Showing posts with label Ewald Oberleitner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ewald Oberleitner. Show all posts

Monday, May 1, 2017

NEIGHBOURS (with Fred Anderson and Bill Brimfield) – Accents (MRC / LP-1978)




Label: Musicians Record Co. – 1C 066-32 854
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album / Country: Germany / Released: 1978
Style: Free Jazz, Free Improvisation
Recorded February 1977 at Rüssl Tonstudio Hamburg, Germany.
Cover Design – Bruno Lefeldt
Rec. Engineer – Gero von Gerlach
Mix – Gero von Gerlach / Wolfgang Kunert
Printed – by 4P Nicolaus, Köln, Germany
(MRC / EMI Electrola, 1978)
Production – Musicians Record Co.
Label Code: LC 5527
Matrix / Runout (Side A, etched): 1C•066-32 854-A-0 PF
Matrix / Runout (Side B, etched): 1C•066-32 854-B-0 PF

A -  a) The Little Fox Run ........................................................................................ 8:00
           Composed By – Fred Anderson
       b) Adam´s Rib .................................................................................................. 9:25
           Composed By – Bill Brimfield
       c) Our Theme ................................................................................................... 0:35
           Composed By – Fred Anderson
B1 - Knautschlack / A Skelett .................................................................................. 4:15
        Composed By – John Preininger
B2 - Snales Pace .................................................................................................... 3:40
        Composed By – Dieter Glawischnig, Karl Berger
B3 - The Worm In Eve´s Apple / Twillight .............................................................. 12:55
        Composed By – Ewald Oberleitner, Fred Anderson

Dieter Glawischnig – piano
Ewald Oberleitner – bass
Joe Preininger – drums, percussion
+
Fred Anderson – tenor saxophone
Bill Brimfield – trumpet

Rare 1977 Original. Grey and white label with "MRC" in bold black and white letters. Rrecorded in Hamburg, Germany in 1977. Very inspirational, free jazz set by the superb Austrian trio Neighbours plus Fred Anderson on tenor sax and Bill Brimfield on trumpet.



In the sixties and seventies Fred Anderson played with musicians such as Bill Brimfield, Archie Shepp, Jack DeJohnette, Joseph Jarman and Muhal Richard Abrams, and other members of the AACM's. Europe was first visited in 1977 in the company of his longtime colleague, trumpeter Bill Brimfield. Chicago boys were the guests of the Austrian trio Neighbours (Ewald Oberleitner - bass, Joe Preininger - drums), led by pianist Dieter Glawischnig. In Hamburg they recorded the LP entitled Accents. In November 1978, Neighbours and Fred Anderson also performed in Ex Yugoslavia in the Amphitheater II, "Maribor Grammar School" (Slovenia) and RTV Zagreb (Croatia) live LP recorded Neighbours + Fred Anderson. Fred is at this time in Europe also played with his quartet (B. Brimfield - trumpet, Steven Palmore - bass, Hamid Drake - drums) and recorded the album Another Place and Live in Verona.   (by V. S.)



If you find it, buy this album!

Thursday, July 10, 2014

TONE JANSA QUARTET – Bouyancy (LP-1976-78)



Label: Cosmic Sounds – CS-15 LP
Format: Vinyl, LP, Compilation; Country: UK - Released: 2001
Style: Post Bop, Modal, Free Jazz
Previously released in Yugoslavia on RTB label on two albums:
Tone Janša Kvartet - RTB LP 4202, 1976 (tracks 1,2)
Tone Janša Kvartet - RTB LP 4205, 1978 (tracks 3,4,5,6)
Compiled By – Zeljko Kerleta
Phonographic Copyright (p) – Cosmic Sounds
Limited edition high-quality Vinyl LPs reissue.

A1 - Yudach (Juda) . . . 15:52
A2 - Milky Way (Rimska Cesta) – Herald Neuwirth - piano . . . 8:38
A3 - Vision (Vizija) . . . 4:37
B1 - Motive (Motiv) . . . 16:23
B2 - Bouyancy (Vzgon) . . . 3:40
B3 - Sun (Sonce) . . . 9:36

TONE JANSA — Sax (Alto), Sax (Tenor)
ANDRE JEANQUARTIER — Piano
EWALD OBERLEITNER — Bass
JOHANN PREININGER — Drums

In 70's Pharoah Sanders wasn't listening to Tone Jansa, neither Tone was listening to Pharoah but two musicians at two different parts of the world were creating at the same time unbelievably similar music. It is obvious where both of them got inspiration - Coltrane. Two albums that Tone recorded in 70's for RTB label are masterpieces of Yugoslavian Jazz. The third one that he did at the same time and in a same quality came out on Helidon label and is well worth checking.
Tone's music is not worth explaining, it has to be heard. It is very spiritual at the moments, very deep and soulful and sometime just cheerful and moving, giving you urge to dance or just wiggle. Couple of the tracks might sound to long for you but if you listen to them carefully, when they finish you want more and the main theme stays in your had all day long........

"Rare recordings from Yugoslavian sax player Tone Jansa - a free-thinking 70s talent with a post-Coltrane spiritual approach to jazz! Jansa's working here in a quartet with piano, bass, and drums -- and he plays alto, tenor, and flute in long spiralling solos that branch out, searching sonically for new horizons, in the mode of some of the better early 70s work by Americans like Carlos Garnett or Pharoah Sanders. "

"Black americas sound of the 70's, wasn't something that the YU jazzmen of the same period did hang on to. Tone is a precious jewel of what may be called the fusion sound of YU jazz."

"Yugoslavian rare groove. 'Vision' instantly reminded me of Courtny Pine new album, kind of soul jazz vibe going on and yes, very nice indeed. The rest of the album is very straight ahead, very spiritual, very much in a kind of John Klemmer, Pharoah Sanders kind of mid 70's vibe..."


"This compilation taken from two seminal albums in the history of Eastern European jazz — particularly in what used to be Yugoslavia — is a welcome find in the bins of the United States and England. Saxophonist Tone Jansa is a giant of a man, and a saxophonist who has much in common with both Pharaoh Sanders and the giant who influenced him, John Coltrane. This quartet made a total of five records, and one in quintet and sextet settings. But the two that are referred to here should be reissued in their entirety. Oh well, what can I do? The first two tracks of this outrageously beautiful, spiritually motivated open modal jazz is from the Tone Jansa Jazz Kvartet disc on RTB in 1976, and the last four are from the Tone Jansa Kvartet disc on the same label from 1978. There is a quiet fire in Jansa's playing; like Sanders, he seeks out the melodic propensity in scalar problems — especially in contrapuntal situations with pianist Andre Jeanquartier on 'Motive' and 'Yudach.' Both men tend to emphasize the mode inside the interval that creates sparks of lyrical fire between them and generates the most intricate of solos. The rhythm section here, Ewald Oberleitner and drummer Johann Preininger, is above journeyman status as well, but far from virtuosos in their own rights. Still they move rhythms and meters through some interesting color phases throughout this collection, turning the time against itself on 'Sun,' which closes the album so that both soloists have to reinvent the mode each time they solo. These recordings are so fine in their spiritually transcendent way, they would have been right at home on the Strata East label a few years earlier. There is no higher compliment one can pay than that." (AMG)



If you find it, buy this album!