Monday, October 31, 2016

EJE THELIN GROUP – Live '76 (2LP-1977 / Caprice Records – CAP 2007:1-2)




Label: Caprice Records – CAP 2007:1-2
Format: 2 × Vinyl, LP, Album / Country: Sweden / Released: 1977
Style: Contemporary Jazz, Free Jazz, Free Improvisation
Recorded at Moderna Museet (Museum of Modern Art), Stockholm, June 23, 1976.
Cover [Front] – Ewert Karlsson (EWK)
Design – Jan Vilhelmsson
Photography By – Ove Alström
Engineer – Nils Edström
Liner Notes [Translation To English] – Fred Lane
Liner Notes [Translation To German] – Gerhard Hladik
Management – Eje Thelin Group
Matrix / Runout (Runout Side A): CAP 2007 A
Matrix / Runout (Runout Side B): CAP 2007 B
Matrix / Runout (Runout Side C): CAP 2007 C
Matrix / Runout (Runout Side D): CAP 2007 D

A1 - Onbird ................................................................................ 10:00
A2 - Another Piece Of Music ....................................................... 8:25
A3 - Time ..................................................................................... 7:00
B1 - Little Green Men ................................................................ 15:10
B2 - Balance ................................................................................ 3:40
C1 - Diesel .................................................................................. 8:15
C2 - Tesseraction, Part 1 ............................................................. 9:20
D1 - Tesseraction, Part 2 ............................................................. 3:25
D2 - Solo VI ................................................................................. 5:50
D3 - Entity .................................................................................... 5:35
D4 - Capricorn ............................................................................. 4:40

Eje Thelin  trombone
Harald Svensson – double bass, electric bass
Bruno Råberg – piano, electric piano
Leroy Lowe – drums, percussion

Written-By – Eje Thelin except tracks A1 and C1 - Written-By – Harald Svensson.
Rikskonserter 1977 / Printed By – SIB-Tryck, Tumba / Made in Sweden



Eje Thelin (born Eilert Ove Thelin) (June 9, 1938 - May 18, 1990) was an innovative Swedish trombonist, widely admired among fellow trombonists for his facile technique and rhythmic intensity. He was, perhaps, the first jazz trombonist to translate that technique into the so-called "sheets of sound" style that characterized much of the music of tenor saxophonist John Coltrane and, in general, Free Jazz of the late 1960s and 1970s.





Thelin started his own quintet in 1961. From 1969 to 1972 he was on the faculty of the Music Academy in Graz, Austria. For the rest of the 1970s, he led his own Eje Thelin Group in Sweden. In the 1980s he expanded into composition, writing commissioned works for large European orchestras, sometimes featuring himself as soloist. In spite of the attention given to the obvious technical side of his playing, Thelin was also known for his warm approach to traditional ballads, a somewhat retro-romanticism that comes through in his later playing.



If you find it, buy this album!

Sunday, October 23, 2016

JEAN-LUC PONTY – Live At Montreux 72 (LP-1976-Inner City Records – IC 1003)




Label: Inner City Records – IC 1003
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album / Country: US / Released: 1976
Original releaze: Les Disques Pierre Cardin – STEC 133 / France - 1972
Style: Free Jazz, Fusion, Experimental
Recorded live at the 1972 International Festival of Jazz in Montreux by Pierre Cardin
Album Design – Frank Vega
Photo – Tom Copi
Engineer – Stephen Sulke
Remix – Emmanuel Sciot
Executive Producers – Irv Kratka, Eric Kriss

A - Sonata Erotica ....................................................................................... 18:00
      a) Preludio
      b) Pizzacato Con Fuocco E Con Echo (Did You See My Bow?)
      c) Appassionato
B - Sonata Erotica ....................................................................................... 23:40
      d) Con Sensualita
      e) Accelerando E Rallentando

Experience:
Jean-Luc Ponty – electric violin
Joachim Kühn – piano [Fender]
Jean-François Jenny-Clark – acoustic bass, electric bass
Oliver Johnson – drums
Naná Vasconcelos – berimbau, congas, gong, percussion

Jean-Luc Ponty "Experience" ‎– Live In Montreux 72, live recording 19.06.1972 at the 6th International Festival of Jazz in Montreux, contents of five movement called "Sonata Erotica" suite, one of the most interesting works from his early days in fusion...





... Ponty's solos here seem far more inspired than his efforts in the 1990s. The violinist makes good use of delays, accompanying himself on the intense solo "Pizzicato Con Fucco E Con Echo." A number of passages were used in Ponty's earlier "Concerto for Jazz Violin and Orchestra," found on his record with Kurt Edelhagen (Vantage LP 504). Supporting musicians included Joachim Kühn on Fender Rhodes, acoustic bassist J.-F. Jenny Clarke, drummer Oliver Johnson and percussionist Nana Vasconcelos. While this LP won't be considered essential to a lot of jazz fans, Ponty's followers will find that is very inspired and a rare opportunity to enjoy.

Extremely strange and exciting album.



If you find it, buy this album!

LÉON FRANCIOLI – Nolilanga (LP-1970 / Evasion Disques – LP E 109)




Label: Evasion Disques – LP E 109
Series: Living Now - 1
Format: Vinyl, LP / Country: Switzerland – Press in France / Released: 1970
Style: Free Jazz, Contemporary Jazz, Free Improvisation
Recorded on the 3rd of April 1970.
Layout – Studiopizz
Photography By – Alain Ogheri
Engineer – Stephen Sulke
Producer – Gaston Schaefer

A1 - Ndi'funa'imali ................................................................... 2:40
A2 - Noma'khephu .................................................................. 8:20
A3 - In Bubwe .......................................................................... 6:25
B  -  Nolilanga ........................................................................ 18:40

Léon Francioli – double bass, conductor
Alan Skidmore – tenor sax and soprano sax
Pierre Cullaz – guitar
Pierre Favre – drums, percussion
Alain Petitmermet – drums, percussion

Léon Francioli (1946 to 2016) was a Swiss double bass player, was born in Lausanne, Switzerland, on May 22nd 1946. After studying piano and double bass at the Conservatory of Lausanne, he worked sessions in studios for mainly 'rock' and classical artists (he was also an accomplished cellist). As a founding member and lead guitarist of the instrumental group 'Les Aiglons', from 1963 to 1965 he recorded several LP-s with them for the record label 'Golf Drouot de Barclay'. In 1970 however, Francioli released his first solo record, under his name but with assistance from Alain Petitmermet, Pierre Favre, Pierre Cullaz and Alan Skidmore. Michel Portal played with him during concerts in Nantes and at the Châteauvallon Festival in 1972, the both of them assisted by Favre, plus Beb Guerin and Bernard Vitet. He then went on to play as a duet with Favre, and this continued until 1980...



... He later recorded and toured with artists such as Johm Tchicai, Albert Mangelsdorff (in 'Triple Entente'), Don Cherry, Radu Malfatti (in 'Humanimal'), and sometimes just solo. In 1982, Francioli co-founded the 'jazz' ensemble 'BBFC' (along with J F Bovard on trombone, Daniel Bourquin on reed instruments and Olivier Clerc on drums). In 1984, he played once more with Pierre Favre, and also collaborated with composer Stan Tracey on the film music for the movies "Les Petites Fugues" and "Le Bus...", as well as playing with various dance bands. In 1995, he won the "Grand Prix de la Fondation Vaudoise pour la Culture", and since 1991 had helped create music for many musical shows, including "Border Line", "Le Cirque", "Une Saison en Enfer", "Amnésie Internationale" and "Délices des Jardins...". He later formed a group along with Daniel Bourquin, called 'Les Nouveaux Monstres'. Léon Francioli died in Lausanne on March 9th 2016. He was 69.

 Alan Skidmore – tenor sax and soprano sax


"Nolilanga", his first album as a leader, one of his few recordings where is in completely gave himself and showed what is actually a master of the instrument. But even more is its intuitiveness and its disconcerting but liberating power at all consider a purely playful angle that will push him to exceed the limits imposed by the shackles of too strict education. The playground is the music itself in time as malleable material which everything can be said. The abstraction of "Ndi'Fuma'Imali" opening is a good example: the bass is not content to play the strings, he played the instrument himself ... playing companions are, it must be say, extremely well chosen too: two drummers, Alain Petitmermet and painfully exciting Pierre Favre, guitarist Pierre Cullaz and finally the brilliant British saxophonist Alan Skidmore who is known for his solo work and participation in many UK jazz fusion/prog groups, i.e; Soft Machine, Keith Tippett's Centipede, The Nice, Elton Dean's Ninesense, etc... "Noma'Khepu" holds the long beach where you can hear that on balance is a philosophy of life be put into practice collectively. Tumultuous and energetic, "Nolilanga" faithful representative of a current to the envied but not always understood precepts, tends to prove that harmony can also be born from chaos...



If you find it, buy this album!

Friday, October 14, 2016

LÉON FRANCIOLI with PIERRE FAVRE, EJE THELIN, JOUK MINOR – Live in Montreux (LP-1972 / EA 100 804)




Label: Evasion Disques – EA 100 804
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album, Stereo
Country: Switzerland / Printed in France / Released: 1972
Style: Free Jazz, Free Improvisation
Recorded live at the Montreux Palace Pavillion, 21 June 1972.
(6th Montreux Jazz Festival)
Layout – Studiopizz
Photography – Alain Ogheri
Engineer – Chris Pennycate
Matrix / Runout: Side1: EA 100 804 A1
Matrix / Runout: Side2: EA 100 804 A2

A - Public 1 ............................................................................. 20:28
B - Public 2 ............................................................................. 20:17

Line-up:
Léon Francioli – double bass
Eje Thelin – trombone
Jouk (Jouck) Minor – baritone saxophone / sopranino saxophone
Pierre Favre – drums / percussion

Note:
Evasion Disques, Swiss records and publishing company, created by Gaston Schaefer and François Vautier.
Evasion Disques has different label graphic styles and various confusing denominations such as: Disques Evasion; Evasion Records; and Evasion (in three different colors).


For its 6th edition – 13 days at the Montreux Palace Pavillion – the Festival hosts Chuck Mangione, Don Burrows, Herbie Mann, Les McCann, Lightnin’ Slim, Muddy Waters and Blood Sweat & Tears as well as Roland Kirk, Ray Bryant, Richie Havens and The Aces.
The first three days are devoted to the Blues, Claude Nobs' favorite music: Chuck Berry performs with two prestigious guests, Willie Dixon and T-Bone Walker.
John McLaughlin and the Mahavishnu Orchestra play at the Festival for the first time. Jean-Luc Ponty and Joachim Kühn give a duo concert as does Phil Woods with Daniel Humair.
Spectators also discover the Stan Getz Quartet, then comprising Chick Corea, Stanley Clarke and Tony Williams.
From local musicians, a remarkable performance (21 June) he had Léon Francioli with a group of friends and associates Pierre Favre, Eje Thelin, Jouk Minor...




This album requires active engagement on the part of the listener. It’ll push you through your confusion into a place satisfyingly close to enlightenment.

High volume and good speakers are heavily recommended.

Enjoy!!!



If you find it, buy this album!

Thursday, October 6, 2016

RED TRIO + JOHN BUTCHER – Empire (LP-2011-NoBusiness Records - NBLP 37)




Label: NoBusiness Records – NBLP 37
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album / Limited edition of 400 copies
Country: Lithuania / Released: Jul 2011 / LP press in Germany
Style: Free Improvisation, Free Jazz
Recorded April 6, 2010 at Namouche Studio, Lisbon
Recorded By – Joaquim Monte
Mixed by – John Butcher
Mastered by – Arūnas Zujus at MAMAstudios
Design by – Oskaras Anosovas
Cover printed in Lithuania by UAB“Garsy pasaulis“
Produced by RED trio and John Butcher
Executive production by Danas Mikailionis and Valerij Anosov

A1 - Sustained ................................................................................ 7:00
A2 - Pachyderm ............................................................................ 17:02
B  -  Empire ................................................................................... 23:34

Music By – Rodrigo Pinheiro, Gabriel Ferrandini, Hernani Faustino, John Butcher

RED TRIO:
Rodrigo Pinheiro - piano
Hernani Faustino - double bass
Gabriel Ferrandini - drums and percussion
+
John Butcher - tenor and soprano saxophone

NoBusiness Records NBLP37, 2011 / Limited edition of 400 copies. Sold Out.
http://nobusinessrecords.com/NBLP37.php


Although it may be fanciful to suggest that this is British saxophonist John Butcher’s Hard Rock record, his playing is certainly more voluble, raunchy and strident than on the majority of his recent sessions.
It may be because on this three-track LP the master of cerebral understatement is matched up with a trio of Portuguese Gen Xes who in this context enliven the common piano-bass-drum trio with enough rough and physical textures to frighten fans that prefer impressionistic pastels. That’s rough, but not crude however, for pianist Rodrigo Pinheiro, bassist Hernani Faustino and percussionist Gabriel Ferrandini have demonstrated a sensitive interface on other discs.
Besides touring the Iberian Peninsula with Butcher, the Lisbon-based trio members have a working knowledge of Rock; have played as a group with American avant trumpeter Nate Wooley; and individually worked with other anything-but-shy improvisers such as saxophonist John Zorn (Pinheiro), saxophonist Jon Irabagon, (Faustino) and cornetist Rob Mazurek (Ferrandini).




Whatever it is, as early as the first track, Butcher lots unbrace with some thickly vibrating and splintering altissimo punctuation that`s a lot closer to 1960s Free Jazz expression than what he usually plays. Meanwhile Pinheiro, for one, spurs minimalism, instead studding his solos with swift soundboard echoes, internal string strumming and high-intensity chording. Similarly as the expositions are developed, there are times when slide-whistle-like shrilling is heard. With his saxophone mastery, Butcher could be adding an intense parallel line to his improvisations. Or, on the other hand, the screech could arise from Ferrandini’s percussion mastery, which includes hand-patting drags, rim shots and flams plus measured cymbal claps and stentorian thumps. Nonetheless it’s the pianist who is most percussive in his playing. Frequently tremolo and highly syncopated, his circular keyboard chording sometimes matches the saxophonist’s circular breathing. Other times he’ll focus on repeated, high-pitched key clicking or use pressure to expose the deepest vibrations from his instrument. For his part, Butcher stresses trills that are watery and murmuring at one point, yet ascend to staccato interstellar-space exaggerations at others. In a way odd man out, Faustino keeps time and stays out of the way.
Exposing individual variants of note distension early on, the four-way communication reaches a climax of cumulative tension on the final and title track. With the bassist finally asserting himself with sul ponticello and col leno swipes and the percussionist’s mallet-driven chops providing the backdrop, the more-than-23-minute exposition bounds from Butcher to Pinheiro and back again. The pianist’s chromatic keyboard work takes in tremolo cadences in the instrument’s lowest register until he breaks free for friction-laden episodes of syncopated string strumming. Meantime the saxophonist blasts out juddering multiphonics, slurring, stuttering and splaying broken chords. In short order the nearly three-dimensional polyphony reaches a crescendo of drilling reed bites and nephritic honks matched with keyboard claps, clips and smacks until both are cut off and the narrative is completed by an isolated string pluck from Faustino.
Likely to be a unique entry in both Butcher’s and the Red trio’s discographies, Empire is a wild ride that should be experienced by everyone, music which shatters preconceptions.

—Ken Waxman

Not to be missed if you have a sense of adventure.


I recommend that you buy their recently released a new album:
https://cleanfeed-records.com/product/summer-skyshift/
https://www.discogs.com/RED-Trio-John-Butcher-Summer-Skyshift/release/8507374



If you find it, buy this album!

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

TARFALA TRIO: Mats Gustafsson / Barry Guy / Raymond Strid – Syzygy (2LP-2011)




Label: NoBusiness Records – NBLP 35/36 + NBEP1
Format: 2 × Vinyl, LP, Album + Vinyl 7", Single Sided / Limited edition of 600 records
Country: Lithuania / Released: Jul 2011
Style: Free Jazz, Free Improvisation
Recorded 14th nov 2009 at België, Hasselt, Belgium.
Design – Oskaras Anosovas
Photography By [7" Cover Photo] – Olof Madsen
Photography By [Booklet Photos] – Ziga Koritnik
Mixed By, Mastered By – Michael W. Huon
Executive-Producer – Danas Mikailionis, Valerij Anosov
Producer – Tarfala Trio

A - Broken By Fire ....................................................................... 21:30
B - Lapilli Fragments ................................................................... 17:43
C - Cool In Flight ........................................................................... 6:41
D - Tephra .................................................................................... 22:10
      + one-sided 7'' EP
E - Syzygy ................................................................................... 19:16

Tarfala Trio:
Mats Gustafsson – tenor saxophone, alto fluteophone
Barry Guy – double bass
Raymond Strid – drums, percussion

This is a double limited gatefold vinyl edition only, which, as a bonus, contains one-sided 7“ EP and a booklet of photos of the musicians playing live.
NoBusiness Records NBLP35/36 + NBEP1, 2011, limited edition of 600 records. Sold Out. 
http://nobusinessrecords.com/NBLP35-36.php




Sometimes one has to admit that, as much of a connection as free improvisation has with the heart of jazz — an approach to music and life that has its roots in spontaneity — it’s sometimes a bit of a tenuous relationship. European free improvisation has a lengthy history going back to the heady late 1960s, as musicians weaned on traditional jazz and bebop searched for ways to distance themselves from cultural-geographic implications quite different from broad European-ness. In places like Scandinavia, it was ironically the influence of African-American jazz musicians like Don Cherry and Albert Ayler, both resident in Sweden in the 1960s, that helped free up local musicians from American influence. Cherry’s effect on the Stockholm scene of the time — including saxophonists like Bernt Rosengren and Bengt “Frippe” Nordström, pianist Jan Wallgren, and itinerant Turkish drummer Okay Temiz and trumpeter Maffy Falay — cannot be underestimated.

Swedish saxophonist Mats Gustafsson studied with Nordström and also worked with veteran European heavies like Peter Brötzmann (Germany), Günter Christmann (Germany), and Sven-Åke Johansson (Sweden/Germany) throughout the 1980s and 1990s. At this point, he’s one of the leading lights of European free improvisation and has, through integrating it with a longtime interest and experience in punk rock and psychedelia, brought the music to a diverse stage. Lately, his collaborations seem to draw as much from the noise and art-rock end of the spectrum as they do improvised music and jazz, but that’s not to say his roots don’t often show.

The Tarfala Trio is a cooperative venture that also features English contrabassist Barry Guy and fellow Swede, percussionist Raymond Strid (Gush, Too Much Too Soon Orchestra). With its roots going back to 1992, the group has gigged around Europe, including collaborations with pianists Sten Sandell and Marilyn Crispell, drummer Alvin Fielder, and saxophonist Kidd Jordan. Curiously, Syzygy is the trio’s second proper recording in nearly two decades of existence, featuring four sidelong improvisations on two slabs of heavyweight vinyl with the addition of a bonus 7-inch. In true Gustafsson “diskaholic” style, the package itself is absolutely stunning, housed in a heavyweight gatefold with a gorgeous LP-sized booklet of photos by Ziga Koritnik. The music was recorded live in Belgium in fine detail, making this a very high-end and honest document of European free music.




With reputations for both full-bore freedom and rarefied insectile distance, it’s easy to forget that things like lyricism and delicacy are important, that players with as much pedigree as Gustafsson and Strid are capable of poetic statements. Part of this group’s penchant for simple give-and-take might be due to Guy’s presence. The bassist has been a significant figure on the landscape of creative music since 1967, and he shows no sign of letting up — “supple orchestration” could be his nom de plume. From the opening entreaties of “Broken by Fire,” the saxophonist’s tenor coagulations nod equally to Evan Parker and Albert Ayler, logical incisions that ultimately catapult in steely, go-for-broke exploration. Although a first-time listener might not know it, Gustafsson is almost reined-in here, dipping and shouting as he bunches, blats, and stretches out on newfound tightropes. Guy and Strid are absolutely nothing like Thing collaborators Ingebrigt Haker Flaten and Paal Nilssen-Love, rather constructing a lacy accenting thrum that’s constantly on the verge of disappearing. Constancy is, of course, the stock in trade of this rhythm section, ebbing and lapping cymbals enveloping the five-string filigree of Guy’s manhandled classicism. When Strid switches to a bevy of mallets and small objects, his phrases mirror Gustafsson’s flutter in beautiful succession; the three build tension expertly as Guy strums and swirls against breathy harmonics and eventual pulpit-pounding. The side closes with velvety, somber crooning, drawn arco and tapped gongs in huge, sweet counterpoint.

The third side’s “Cool in Flight” begins as a duo for bass and tenor, recalling the excellent Guy-Gustafsson duo LP Sinners, Rather than Saints (No Business, 2009) with slap-tongue drawn into burred lines. Jamming mallets and objects into the strings, Guy’s pizzicato solo sounds more like a brutish take on prepared piano à la Juan Hidalgo or the Swedish guitar wizard Christian Munthe. As the saxophonist reenters and tries to find a matching cadence, it sounds more akin to a drunken clamber. But the trio’s empathy is borne out through steadfastness as“wrong-ish” notes and phrases become “right.” Dogged volleys are rhythmic through lungpower and athleticism, glossolalic screams granted a workmanlike search as Strid and Guy maintain a toe-tapping rigor. There’s a winsome quality to the bassist’s upper-register strums alongside Gustafsson’s simple closing phrases, which recall Archie Shepp’s protest-pastoral “There is a Balm in Gilead.” This performance alone is worth the price of the set.

Taking two 20-minute slices out of an 85-minute set might seem disingenuous, but there’s so much music on offer here that giving it all away in platitudes seems more unfair. It’s worth noting again that a significant swath of Gustafsson’s work of the last several years has been wrapped in lung-busting machismo, tight t-shirts and wagging tongues alongside free-jazz covers of punk rock tunes. That music has its own attraction — outdoing PJ Harvey on “Who the Fuck,” for instance — but without denigrating the world-class improvisation that goes on in The Thing, Fire, and other groups, the Tarfala Trio embraces subtlety as much as it does the full-bore. There are snatches of jazz, or maybe the whole thing is “jazz,” depending on how open your definition of the music is — danger, excitement, love, and knowledge, where the only preordained structure is empathy.

by CLIFFORD ALLEN



If you find it, buy this album!

Friday, September 16, 2016

SIEGFRIED KESSLER /JEAN-FRANÇOIS PAUVROS – Phenix 14 (LP-1979-Le Chant Du Monde - LDX 74706)




Label: Le Chant Du Monde – LDX 74706
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album / Country: France / Released: 1979
Style: Experimental, Free Improvisation, Free Jazz
Recorded at studio Solaris, Paris, France, July 13 & 14, 1978.
Photography – Siegfried Kessler
Layout – Anne-Marie Dufour
Recorded By – Armand Friedman, Dominique Pauvros
Matrix / Runout (Side A Label): XC1I 74706 A
Matrix / Runout (Side B Label): XC1I 74706 B

A1 - Danse Du Stampe ..................................................................... 5:08
A2 - Rêve D'un Vol ........................................................................... 6:32
A3 - Pizzicato D'antennes ................................................................. 2:02
A4 - Rock 83,000 Pieds D'altitude .................................................... 3:15
A5 - Swinging S.K. 13, Swagin' Cap 10 ........................................... 4:10
B1 - Espace Cathédrale ................................................................... 7:18
B2 - Chant Du Bijave ........................................................................ 4:17
B3 - Cumulo-Nimbus ........................................................................ 3:00
B4 - Phenix Re-naissance ................................................................ 5:32

Siegfried Kessler – clavinet, organ, piano
Jean-François Pauvros – electric guitar [Jacobacci]

Pauvros, a well-known avant garde guitarist composer & performer. He met and plays since the early 70s with the most renown musicians (Ted Milton/Blurt, Arto Lindsay/DNA, Elliot Sharp/Carbon). Part of Catalogue with Jac Berrocal and Gilbert Artman (Lard Free & Urban Sax). Siegfried Kessler played with numerous artists and namely Yochk'o Seffer. Considered as one of the most brilliant pianists of his time...

This is a magical record, absolute masterpiece.



There are several ways to master the fear of emptiness. In music, it is alone with his instrument that reveals the most pressing. But improvisation, that moment of weightlessness happiness that rewards long years of work sometimes turns into minutes of boredom, ecstasy or shame. To master the fear, you have to let go as they say in TV-hooks fashionable to jump naked into the mouth of the ogre. The vacuum also dominates the amateur aerobatics. At the helm of the cuckoo, there is then no question of improvisation for the pilot, everything seems thought studied as a tool for each function, dials numbers, a broom handle and so many other things to handle. A calm and control force, he will fly to the worst in gravity-defying acrobatics. Improvisation and technology, pushed to their limits are rare, and when these two qualities are found in one man, it borders on the fantastic.




Siegfried Kessler, German pianist and installed in France was this rather special timber, a fanatic aerobatics, a real, to the point that will make a record, at a time when the talent still allowed some daring. Phenix 14 is thus a recueuil impressions, music and freely inspired tensions aircraft, air, metal and unequal fight that they indulge without respite.

Accompanied by Jean-François Pauvros on guitar, the unlikely duo resembles one of those improbable cinema alloys where the two heroes who oppose eventually best friends. With his mop to Tahiti Bob and small glasses Pauvros like a conscientious objector all ready to be lectured by Kessler sergeant with his steely gaze and his aviator outfit is furiously thinking about a guy that must not do shit too. But the music of the two men, instinctive to excess, boiling, simmering ( "Pizzicato antenna"), energetic, it is nothing artificial, she speaks from heaven and she talks to you in the guts.

The large gap also does not stop the protagonists. The musical journey of Siegfried Kessler capable alongside Didier Levallet both of the free bold as to accompany the classic singer Jacques Bertin, and always on the very institutional and exciting label "Le Chant du Monde" that will given the words to all music and all the revolts that these carting behind. Excellence at the service of more or less popular singers of that time seems to be the witness of a bygone era where human connections flouted labels of all kinds. In the same vein, we think Francois Beranger who played in all relaxation alongside the great guitarist Jean-Pierre Alarcen (and vice versa) yet it it offended anyone. And deeper still, this absolutely free music made the big difference...

The album concludes with Phenix Rebirth, exciting piece, torn between the two musicians. Remove the guitar, he still plays some contemporary Kessler notes, remove the piano, there remains a sticky guitar solo, violent, but together the great voodoo operates.


Translated from French:
http://lesdisquesnousparlent.overblog.com/siegfried-kessler-jean-francois-pauvros-phenix-14-le-chant-du-monde-1978    



If you find it, buy this album!