Showing posts with label Russ Lossing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Russ Lossing. Show all posts
Monday, February 4, 2013
RUSS LOSSING / MAT MANERI / MARK DRESSER – Metal Rat (2006)
Label: Clean Feed – CF064CD
Format: CD, Album; Country: Portugal - Released: Dec 2006
Style: Free Improvisation, Free Jazz, avant-garde
Recorded at Acoustic Studios, Brooklyn, N.Y. by Michael Brorby, 2006
Mixed at Skulyne Productions, Warren N.J.by Paul Wickliffe
Mastered by Luis Delgado / Produced by Russ Lossing
Design by Rui Garrido
''Metal Rat'' with Russ Lossing, Mat Maneri and Mark Dresser has been hailed a masterpiece by critics and musicians.
Review:
A focused session of collective free improvisation conceived by pianist Russ Lossing, Metal Rat features the spontaneous interplay of three sympathetic musicians. Joined by violist Mat Maneri and bassist Mark Dresser, Lossing booked a recording studio for a mere four hours to instill a "real sense of urgency" to the proceedings. The ensuing session benefits from this pre-imposed constraint by lending an air of palpable tension to the work. Full of simmering intensity and dramatic flair, this is dark, intuitive chamber jazz at its finest.
The album is composed of four trio excursions, four duets and two distinctive originals written by Lossing, the blistering "Turn" and the introspective "Is Thick With." The majority of the pieces are brief sketches, from two to four minutes in duration, with "Ch'ien" the only exception. At fourteen minutes, it is the album's tour-de-force, an epic suite of turbulent emotional transformation, circumnavigating jittery agitation, hopeful optimism and bittersweet resignation.
Throughout the record, Lossing reveals a shadowy, modernist sensibility; melancholy pointillism, spectral glisses, pulverizing clusters, and searing embers erupt from his keys. Maneri's microtonal viola technique is singularly expressive, a hollow, crying tone that glides from mournful to caustic. Dresser's resonant bass playing is typically magnificent; his sinewy arco work is especially plangent.
The trio stretches formal concepts of accompaniment, call-and-response and counterpoint with clairvoyant elasticity. No one player dominates as each responds in turn with confirmation or confrontation. Their intuitive declarations spur on new avenues for exploration. The session unfolds gradually with chamber-like restraint, punctuated by sudden interjections of taut dissonance.
Employing a monochromatic palette of deep chiaroscuro, the album alternates between unsettling agitation and somber melancholy. Metal Rat is a subtle, rewarding document of free improvisation from three acknowledged masters of the form.
_ By TROY COLLINS, Published: June 13, 2007 (AAJ)
Links in Comments!
Sunday, October 14, 2012
SCOTT CUTSHALL – Zyphoid Process (1994)
CMP Records; CMP CD 76
(P) (C) 1996 CMP Records GMBH
Recorded: June 1994; Released: 1996, Germany
Recorded by Kent Heckman at Red Rock Studios, Saylorsburg, PA, June 1994 Assistant Engineer: Jessica Everett
Produced by Scott Cutshall, Dave Liebman, Russ Lossing and Tony Marino
Associate Producer: Lesli Cutshall
Art and design for CMP by Ulf v.Kanitz / Photo of Scott Cutshall by Jim Gaffney
„Law Years “ is dedicated to my first mentor – Floyd Williams Jr., 2 April 1929 – 18 January 1994.
(Scott Cutshall)
1. Zyphoid Process (20:53) [S.Cutshall, R.Lossing, T.Marino]
2. Law Years (9:03) [Ornette Coleman]
3. Poetics (14:42) [S.Cutshall, D.Liebman, R.Lossing, T.Marino]
4. Dear Lord (7:42) [John Coltrane]
Musicians :
Scott Cutshall : drums, percussion
Dave Liebman : soprano saxophone on 3,4
Russ Lossing : piano
Tony Marino : bass
"If you work with great musicians, you get great results," Cutshall said. "I feel very fortunate to be able to do this."
Linear Notes:
Scott did the „RIGHT THING “!! He let the musicians just play – no words, no directions, no attitude – just make music. The result is three and four musicians talking DIRECTLY with each other, rather than a specific piece of music acting as the subject of discussion. In other words, no intermediary „thing “ as a reference point. All each of us had was the moment and the other people playing. After all, isn't that the point of improvisation?
However, when there was a piece of music, what could be lovelier than one of the most simple diatonic, melodic/harmonic combinations ever written by one of the most sophisticated and complex musicians who ever lived? ... - ... John Coltrane’s prayer – „Dear Lord “ .
YES: SCOTT DID THE RIGHT THING!!
By David Liebman
Welcome to new prog-blog "Different Perspectives In My Room...!".
Enjoy the music, and please leave a comment. Thanks in advance.
Enjoy the music, and please leave a comment. Thanks in advance.
Link in Comments!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)





