both focus the strength of Mats' reedwork technique while providing a context for its development. Each of this piece's five parts are bridged by a duet of Barry performing some very subtle arco work with Joel working inside the piano with the precision of a harpist. On either side of the bridges, Mats explores every possible sonorous nook and cranny of his instruments. Behind Mats, Barry and Joel maintain a continuous current of compositional development that ultimately resolves itself in a most unexpected manner. Meeting places can be public or private, planned or unplanned; this piece describes each.

Building on the musical conceptions displayed in their duet, Futterman and Jordan bring all the members of the quintet together in the centerpiece of this recording, Nickelsdorf Summit. In almost 45 minutes, divided among seven continuous parts each with its own distinct personality, this composition explores the extreme reaches of the best each musician has to offer - within a unified whole. In this piece, Futterman continuously shifts from inside to outside the piano, while using his curved soprano and Indian flute for coloring, in a continual search for the next resolution and phrase. All the while, Jordan continuously changes the moods, colors, and melodic constructs of the music. In doing so, they not only continuously trade phrases with one another, but keep the music moving in a direction that fully integrates each of the other three members.

Fournier opens with an extended drum solo by Alvin Fielder, one of the rare instances that the spotlight has moved his way. This piece is based on another composition, Four For Fournier, that Alvin wrote for his longtime friend, Vernel Fournier, while Vernel was recovering from a stroke. Always the consummate sideman and gentleman, Fielder seeks to blend his style of playing with the musicians around him. Or, as Alvin says, "Similar conception in thought." In doing so, he brings no preconceived conceptions about the music's rhythms to the studio. As very aptly shown in this piece, Alvin is content to let the music flow, only seeking to be its rhythmic channel. With this recording, Joel Futterman and 'Kidd' Jordan have crafted a quintet performance that represents the purity of the jazz tradition - a purity that harkens back to another time. In its purity though, this music also holds the promise of the future. So, this recording closes with the bookend of its opener, Going With You. Just as Hear With You sets up the listener for the rest of this recording, Going With You, sets up the listener for what is to come.

Philip R. Egert, September 1995


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Thursday, July 19, 2012

HOWARD RILEY TRIO – The Day Will Come (1970/1999) [Repost]






Columbia – 494434 2; Format: CD, Album, Reissue; Country: UK, Released: 1999
Style: Free Jazz, Contemporary Jazz, Free Improvisation; Barcode: 5 099749 443426
RE-Design by ART&JAZZ Studio SALVARICA, Engineer – Mike FitzHenry, Producer – David Howells Originally released on – CBS – 64077; Format: Vinyl, LP, Album; Country: UK, Released: 1970
Recorded: London, March 1st and April 17th, 1970

This is one of my favourite jazz records. It straddles a very interesting middle ground between complete abstraction and more traditional forms of jazz improvisation. Great tunes with unique moods. Great interplay ampongst the trio. Fantastic bass playing. The title track is even insanely catchy in an almost pop tune way. If you have any interest in British avant- garde jazz, don ’ t miss this. 

 Howard Riley – short biography:

Born as John Howard Riley, 16 February 1943, Huddersfield, Yorkshire, England. Riley began playing piano at the age of six, although it was another 10 years before he began to play jazz. At university he studied under Bernard Rands at Bangor, North Wales (1961-66) gaining BA and MA degrees, then with David Baker at Indiana, adding M.Mus to his name in 1967. From 1967-70 he studied for his PhD at York University under Wilfred Mellers, who wrote a piece (Yeibichai) for symphony orchestra, scat singer and jazz trio that was performed by the BBC Symphony Orchestra, Frank Holder and Riley ’ s trio at the 1969 Proms. Riley had led a trio at Bangor, and later joined Evan Parker ’ s quartet. On his return from Indiana he formed a trio with Barry Guy (and sometimes Ron Rubin) and Jon Hiseman (also Tony Oxley and, later, Alan Jackson) and began writing for bands including the Spontaneous Music Ensemble and the Don Rendell – Ian Carr Quintet. At this time he also began to have his chamber and orchestral pieces performed in concert, and was a founder member of the Musicians ’ Co- Operative. He has composed for Barry Guy ’ s London Jazz Composers ’ Orchestra and the New Jazz Orchestra and played with Keith Tippett, John McLaughlin (who had also occasionally sat in with the late 60s trio), Jaki Byard, Elton Dean, the LJCO (being the featured soloist on their Double Trouble), Barbara Thompson, Oxley and many others. He has also taught at the Guildhall and Goldsmith ’ s schools of music in London and at the Center Of The Creative And Performing Arts in Buffalo. In the late 80s he began to release both old and new recordings on his own cassette label, Falcon Tapes. In 1990, he and Dean co-led a quartet of improvisers on a set of jazz standards, All The Tradition.

Review:

An occupational hazard of jazz musicians is prolixity, the urge to play on and on even when inspiration begins drying up. Performers with a hard grounding in classical disciplines— especially compositional disciplines—tend to avoid this, which may be why the music on this LP is so splendidly concise and pithy. For both Howard Riley and his bass player, Barry Guy, are practising ‘ straight ’ composers as well as jazz musicians. This shows in their work, not in the sense of classical devices being grafted on uneasily, but in the way they think about their music. Eclipse, mixing common and triple time, provides an easily grasped example, especially Riley ’ s piano solo, which instead of improvising on the chords or shape of the theme sets about developing certain elements of it. All the compositions are by either Howard Riley or Barry Guy, and each has a genuine identity of its own. One of the best is Winter, in nicely contrasting 9/4 and 8/4, its open intervals suggesting the chilliness of the title, although Riley did not set out with any intention of being programmatic. Sad Was The Song, slow and elegant, is a duet for bass and piano; Sphere and Score are brisk, brief and stick to the point; High, mostly in drawn-out 10/4, has an attractive interior buoyancy; Funeral Song involves sounds as such, with bass strings scraped, piano wires plucked and drum skins rubbed instead of struck, yet has a ripe, much more romantic middle section; Games is eruptive, Dawn Vision fairly loose, the solos stretching out for once, while The Day Will Come has a gospel feel, popinfluenced drumming and—as Riley ’ s sleevenote takes care to point out—a faintly ironic stance. Barry Guy ’ s bass playing is superb throughout the LP but at its most brilliant, perhaps, in Playtime, a real tour-de-force. This is, in fact, an outstandingly good record, and as well as composing and playing by Riley and Guy there is exceptionally intelligent and sensitive drumming from Alan Jackson. Fanciers of the older-established sorts of piano-bass- drums trios may find the music a bit cryptic to start with but familiarity should breed enjoyment.

By C.F. (Gramophon, January 1971, Page 135)



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Monday, July 16, 2012

JOHN STEVENS – Application Interaction And... (1978/2002) [Repost]





Label: Hi 4 Head Records; Catalog#: HFHCD002; UK – 2002
Recorded on 31 August 1978 at Sound Suite Studios, London
Originally released on Spotlite Records
Style: avant-garde, free improvisation, Contemporary Jazz, Free Jazz
Music By [All Tracks] – Barry Guy, John Stevens (2), Trevor Watts; Photography By [Original Photographs] – Valerie Wilmer; Design – Malcolm Walker; RE-Design by ART&JAZZ Studio SALVARICA; Producer [Original Production] – Tony Williams; Reissue Producer – Nick Dart

The trio of drummer John Stevens, bassist Barry Guy and saxophonist Trevor Watts was one of Stevens ’ s hottest small groups and the two records they cut for Spotlite in the late 70s are Atlantic straddling classics that reconcile the emotive supernatural force of the late Albert Ayler with the exacting microdetail of the post SME set. Application Interaction And… was the second of these discs, the first, No Fear, having already been made available on CD by Hi 4 Head. At points the fidelity is pretty murky, with Stevens sounding like he ’ s playing his kit with boxing gloves and Guy ’ s bass almost overloading the speakers but all of that bottom end works as a delicious contrast to the upper register blasts that Watts peels from the ceiling. Guy is on inspired form and Watts ’ evocative, bluesy cries bring out the Charlie Haden in him, dropping yo-yoing notes right into the bell of Watts ’ s horn and plunging across register. The arco passage that caps the first piece sounds like more like a tiny rainbow of electronics than mere hairs on wire and Watts falls into step with a slow marching motif that feels more channelled than improvised. Stevens is better served by the second track, where his subtle time inversions and emphatic punctuation throw up countless phantom goalposts for Guy and Watts to make for. An excellent restoration of a great set.



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