Label:
Free Flow Music Production – ffm 0493
Format:
CD, Album; Country: Germany - Released: 1993
Style:
Free Jazz, Free Improvisation
Recorded
live 5th December 1992 at the Hindemith Hall of the Old Opera, Frankfurt
New Cover Design by ART&JAZZ Studio, by VITKO
Photography
By – William Klein
Producer
– S. Siebenlist
Technician
[Ton] – T. Raisig
Live-Mitschnitt
aus dem Hindemith-Saal der Alten Oper Frankfurt, 5. Dezember 1992.
Straight
ahead energetic Jazz. Enjoy!
01.
1st2nd3rd&4th . . . 29:18
02.
BukzokWestWostokSude . . . 29:38
QuasarQuartet:
Alfred
23 HARTH - tenor sax, bassclarinet
Simon
NABATOV - piano
Vladimir
TARASOV - drums and percussion
Vitold
REK - bass
"I
want more POPEYE", writes Alfred Harth. "Possessing uncompromising
moral standards and resorting to force when threatened". He also refers to
"my artist's way through postmodernism", which at the beginning of
the 90s brought him to grow tired of "all those mixes, remixes,
postmodernisms and pop" that he had gone through during the previous
decade: he was ready to return to a "pure" approach, essentially
based on real players and real instruments. Enter Russian drummer Vladimir
Tarasov from the Ganelin Trio, a long-time admirer of Harth, met for the first
time in 1992 when Mr.23 was invited by Moscow TV for a program about him; the
next character after his portrait would be none other that Popeye the Sailor
(hence the album's title, a word game with the ironical "end" of the
"pop phase" of Alfred's career). Tarasov had imported all the early
Harth albums in the USSR, playing together became a necessary consequence. The
QuasarQuartet, formed by the saxophonist in the same year, sees Harth on tenor
sax and bass clarinet and Tarasov on drums and percussion, plus the fabulous pianist
Simon Nabatov and the excellent Vitold Rek on bass. "POPendingEYE"
features two half-hour tracks in which everything (Coltrane-derived ascensions,
logical freedom, contaminations of marching band rhythms, folk melodies,
pyrotechnical pianism, sadly pensive reed lines) obeys to a logic that's
inspired by Harth's idea of "opening to the East": in fact, besides
this new musical situation, he met his current partner - South Korea's visual
artist Soonjoo Lee - right at that time . Even the track titles, "1st2nd3rd&4th"
and "BukzokWestWostokSude", respectively refer to the world's
divisions ("...we know what the 3rd world is, but which would be the
1st?" says Harth) and to a mixture of Korean and English language to
describe directions. And many directions this music points at, with a
stimulating alternance of high-charge improvisations and melodic crystals that
doesn't remind us about the players' originary lands, but it rather stands as a
primary example of reciprocal instant comprehension: no language is a barrier
when the instruments are the ones doing the talking. "POPendingEYE" -
a meaningful record in the free music scene of the early 90s - has remained
pretty obscure despite its quality; but it sure helped Alfred Harth to be
"strong to the finish", as the Sailor himself would have it. The fact
is, his creativity shined then and it still does. What finish, then? And what's
your favourite brand of spinach, Alf?
Highly recommended.
Highly recommended.
_
Review by MASSIMO RICCI
Buy
this album!