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A criticism of Charles Lloyd and moldy figs.

To me, Ran Blake is Ran Blake, not standing in for any greater aesthetic problem or solution.

I agree. I meant to employ Baraka's criticism to the idea of a "freedom argument."

I love Ran Blake's music. I need to spin Blue Potato & Other Outrages again--it's been too long since I listened to Blake. In fact, I have that duet album with Jaki Byard, and I think I only gave it one listen a year ago. Gotta get on that. Too little time.

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cliff, if I read you right, than I may disagree - see my post with the incorrect stationary.

been doing some recording with Matt Shipp and, interestingly enough, on the more "inside" material he shows a marked Ran Blake influence - and though it's difficult to use these ideas in a group format, it can be done with the right players. It takes musicians who don't mind, in effect, stopping and starting, using the material as a kind of re-write format. It's very effective when done right and also a very radical way to re-work standard material. To my way of thinking this is one very significant aesthetic solution do making older (or older-style) compositions fresher and even new again.

Edited by AllenLowe
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  • 2 months later...

From the latest Ran Blake newsletter:

End of the Year Honors for Driftwoods

Slate, AllMusic, etc.

driftwoods

Driftwoods, Ran's album of solo piano released earlier this year, turned up on a number of lists of the best albums of 2009.

--In Slate, Fred Kaplan rates Driftwoods 10th in his listing of the best jazz albums of the year. Kaplan writes: "His chords, dissonant but heartfelt, waft out of a dream."

--emusic lists Driftwoods as the 19th best album of 2009 (of any genre).

--Boston Phoenix jazz critic Jon Garelick includes Driftwoods and Ran's November NEC tribute to the film Pawnbroker among a list of his favorite things of 2009.

--AllMusic mentions Driftwoods in a list of the top jazz albums of the year.

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"Sorry, typed "problem" when I meant to type "argument."

I mean, Ran Blake isn't the only person to have approached openness with conviction"

sorry, Cliff, missed this post when you first put it on this thread -

I agree, there have been many and differing solutions - what I meant, really, was that I find his solution particularly compelling and idiomatic - as a matter of fact, I think Shipp has taken it even a step further than Blake, though he rarely performs "standards" per se -

as is well known here, I have some issues with so-called "free" players, though I have no question that they have defined their own musical spaces compellingly; too many of them just seem to hit a wall, and to not be aware of WHEN they've hit that wall.

This is, I know, a rather conservative response to the form; it may be generational, though I think not, given that I was feeling this way as far back as the 1980s; I just think that, eventually, each school runs into the problem of repetition and cliche.

Personally I am so bored with nearly all forms of jazz that I have to fight a certain paralysis that sometimes sets in. This makes certain kind of judgments even more difficult.

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  • 3 months later...

I love that drawing of Ran carrying his oversized case and looking as if it contained the Los Alamos formulas. That's the Ran Blake I met in 1960, the Ran Blake who all but dragged me to a small NYC apartment to meet Reverend Gary Davis. I don't think I ever saw Ran as enthusiastic and full of awe as he was when speaking to Davis.

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I've always felt partially responsible for driving him underground. His phone number used to be in the book. So 20 years ago I called him up to ask if he was interested in a recording project I was working on, and he was completely paranoid that I'd gotten his phone. I explained to him that it was a public listing. When I checked the next week, it was unlisted.

just doing my bit for American culture.

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I have noticed that the magnificent, Penguin-crowned All That is Tied has fallen out of print. There are a couple more "affordable" copies on Amazon, so I might suggest picking this up quickly if you haven't already. I can't imagine you'd regret it ;)

Have a copy on the way now, thanks for the alert!

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  • 2 weeks later...

[That Certain Feeling, a Gershwin album with Steve Lacy & Ricky Ford. Out of print, but I bet Hat Art will get around to reissuing it one of these days.

That is really a superb session. Magical moments; Lacy and Ford are in their best attitudes.

The best version of Lover Man out of the Golden Age of jazz (and a pretty 'free' different one) I ever heard.

Made me understand why Blake is famed to be so interested in visual arts, in Cinema and soundtracks.

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I have noticed that the magnificent, Penguin-crowned All That is Tied has fallen out of print. There are a couple more "affordable" copies on Amazon, so I might suggest picking this up quickly if you haven't already. I can't imagine you'd regret it ;)

Have a copy on the way now, thanks for the alert!

And have given it a few listens by now, slowly letting it sink in - wow! A truly magisterial album!

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  • 8 years later...
  • 2 years later...
  • 7 months later...
On 12/3/2021 at 0:25 PM, colinmce said:

Ran has a new solo recording of his own compositions (+ "Round Midnight" and "Turnaround"), his first fully solo session since Grey December in 2011. Digital only, unfortunately.

https://ranblake.bandcamp.com/album/looking-glass

+1 for Ran's new record.

The project focuses on his early and lesser-known compositions. Of course, I'm biased but Looking Glass is a deep, lion-in-winter statement. Ran's piano has rarely been recorded better, full tonal gamut with great room ambience. You can really hear those strange resonances (he calls them "ghost tones") that come from his unique voicings, attack, and pedaling. There are moments they sound almost electronic or multi-tracked, though of course they're not. 

A cohesive, meditative statement. Listen too for Ran's own voice in a couple spots. Top of my favorite releases list this year.

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46 minutes ago, srellek said:

+1 for Ran's new record.

The project focuses on his early and lesser-known compositions. Of course, I'm biased but Looking Glass is a deep, lion-in-winter statement. Ran's piano has rarely been recorded better, full tonal gamut with great room ambience. You can really hear those strange resonances (he calls them "ghost tones") that come from his unique voicings, attack, and pedaling. There are moments they sound almost electronic or multi-tracked, though of course they're not. 

A cohesive, meditative statement. Listen too for Ran's own voice in a couple spots. Top of my favorite releases list this year.

I agree, a wonderful record. I really wish it would have a physical release.

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  • 10 months later...

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