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What live music are you going to see tonight?


mikeweil

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Some great stuff lately ... trying to sum up some (for those who read German, go here for more detailed reports)

 

Last night (May 21), at a friend's, it was Nicolas Masson "Parallels" with Colin Vallon, Patrice Moret and Lionel Friedli. Pure bliss to be in a small room (probably 60 or so people attending, some out in the corridor) and witness music making of such quality and intensity. Started out with a tune (all compositions by Masson) that reminded me slightly of Miles Davis' "second quintet" ... but Vallon (on upright, opened so he could tackle the strings with various little things) and Friedli are totally different from Hancock/Williams, and the music took other turns anyway. Masson (on tenor) was impressive, classic (and classy) storytelling that sounded perfectly organic and - that was the best part, I thought - still succeeded in integrating the quartet into one close-knit unit. The others all had their turns as soloists as well, and made great use of it. Pure bliss to be there and witness it, as I said.

 

The two nights before were spent at Taktlos Festival, 33rd edition. The first night (May 19) started off with Matthew Shipp solo. I found it intriguing and pretty good, also quite amazing to watch him play (when he does that "rowing" thing with both his arms/shouldes, like: left hand at the piano, right pulled back, and then vice versa) - never saw him live, am somewhat ambivalent about his music, but always fascinated enough to keep listening to some of his output (which is way too huge for me to keep up, nonetheless). He was moody but clear, into it yet somewhat detached, letting things flow in a way that yet constantly interrupted everything again. And of course he harks back to all kinds of jazz, from Ellington to Tristano to Taylor. Not a great concert, but great to have finally seen him live!

Second set was the low point of the entire festival (I skipped the third night, yesterday - another venue would have had Sheila Jordan at the same time ... can't these folks coordinate somewhat better please?!?), Tiptons Sax Quartet + Drums. I guess they meant well, but it boiled down to a so-so high school project of kids that are constantly being told by their parents how exceptional, how unique, how very special, how great they are. No. Jessica Lurie was the best soloist by far, Amy Denio not half bad (and she did one wonderful klezmer-like tune on clarinet, though after her solo Lurie followed on alto and was at least as great), but Sue Orfield on tenor was a constant nuisance, Tina Richardson on baritone just so-so, and Austrian drummer Robert Kainar, while clearly a very good musician, was busy accompanying and reacting, instead of every intruding and pushing and giving the occasional slap that might have helped. Too much singing, too (and not good singing, mind me). So, okay, I was quite pissed after that, tried to relax as it went on and got somewhat better.

What about the final set? Well, that was some kind of ambient-y hommage to electric Miles, I guess, by Vallon-Michel-Götte-Chansorn, a quartet of Swiss musicians (the former two from the Romandie, the latter two from Zurich). Chansorn hit the simples of rock beats in a real hard way, while the others sort of merged into one, and that was the fascinating part of it. Michel, who's a great flugel and trumpet player (he was with the late Vienna Art Orchestra for a long time) had lots of delay and echo on his sound and merged with the Fender rhodes played by Vallon, as well as Götte's electric bass (which was sometimes played like a guitar, to pretty nice effect). Not a bad ending, but again, not outstanding either. We left a bit early, and Vallon told me yesterday that some ten or fifteen minutes later they had to end the concert because they had some severe feedback/sound issues.

Second night at the Taktlos looked somewhat less promising to me on paper, but it turned out to be, as they sa, da shit! The opening set was by Ephrem Lüchinger, another local guy, keys player, composer, songwriter, producer of pop acts etc., and trained pianist, he learned with Simon Nabatov who tried to break him, as he mentioned in an interview ... but he refused to go into the jazz school grind, and I guess it pays off now, almost 20 years later. His triple album "Are You Prepared" which was released last year (I think) was based on recordings done in 2008 and then re-worked and treated in all kinds of ways. He had also, hence the title, worked with a prepared piano. How to do that on stage? Well, he had two pianos, one mostly left as it comes, the other heavily prepared, he had an Akai synth on top of one of them, a notebook and various other stuff ... and he succeeded superbly in creating a flowing set of sounds that was quite gorgeous indeed! So yeah, off to a great start!

Second set was Poing + Maja S. K. Ratjke, doing their traditional programme for workers day (they seem to play this kind of concert yearly in Norway on April 30th) - a mix of songs by Brecht/Weill, Eisler, Norwegian stuff, for starters Lennon's "Working Class Hero", and they also did a Bowie song, "Rock'n'Roll Suicide" ("this is not on one of our records, we're not that commercial"). Great on all counts, Ratkje's singing and vocalising paired with her amazing stage presence was terrific to witness (first time I saw her live, alas!), and musically, the guys (Frode Haltli on accordion, Rolf-Erik Nystrom on alto and sopranino, sometimes simultaneously, and Hakon Thelin on double bass) were great, too. I was totally floored after that. (As an aside: they were so much more adventurous and musically so much better than the Tiptons, yet they had perfect stage presence all the time ... and they even watched the clock and stopped in due time - alas, as I could have gone on listening to them for another hour or two, easily!)

The final set of the night was to be Ken Vandermark-Nate Wooley, and I was ambivalent about it as I heard about a failed concert in Berlin a few days ago (and could relate to the reasons the guy who told me about it mentioned), which was in a quartet setting though. So let's relax and be open-minded about it, okay? It turned out a pretty fine set, Wooley was quite okay most of the time, and Vandermark played clarinet for about half of the time. They did pieces by John Carter as well as originals, and to close things, a wonderful version of Ornette Coleman's "I Heard It on the Radio" (an outtake from the first session for "This Is Our Music"). The music was hardcore jazz after the very different two acts before, and it was kind of difficult to get into it, after all a clarinet/trumpet duo isn't the most attractive sonic combination (which made VDMK's good tanor and baritone contributions more welcome than they would have been in a band setting - I like him best on clarinet, by a clear margin), but after two or three tunes, they really caught on with me.

 

Also, a few days before, on Tuesday (May 17), I had the immense pleasure of finally catching Kris Davis live, finally. Again, this was in a private setting, but much bigger-scale than the concert yesterday. She did an amazing solo set first, which displayed plenty of character, while harking back to Tristano quite regularly it seemed to me. She piled waves of sound on top of each other, played tiny little variations and combined melody and sheer power in a great way. Will truly have to check out more of her music (I started by buying "Save Your Breath" from her, the only disc she had with her).

 

The week before that (May 13), I went to the tiny WIM in Zurich. First set was Jacob Wick on solo trumpet, doing a set of minimal breath-music, not one actual "tone", and permanent circular breathing ("Has anybody seen LaMonte Young?", he asked before he started), which was pretty fascinating, if somewhat hard to focus on ... but eventually it turned out quite interesting as sounds started ot appear about which I really couldn't tell if they were just in my head or actually in the room. It was this kind of experience that throws you back into yourself, into your own head and brain. Then he was joined for the second half by Christian Weber on double bass, and off they went, both using their instruments to produce any kind of amazing sounds, including, now, conventional trumpet tones (but lots of quarter/microtones, too). The second set that night was by a trio of Bertrand Denzler (ts), Axel Dörner (t) and Antonin Gerbal (perc). This turned out to be a rather typical free improv set, but a pretty fine one at that! Denzler has a gorgeous sound and just as Dörner used circular breathing and all kinds of unconventional ways to produce a broad sonic palette. Gerbal had a very basic set of drums, just a few toms and one cymbal which was barely used for a long time, but he allowed the others to follow their path(s) and he joined in most of the time, not being content to just manage time. Dörner played a trumpet with valves plus a slide added, allowing him to adapt his tone seemlessly, and he made good use of that. Too long since I cauht him live (12 years, I think?), and actually this was - finally! - the first time I caught Denzler.

 

No photos, btw, as I left my stupid phone in my pocket this time.

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9 hours ago, king ubu said:
15 hours ago, Steve Reynolds said:

First set only the trio without the drummer - not my cup of java - not sure it was expected - nice playing but 50 minutes of continuous improvisation without the drummer when I'm expecting the drummer took me over half of that 50 minutes to open up to listen. Roberts unaccompanied solo towards the end had me a bit interested. When the set ended at a few minutes past 10:00, Malaby said Ben Perowsky would be joining the group for the second set. I hadn't seen him in almost 20 years and I know he's good but.....maybe no one here would believe it if I told you....cuz I was planning on going home angry - I came to see a full quartet with a DRUMMER!!!

Perowsky shows up at 10:45 / band finally starts at 11:05 or so and I'm losing patience quickly - questioning why I stayed as I was trying to get out of there after the first set before Tony made the announcement....

the next continuous 50 minutes should be the best live jazz record of the past 5 years in an alternate universe but nobody knows or really hears my guy too well, I think - for me better now on soprano - in fact for me - pretty damn untouchable on the straight horn / never have I heard him wail and scorch the earth like he did last night and THEN!!! a section on the big horn a half hour in with the band in full fucking roar - holy moly - and Hank Roberts with a little stick - with both Formanek & Roberts bowing - vibrations to end all vibrations

 

and Perowsky is what Malaby said when he introduced him as the *great* Ben Perowsky / I had no fucking idea that Malaby was right / the roster of truly world class drummers in NY is insane - here is another one / a few people besides me screamed with joy or terror a few times when things got very very intense.

see I know none of you believe me,,,,ignore these dudes at your peril

 

blood and guts, baby

 

Steve, that second set does sound like an incredible experience. Don't know Perowsky at all but will be alert for him.

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58 minutes ago, Leeway said:

Steve, that second set does sound like an incredible experience. Don't know Perowsky at all but will be alert for him.

I remember hearing Perowsky and Donny McCaslin in a classroom  ensemble at Berklee when they were first-year students there and thought right off they were going to be really good -- heck, they already were. I told Gary Burton about them, he was then Berklee's dean of students, and  the next time Burton came to Chicago, Donny was his tenorman. Ben made a nice record with his tenorman father, Frank.

http://www.amazon.com/Bop-Pop-Frank-Perowsky-Trio/dp/B00006RZ4Y/ref=sr_1_5?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1463951875&sr=1-5&keywords=perowsky

41FJ06QJN4L.jpg

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1 hour ago, alankin said:

Perowsky is also on some good Dave Douglas recordings from the late 1990s.

This is the context I heard him in. Live show with Douglas, Uri Caine on electric keyboards plus a saxophonist(?) and bassist(?) maybe Knitting Factory maybe late 90's. 

What I heard Saturday night was a horse of another garage. So much more explosive and much more in my wheelhouse.

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Saw Logan Richardson on Saturday. Pretty good set, only got to stay for the first one. Wasn't completely happy with the mix, guitar was way to loud. Logan was buried at times. Tommy Crane was on drums and that man was insane! 

Oh and should be going to Gavin Templeton on Wed. For his album release. He's a fantastic performer, I saw him a couple years ago with Vinny Golia and immediately bought his catalog. And as a bonus Joshua White will be on piano and he is fantastic as well. 

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Last night, New Orleans blues musician Chris Thomas King was rather inexplicably performing in Little Elm, Texas at a place called Rock 101. A 26 mile, though fairly easy, drive from my home, the venue turned out to be a bar/restaurant, but with a stage and decent sound. Chris Thomas King performed solo on electric or acoustic guitar and vocals--a mixture of country blues (Hard Times Killin' Floor Blues), modern blues (Hideaway), and his original material. A rather fine performance it was; I really enjoyed the set. The setting was not so great, as maybe 20 people or so were there to see Chris Thomas  King and listened attentively, while the rest of the place was populated by a loud, indifferent bar crowd.

Edited by kh1958
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Was able to catch The Gavin Templeton Quartet on Wed. Best show I've seen in a loooooooong time. Blew Logan Richardson out of the water, as well as when I recently saw Greg Osby. Gavin with Joshua White on piano (absolute MONSTER), Richard Giddens on Bass and Gene Coye on Drums. Outstanding!!!!

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lila-downs-chicago-450x323.jpgvarttina_515x290_2.jpg

Lila Downs (Royal Festival Hall, London)

Varttina (KIng's Place, London) 

Two from the bucket list - concerts on successive nights so worth a trip.Both excellent.

Lila Downs - a bit like going to a wild party where you don't know anyone (I didn't half feel British...polite applause, clapping along on the wrong beat etc!). Huge Latin contingent in the audience going bananas from the off. A really exciting two hours with real instruments (no beat boxes etc that you get on her records in places). Tremendous voice - just as powerful live as on record, especially at the lower end. Not quite what I'm used to....this was a slick, choreographed 'show' with some cheesy cameos (an accordion 'duel') but once you suspended your disbelief, utterly compelling.

Proper review here: https://www.theguardian.com/music/2016/jun/02/lila-downs-review-mexican-american-singer-royal-festival-hall-london

Varttina - no sign of London's Finnish population (probably already deported by Boris and Nigel) and only half full which was sad as this was a beautiful concert. Just the three women (no band which they usually have) with the focus on the vocals but really nice accordion, kantele (two!) and some flute-like things. The vocals were stunning - those amazing harmonies that make their records so wonderful pulled off with pin-point accuracy. Lots of percussion in the words, yelps and screeches. All in Finnish but the introductions and hand actions gave a rough idea of the song's content. 

Both concerts made a nice corrective to the poisonous xenophobia sweeping through this sad country at present.   

 

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On June 3, 2016 at 0:08 PM, A Lark Ascending said:

lila-downs-chicago-450x323.jpgvarttina_515x290_2.jpg

Lila Downs (Royal Festival Hall, London)

Varttina (KIng's Place, London) 

Two from the bucket list - concerts on successive nights so worth a trip.Both excellent.

Lila Downs - a bit like going to a wild party where you don't know anyone (I didn't half feel British...polite applause, clapping along on the wrong beat etc!). Huge Latin contingent in the audience going bananas from the off. A really exciting two hours with real instruments (no beat boxes etc that you get on her records in places). Tremendous voice - just as powerful live as on record, especially at the lower end. Not quite what I'm used to....this was a slick, choreographed 'show' with some cheesy cameos (an accordion 'duel') but once you suspended your disbelief, utterly compelling.

Proper review here: https://www.theguardian.com/music/2016/jun/02/lila-downs-review-mexican-american-singer-royal-festival-hall-london

Varttina - no sign of London's Finnish population (probably already deported by Boris and Nigel) and only half full which was sad as this was a beautiful concert. Just the three women (no band which they usually have) with the focus on the vocals but really nice accordion, kantele (two!) and some flute-like things. The vocals were stunning - those amazing harmonies that make their records so wonderful pulled off with pin-point accuracy. Lots of percussion in the words, yelps and screeches. All in Finnish but the introductions and hand actions gave a rough idea of the song's content. 

Both concerts made a nice corrective to the poisonous xenophobia sweeping through this sad country at present.   

 

Last year, I went to see Lila Downs at the House of Blues in Dallas, which is literally right across the street from my office.--it was a short walk to a total cultural transformation, it was like I had walked to Mexico City. She's definitely got a lot of power in her voice and has a good band. 

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1 hour ago, kh1958 said:

Last year, I went to see Lila Downs at the House of Blues in Dallas, which is literally right across the street from my office.--it was a short walk to a total cultural transformation, it was like I had walked to Mexico City. She's definitely got a lot of power in her voice and has a good band. 

I was amazed at the sheer enthusiasm of the crowd - she's hardly a household name here. I experienced something similar several years ago when the London Barbican put on a 50 Years of Bossa Nova concert with a host of famous Brazilian singers and players from that genre - a huge and vociferous crowd going nuts for music that gets little notice in the musical world at large here. 

Agree about the voice and the band. 

Edited by A Lark Ascending
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Yesterday, I drove to Longview, Texas for the second day of the T-Bone Walker Blues Festival--a two hour drive from Dallas.

Clearly the people running the festival are on the rock side of the blues-rock spectrum, but the festival had two artists I wanted to see, so I made the trip.

There were two stages, an outdoor stage moved under cover due to recent prodigious rains. Basically, it was underneath a large shed suitable for farm animal shows, with sawdust covered floors. The other stage was seated and indoors, in the Maude Cobb Convention Center. The sound was pretty well done in both cases.

Starting off with the outdoor venue, I'm listening to the pride of Kilgore, Texas, a 17 year old high school girl (Ally Venable) leading a blues rock quartet. Not exactly my usual scene, but I must say this young woman is a very talented guitar player and a surprisingly effective vocalist. Her band was good too. I actually loved her set.

Shifting indoors, next we have blues-rocker Eric Gales, brother of the late Little Jimmy King. His group (bass guitar and drums) is at the start augmented by a trio of vocalists in the gospel vein. Kind of interesting and unusual in sound. After awhile the vocalists leave the stage and the focus is more on the power blues/rock trio. The bassist is in the Jaco mode, pretty good, and Eric Gales shows off his guitar chops at length. Again, not my usual genre, but if there is a better rock guitarist than Eric Gales these days, I'd like to know who it is. He generated some pretty high intensity.

So far the closest we've come to T-Bone Walker are some Chicago blues chestnuts performed by Ally Venable and Eric Gales, but next we have what is presumably the closest one can get to hearing T-Bone Walker live these days, in the person of 81 year old Roy Gaines and his Orchestra. After a couple of sets of mostly youngsters (well, Eric Gales is in his early 40s), the Roy Gaines Orchestra looked like it had been around the block a rather large number of times. A nine piece group with four horn players, they reminded me of B.B. King's group a bit. Roy Gaines is a perennial sideman originally from Texas, who actually played with T-Bone Walker, starting when he was 14 years old. I hadn't heard any of his late life leader dates, but he turned out to be an exciting performer, playing dynamic guitar in the T-Bone Walker tradition, with a taste of B.B. King. His band was terrific, very swinging, a throwback to the days when jazz and blues had less of a clear demarkation. It was a great set.

I do wonder about whether this festival will recur next year though. Attendance was not that great. That is, it looked like they were set up for an audience in the 2000-3000 range, and the actual audience looked like it was in the 500-600 range, between the two venues.

 

 

 

 

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Thursday  night at Elastic I heard two of best young players I’ve heard in a long time — Norwegian drummer Tollef Ostvang and Portuguese trumpeter (now resident in Stockholm) Susana Santos Silva.

 
 In a duo with alto and soprano saxophonist Nick Mazzarella, Ostvang (age 31) sounded something like a “free” Kenny Clarke who could read minds, remarkable fluidity of technique and a terrific sense of compositional rightness/wholeness. Not a stunningly different kind of drummer at first hearing, but I may change my mind on that — everything he played made such lovely sense.
 
Santos Silva (age 37) has superb chops, in terms of range and rapidity of note production/placement of same, and a fantastic ear for fairly busy collective playing — paired with alto and baritone saxophonist Dave Rempis, bassist Toby Cederburg and Tim Daisy, that’s mostly what she was up to. Her ideas were crystal clear (as was her sound) and rhythmically intense, and one felt sure she could shine in many contexts. Striking too — for all the speed, range, and power of her playing — was her utterly relaxed physical relationship to her instrument, even in what seemingly was (or would have been for most other players) top gear. She reminded me some of Herb Robertson, especially in her occasional use of mutes for essentially rhythmic rather than coloristic purposes.
 
Some Ostvang:
 
 
 
Some Santos Silva:
 
 
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mmh1-5KmTX8

Though none of the above, nor the albums of theirs I bought, good as they are so far,  quite matches what I heard from them Thursday night.
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this chick corea fest at the blue note is out of control--- this must be a lot of work to prepare all these bands and music

 

Oct. 19-23 – The Chick Corea Elektric Band: Corea (keyboards), Eric Marienthal (saxes), Frank Gamble (guitar), John Patitucci (bass), Dave Weckl (drums)

Oct. 26-30 – For Miles: Corea (keyboards), Kenny Garrett (saxes), Wallace Roney (trumpet), Mike Stern (guitar), Marcus Miller (bass), Brian Blade (drums)

Nov. 2-3 – Three Quartets Band: Corea (piano), Steve Gadd (drums), Eddie Gomez (bass), Ben Solomon (sax)

Nov. 4-6 – The Leprechaun Band – Corea (keyboards), Steve Gadd (drums), Gayle Moran Corea (vocals), Steve Wilson (sax & flute), Michael Rodriguez (trumpet), Steve Davis (trombone), Eddie Gomez (acoustic bass), TBA (electric bass)

Nov. 9-10 – Experiments In Electronica: Corea (keyboards and computers), Marcus Gilmore (drums), Leading Genre-Defying Electronic Explorers (TBA)

Nov. 11-13 – Chick’s Flamenco Heart: Corea (Keyboards), Jorge Pardo (sax & flute), Niño Josele (acoustic guitar), Carles Benevant (bass), Tom Brechtlein (drums), Luisito Quintero (percussion), Flamenco Dancer (TBA), Vocalist (TBA)

Nov. 16-17 – The Chick Corea Big Band: Corea (keyboards), Erlend Skomsvoll (arranger & conductor), the Trondheim Jazz Orchestra - 13-Piece Big Band (8 horns, guitar, bass & drums)

Nov. 18-20 – Chick Corea Piano Duets: Corea performing with a different pianist each night

Nov. 22-23 – Chick Corea & Gary Burton with the Harlem String Quartet: Gary Burton (vibes), Ilmar Gavilán (violin), Melissa White (violin), Jaime Amador (viola), Felix Umansky (cello)

Nov. 25-27 – Origin II: Corea (piano), Ravi Coltrane (sax), Steve Wilson (sax & flute), Steve Davis (trombone), Carlitos Del Puerto (bass), Marcus Gilmore (drums)

Nov. 30-Dec. 4 – The Music Of Return To Forever and More (Acoustic): Corea (keyboards), Ravi Coltrane (sax), Hubert Laws (flute), Avishai Cohen (bass), Lenny White (drums)

Dec. 7 – TBA

Dec. 8-12: The Music Of Return To Forever and More (Electric): Corea (keyboards), John McLaughlin (guitar), Victor Wooten (bass), Lenny White (drums)

 

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Universal Indian with Joe McPhee, Windup Space, Baltimore, June 8, 2016

Universal Indian: John Pikeman (ts), Jon Rune Strom (b), Tollef Ontvang (d).  Joe McPhee: pocket trumpet, plastic alto sax, alto sax. 

Two fire-breathing sets from this group that harkened back to earlier days of free jazz, with some incredibly hard blowing and very free improvisation. It always amazes me how much blues McPhee can get into the free jazz idiom. McPhee's cream-colored plastic alto was something to see (and hear), although I preferred him on the "regular" alto. An exciting evening. 

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Teamed up with fellow Org member Sidewinder in Sale, Greater Manchester to see Lady Sings the Blues, a celebration of Billie Holiday by singer Wiseman, ably supported by Alan Barnes, Bruce Adams, Roy Williams, Brian Dee and Len Skeat.

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On June 9, 2016 at 2:12 PM, Leeway said:

Universal Indian with Joe McPhee, Windup Space, Baltimore, June 8, 2016

Universal Indian: John Pikeman (ts), Jon Rune Strom (b), Tollef Ontvang (d).  Joe McPhee: pocket trumpet, plastic alto sax, alto sax. 

Two fire-breathing sets from this group that harkened back to earlier days of free jazz, with some incredibly hard blowing and very free improvisation. It always amazes me how much blues McPhee can get into the free jazz idiom. McPhee's cream-colored plastic alto was something to see (and hear), although I preferred him on the "regular" alto. An exciting evening. 

Cannot wait to see the *great* Joe McPhee on the 21st

I never take seeing these dudes live up close and personal for granted.

Very grateful for when I can see a few of the Giants Who Walk This Earth

McPhee is one of them - one of the great pure improvisors who has seemingly never run out of ideas

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I also feel very lucky to have seen Joe McPhee a few times in different settings in the last couple of years, and to be seing him again next August with The Thing.

Last february with Chris Corsano at the Instants Chavirés was a summit for me, McPhee was in a very playful mood on arrival and they gave a great hommage to Ornette Coleman!

 

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Next week will be seing Harry Partch's opera Delusion of the Fury arranged by Heiner Goebbels. Harry Partch's instruments were all recreated according to the instructions he had left, since the original ones are not functional anymore. The stage looks impressive:

Wonge Bergmann

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