Label:
About Time Records – AT-1002
Format:
Vinyl, LP / Country: US / Released: 1979
Style:
Avant-garde, Free Jazz, Free Improvisation
Recorded live at
Soundscape in New York City, July 6, 1979.
Album
Design by – Therese Bolton
Cover
and Liner Photographs by – Doug Fidoten
Engineer
by – Larry Shengold
Produced
by – Jerome Cooper in association with Verna Gillis
All
music composed by Jerome Cooper
Matrix
/ Runout (A-side): AT-1002-A [DC] FW/NY (EDP in ellipse)
Matrix
/ Runout (B-side): AT-1002-B-1 (EDP in ellipse) [DC] FW/NY
Original
US pressing. Solo album of a drummer of the LOFT team.
Tracklist:
A - The Unpredictability Of Predictability:
A - The Unpredictability Of Predictability:
1
- Movement A, B (flute, whistle,
chiramia, bass drum, sock cymbal) .................... 9:59
2
- Movement C (drum set / mallet)
..................................................................... 4:29
3
- Movement C1 (floor tom-tom, bass
drum, sock cymbal, voice) ........................ 6:40
B - Bert
The Cat (balaphone, chiramia, bass
drum, sock cymbal) ...................... 20:37
"This
is not just an album for drummers... anyone into music can dig it this music.
Classical music people can dig it because it's structured, people into rock
because of the beat, people into jazz because of the improvisation aspect, and
those into ethnic music because of the instruments involved." -- Jerome
Cooper
A
great solo performance from Jerome Cooper – not just drums and percussion, but
work on flute, balaphone, and other instruments too! Cooper really brings all
of his most thoughtful elements into play here – working slowly, and covering
space with ideas that really take some time to stretch out and find themselves
– then confidently move forward to open up new chapters in the performance – a
bit like some of the best early moments of the Art Ensemble Of Chicago, but
presented here as a solo act! Side one features "The Unpredictability Of
Predictability", in four movements – and side two features "Bert The
Cat".
Not
many jazz drummers present entire albums of themselves in solo format, but when
they do, chances are they're going to haul out everything including the kitchen
sink to dazzle the listener with their range and dexterity. Not Jerome Cooper.
This superb musician, known primarily for his masterful and invaluable
contributions to the fine trio Revolutionary Ensemble, treats his solo
performances as free-standing compositions scored for only certain instruments
from which he extracts huge volumes of sounds and rhythms. For example,
"Bert the Cat" is written for balaphone (an African ancestor of the
marimba), chiramia (a double-reed instrument that sounds liked a more
softly-timbred shenai), bass drum, and sock cymbal. Using only these four
elements, Cooper constructs a rich, propulsive theme so inherently fascinating
that one soon forgets one is listening to only a solo percussionist. Cooper has
no interest in wowing the listener by playing fast or loud, but simply desires
to develop lovely rhythms and melodic patterns and allow them to flower. A fine
recording and wonderful antidote for those who claim to be bored by drum solos.
(_Review
by Brian Olewnick)
If
you find it, buy this album!