ep1str0phy Posted February 21, 2006 Report Posted February 21, 2006 as far as blacke saint/soule note if you don't have them-the andrew cyrille lead quartet albums from the early 80s (late 70s?) are excellent. i am thinking primarily of "the navigator" "special people" and "metamusicians stomp". i do not think these cyrille albums get enough credit for being among the best small group performances of this time period. I own only "Metamusicians' Stomp," but it's a favorite--probably one of the best post-Ornette quartet records out there. The whole band just cooks--and it's always nice to hear Ted Daniels (one of the most underrated trumpet players in the "New Thing"). Few combos have found interesting, original things to do with the trumpet/reed/bass/drum format, but that Maono record will always be a beautiful exception. Quote
Guest Chaney Posted February 21, 2006 Report Posted February 21, 2006 Of course, also wonderful and on Black Saint: four by Jimmy Lyons : Give It Up, Nuba, Something In Return and Burnt Offering. Quote
ep1str0phy Posted February 22, 2006 Report Posted February 22, 2006 Just 'cause we're talking Black Saint, I'll bring up John Carter's "Dauwhe." Just got it a couple of days ago--heavy, heavy stuff (I'm sure most of you are hip to it). Carter is a legend of modern clarinet--and what beautiful compositions! Top-flight in every respect. The band is a plus. Quote
jon abbey Posted February 22, 2006 Report Posted February 22, 2006 I don't have much interest in most of the Black Saint/Soul Note catalog anymore, but the ones that I think are real classics are Bill Dixon-Vade Mecum and Vade Mecum II, quartets with William Parker, Barry Guy and Tony Oxley, following up the chamber jazz legacy of the Giuffre/Bley/Swallow trio. Quote
Guest Chaney Posted February 22, 2006 Report Posted February 22, 2006 (edited) From the European Free Improv site: Günter Christmann has issued, on Explico, Mal d'archive 2 with himself alongside Serge Baghdassarians and Boris Baltschun and Vario-41 by Boris Baltschun/John Butcher/Günter Christmann/Michael Griener in a limited edition of 150 numbered copies. Anyone familiar with Edition Explico? With Günter Christmann? I got Vario-41 at the TMM in Berlin last fall - still haven't listened to it. Listened to Vario-41, and I htough it was quite weak - no interesting ideas (even from Butcher), no development, regular free-improv noodling. This might be the least successful deisc with Butcher I've heard so far. Unfortunately, after only one listen, I'd have to agree. There's just nothing there to grab hold of. Nothing to draw you in or even... I don't know! Very weak and very disappointing. Damn. ~~~~~~~~~~ Nice pictures... Edited February 22, 2006 by Chaney Quote
ep1str0phy Posted February 22, 2006 Report Posted February 22, 2006 I don't have much interest in most of the Black Saint/Soul Note catalog anymore, but the ones that I think are real classics are Bill Dixon-Vade Mecum and Vade Mecum II, quartets with William Parker, Barry Guy and Tony Oxley, following up the chamber jazz legacy of the Giuffre/Bley/Swallow trio. I keep hearing things about the Dixons, although they aren't exactly canon (sleeper classics, I guess). Next time I see one, I'll pick it up. Quote
jon abbey Posted February 22, 2006 Report Posted February 22, 2006 that all depends on whose canon you're following, I suppose. here's a rough one I did quickly on Jazz Corner in 2004 (there would be a few more Ersts in there if I updated it, Good Morning Good Night and EL005 certainly, probably not many other changes), along the lines of Ben Ratliff's book and the Penguin Guide "crowns", but trying to be a bit more wide-ranging in terms of the ground covered as well as bringing it up to the current date: http://www.jazzcornertalk.com/speakeasy/sh...1675#post261675 Quote
clifford_thornton Posted February 22, 2006 Report Posted February 22, 2006 Nice mention of Takayanagi. I've wanted to hear those Axis: Another Revolvable Thing records, but alas, my wallet can't hang with their going rate... Quote
clifford_thornton Posted February 22, 2006 Report Posted February 22, 2006 I keep hearing things about the Dixons, although they aren't exactly canon (sleeper classics, I guess). Next time I see one, I'll pick it up. Those are very good dates, as are the duets with Tony Oxley. I've not heard much "bad" Dixon, though there are some less interesting titles for sure. Odyssey is a motherfucker, though! Quote
king ubu Posted February 22, 2006 Report Posted February 22, 2006 So David seems to be the one person on the whole board who made the single one post including Guerino Mazzola's name... anybody has any impressions, any recommendations? I have recently bought "In Orbit" (Music&Arts), by Mazzola/Heinz Geisser/Rob Brown (mostly on flute, not alto). There are plans for a radio show (interview) on Mazzola, which is the main reason I picked up the disc. Gave it one listen so far and found it rather conventional and boring, I'm afraid. Sure, there's a density of some kind that is not just run-of-the-mill free jazz, but much more than that it ain't, I think. I assume Mazzola has been majorly influenced by Cecil. To that he adds his music/mathematics stuff (which I don't know a lot about, another friend of mine would cover that if we'd do a radio show with/about him), and out comes a somewhat cool, tense free music that is probably not half as free in the end, as it sounds. Rob Brown does ok, but for me, Geisser is providing most of the highpoints of this disc. and a quote from the musicandarts page: Writes fellow-improviser Scott Fields in his liner notes, "[We have here] spontaneous composition in which the trio's sense of form erases the distinction between improvisation and premeditation. Any free improviser works with a core of practiced material. (As Mazzola says, "This music is quite the contrary of spontaneous improvisation. It's about long-term planning and then, when the job takes off, a sudden burst of all those well-planned energies."). In the least-interactive, and so in my mind least-sophisticated and least-interesting, freely improvising ensembles, individual musicians work their core material without adapting it significantly to the contributions of their fellow improvisers. Layers of practiced ideas meet without evolving new ideas. But I never get that feeling in the seven compositions on Orbit. Of course, the artists on Orbit have also practiced improvisational ideas in isolation and they have repertoires of techniques, but this music never sounds cobbled together from set pieces. The trio members listen and react to each other, while meticulously avoiding such hackneyed, free-improvisation gambits as echoing, which Roscoe Mitchell has scornfully referred to as 'follow the leader.'" Guerino Mazzola's homepage Quote
paul secor Posted February 22, 2006 Report Posted February 22, 2006 I bought In Orbit several years ago, mainly for Rob Brown's presence. I gave it several listens over a period of time, found it rather boring also, and sold it. Obviously, not a recording I'd recommend. Quote
king ubu Posted February 22, 2006 Report Posted February 22, 2006 Thanks for chiming in, Paul. I just played "In Orbit" again and liked it a lot better, this time. Brown's micro-tones on flute are rather impressive! But then somehow the music - while I found some parts of it quite beautiful, this time around, mainly the opening two tracks and the beginning of the third, too - leaves me rather cold, has maybe got some kind of "academic" touch... Quote
paul secor Posted February 23, 2006 Report Posted February 23, 2006 (edited) Thanks for the welcome, Flurin. I haven't followed This thread, for whatever reasons, but I started reading it from the beginning yesterday to find out what's gone on. So far, I'm at 10 pages - only 387 to go! Whoops - make that 388. I just started a new page. Edited February 23, 2006 by paul secor Quote
Jazzmoose Posted February 23, 2006 Report Posted February 23, 2006 Wow. I must admit, I haven't read every page on this thread. It's more of a "check in and see what's new" thing for me. Just lazy, I guess, but when I was trying to read the thread from the beginning, it was starting to get expensive... Quote
Д.Д. Posted February 24, 2006 Report Posted February 24, 2006 For the American rats: Jazzloft.com has a sale on all Black Saint / Soul Note CDs - $15 per piece. Does not make much sense for us in Europe (there are a could pof good sources for these releases here9, but I assume this is the best price you can get itn the US. I will post a list of some of my favorite BS/SN discs later. My favorities on Black Saint / Soul Note: "THE FLAM" FRANK LOWE - Frank Lowe is hero tenor blower, and this is the best Frank Lowe I've heard (together with his duo with Rashied Ali, I guess) - some very powerful free-bop playing (nice compositions as well). Lowe is very intense, but very focused, and there is a really mad bassist (Alex Blake, iirc), who just rips the bass to pieces. "HOLDING TOGETHER" OLIVER LAKE - ths is early Lake, quite a bit more adventurous than he is now. The music is quite abstract with a few meandering moments, bt on the whole is quite orgiginal and powerful. "THE NEW VILLAGE ON THE LEFT" MARCELLO MELIS - this is a recent edition, bought based on brownie's recommendation, and it is excellent. Melis is a bassist and composer, and the band includes Roswell Rudd, Enrico Rava and Don Moye. There is also a Sardenian folk mail vocal quartet! Sardenian vocal music is really uniue in its polyphony, some of the most complicated polyphonic singning in the world (together with Georgian, baka pygmies and Tahitian singing), with a use of overtone ("throat") singing (a bit like Tuvan). The harmonies that are created are just mesmerizing. I've heard some Sardeninan folk muisc before and was interested to hear how it was integrated in Melis' disc - and it is integrated perfectly. The compositions are based on folk themes (and I started understanding it only well into the middle of the disc after the vocal guys kikced in); vocal segements are breathtaking (beter than everythng I've heard of Sardenian music before, I just wish there would be more of them on this disc); the blowing is excellent (Rava is really fiery here). There is a beautiful track of Rudd playing over the vocal quarttet - now I am not the biggest fan of Rudd (I think he often lacks subtlety and is a bit of a one-trick pony), but here he plays beautifully complementing perfectly what the quartet is creating (which I think is where most of the "world music fusion" (including Rudd himself on his "Malicool" disc) fails - to add something of value to the folk music - in most cases it either subtracts from the folk music effect, or merely co-exists). And the main (of many) highlight for me is Don Moye. I think Moye is one of the greatest jazz drummers, and IMO his best plying is documented outside of AEoC, and this might be one of such records. He is extremly inventive, with a great expresive range, and just makes everybody sound better (there is also a segemnt where he plays with Sardenians, responding to what they are singing - sublime!). Ths might be my favorite Black Saint / Soul Note disc now. "THE FIFTH POWER" LESTER BOWIE - remember liking it a lot - buzt that's all I remember about it. "BIRTH AND REBIRTH" MAX ROACH-ANTHONY BRAXTON - good one, even if Roach is not listening too much, IMO. "NIGHT FIRE" THE JOHN CARTER QUINTET - John Carter is the meanist clarinet player out there "DAUWHE" THE JOHN CARTER OCTET - this is essential both for great compositions and equally great playing. "Some Order, Long Understood" - Wayne Horvitz / Butch Morris / William Parker - I thiught this was quite a unique, dark brooding record. Parker's playing is not too bad here "BLUES FOREVER" - MUHAL RICHARD ABRAMS BAND - also fgreat composiitons for a large band, and excellent playing. "SIX MONK'S COMPOSITIONS" - 1987 ANTHONY BRAXTON. I thought this one was a very good interpretation of Monk, with hilarious first track played at breakneck tempo. shit... they have a huge catalog - I'll continue some time later... I have huge amounts of respect for John [butcher], he's probably my favorite saxophonist in the world (pretty much the only one I can listen to these days). but he is rooted somewhat in first generation EFI (as he says there), and there are even newer waves of musicians coming up, who he's probably not so familiar with. as far as the London scene goes, Mark Wastell and the group of musicians around him (Graham Halliwell, Matt Davis, sometimes Phil Durrant) are probably the most currently tapped into what's happening in international improv in 2006. John is a bit UK-centric, despite his extensive work with the Vienna crew, and occasional dips into the Tokyo crew, his mindset is still very rooted in the London scene's way of thinking about things. As for Butcher's ties to tradition (whatever it is), I saw Butcher live at TMM - first in duo with Gio RObair, which was very good, and then in trio with drummer Fabrizio Sperra and bassist Lisle Ellis, which left a very mbiguous impression. Sperra is an excellent, very gentle and musical drummer and he complimented Butcher well, but Ellis was doing all this really traditional fast walking bass lines (and also played with some electronic gear, which was a disaster - he had to stop what he as playing, tweak this box attached to the bass for several seconds, extract some ugly (and seemingly random) distorted bass sound, again stop for several seconds, tweak the box again, ang go back to his acoustic playing - all this destroying the flow and logics of music comletely). So Butcher was trying to interact with this somehow, and then at some point, visually annoyed, went into some jazzy free macho tenor blowing, very uncharacteristic for him. The blowing was really good, but he was obviously unsatisfied that he was pushed to do it and halted it rather fast. Concerts vs. Concert recordings - all seems to me like good old Bob Smithson, the whole site/non-site dialectic. As in, the work as it "occurs" experienced live has a set of rules that are entirely its own, and a recording of such a work has a completely different context and rules, essentially making each of them two different works. Like how an Ansel Adams photograph of the Rockies and actually being at or in that same geographical spot in Real Time/Experience are entirely different things. Funny to be invoking Adams here with AMM and Bob Smithson, but whatever... I htink I read some semi-scientific article discribing that recording, however perfect, is not able to catch all the acoustic nuances of a musical (or any) sound, and its perception live or on record by defualt will be different. Just 'cause we're talking Black Saint, I'll bring up John Carter's "Dauwhe." Just got it a couple of days ago--heavy, heavy stuff (I'm sure most of you are hip to it). Carter is a legend of modern clarinet--and what beautiful compositions! Top-flight in every respect. The band is a plus. Totally agree. that all depends on whose canon you're following, I suppose. here's a rough one I did quickly on Jazz Corner in 2004 (there would be a few more Ersts in there if I updated it, Good Morning Good Night and EL005 certainly, probably not many other changes), along the lines of Ben Ratliff's book and the Penguin Guide "crowns", but trying to be a bit more wide-ranging in terms of the ground covered as well as bringing it up to the current date: http://www.jazzcornertalk.com/speakeasy/sh...1675#post261675 Great list, Jon - and I am actually quite surprised about it largely overlapping with what I'd consider best albums for these artists. I keep hearing things about the Dixons, although they aren't exactly canon (sleeper classics, I guess). Next time I see one, I'll pick it up. Those are very good dates, as are the duets with Tony Oxley. I've not heard much "bad" Dixon, though there are some less interesting titles for sure. Odyssey is a motherfucker, though! You heard "Papirus Vol. 1"? - I thought it sucked big deal - Oxley being great, but Dixon plain annoying wiht all these farting sounds. So David seems to be the one person on the whole board who made the single one post including Guerino Mazzola's name... anybody has any impressions, any recommendations? . I have a few records with him, and all of them are with Geisser - and I thin I like them mostly for Geisser's plying. Quote
paul secor Posted February 24, 2006 Report Posted February 24, 2006 For the American rats: Jazzloft.com has a sale on all Black Saint / Soul Note CDs - $15 per piece. Does not make much sense for us in Europe (there are a could pof good sources for these releases here9, but I assume this is the best price you can get itn the US. I will post a list of some of my favorite BS/SN discs later. My favorities on Black Saint / Soul Note: "THE NEW VILLAGE ON THE LEFT" MARCELLO MELIS - this is a recent edition, bought based on brownie's recommendation, and it is excellent. Melis is a bassist and composer, and the band includes Roswell Rudd, Enrico Rava and Don Moye. There is also a Sardenian folk mail vocal quartet! Sardenian vocal music is really uniue in its polyphony, some of the most complicated polyphonic singning in the world (together with Georgian, baka pygmies and Tahitian singing), with a use of overtone ("throat") singing (a bit like Tuvan). The harmonies that are created are just mesmerizing. I've heard some Sardeninan folk muisc before and was interested to hear how it was integrated in Melis' disc - and it is integrated perfectly. The compositions are based on folk themes (and I started understanding it only well into the middle of the disc after the vocal guys kikced in); vocal segements are breathtaking (beter than everythng I've heard of Sardenian music before, I just wish there would be more of them on this disc); the blowing is excellent (Rava is really fiery here). There is a beautiful track of Rudd playing over the vocal quarttet - now I am not the biggest fan of Rudd (I think he often lacks subtlety and is a bit of a one-trick pony), but here he plays beautifully complementing perfectly what the quartet is creating (which I think is where most of the "world music fusion" (including Rudd himself on his "Malicool" disc) fails - to add something of value to the folk music - in most cases it either subtracts from the folk music effect, or merely co-exists). And the main (of many) highlight for me is Don Moye. I think Moye is one of the greatest jazz drummers, and IMO his best plying is documented outside of AEoC, and this might be one of such records. He is extremly inventive, with a great expresive range, and just makes everybody sound better (there is also a segemnt where he plays with Sardenians, responding to what they are singing - sublime!). Ths might be my favorite Black Saint / Soul Note disc now. "SIX MONK'S COMPOSITIONS" - 1987 ANTHONY BRAXTON. I thought this one was a very good interpretation of Monk, with hilarious first track played at breakneck tempo. shit... they have a huge catalog - I'll continue some time later... Strong seconds on the Braxton - Six Monk's Compositions and The New Village on the Left (& several others you listed). New Village is an overlooked minor classic. This is simplistic, but whenever I play that record and hear the Sardinian vocal quartet, I always think about four Froggie the Gremlins (U.S. members who grew up in the 50's and watched Saturday morning television will know who I'm talking about) singing doo-wop. I mean that as a total compilment - no slur on their artistry. I hear what you're saying about Roswell Rudd, ay least to some degree. There are times (and even entire records) when he plays without a lot of subtlety. Over the whole of his recording career, though, I don't find that to be the case. I think some of what you write about depends on the context in which he's playing. I've also heard him play live several times, and never heard him in his bluster bag. Just my opinion. P.S. - For U.S. members - Cadence sells Black Saint/Soul Note for $15 ($14 for subscribers). I believe that they distribute those labels in the U.S. Quote
jon abbey Posted February 24, 2006 Report Posted February 24, 2006 Great list, Jon - and I am actually quite surprised about it largely overlapping with what I'd consider best albums for these artists. just because I can't listen to most of it anymore doesn't mean that I didn't spend quite some time in Funny Rat territory, as well as exploring jazz reasonably thoroughly. what's really funny is to take a look at my rec.music.bluenote postings of a decade ago, quite a few would fit very nicely here. Quote
gnhrtg Posted February 24, 2006 Report Posted February 24, 2006 Of what I've heard from the recommendations so far, I'd say the following are good albums: Frank Lowe - The Flam (agree with D.D., very good) Giorgio Gaslini - Gaslini Plays Monk Giorgio Gaslini - Ayler's Wings (though so far I like the Monk album better by a fair margin, so though both are interesting, get the Monk first, if you like him it's likely to be so much that you'll want to get Ayler's Wings at some point and if not, well at least you'll have heard some of his best work) Waldron/Lacy - Sempre Amore (this is good, though most people seem to like it more than I do; my favorite of the Waldron/Lacy duos is Let's Call This...Esteem on Slam) Anthony Braxton - Six Monk's Compositions (one of my first Braxton - and Waldron - discs, and one that I still enjoy every bit as much as I did back when I got it, very good) And I have added The New Village on the Left to my to-get list. Quote
John B Posted February 24, 2006 Report Posted February 24, 2006 Some fantastic Black Saint / Soul Note recommendations so far. Here are a few more discs I love that haven't been mentioned so far: Don Pullen - Sixth Sense, Evidence of Things Unseen, Milano Strut, Warriors, Healing Force Joseph Jarman / Don Moye w/Johnny Dyani - Black Paladins Lester Bowie - The 5th power Roscoe Mitchell - 3x4 Eye, This Dance is for Steve McCall Quote
Guest akanalog Posted February 24, 2006 Report Posted February 24, 2006 look what got started! ok let me add and emphasize- i agree on frank lowe's "the flam" i would also like to recommend- billy bang's "the fire within" andrew cyrille "the navigator" "metamusicians stomp" "special people" all 3 are great, IMO enrico rava's "il giro de giorno in 80 mondi" archie shepp's "a sea of faces" joseph jarman's "black paladins" as someone mentioned jukius hemphill "flat out jump suite" billy harper "black saint" these are about my favorites on the label right now. just bought jemeel moondoc's "nostalgia in times square". looks interesting... Quote
Д.Д. Posted February 25, 2006 Report Posted February 25, 2006 Leo records now provides downloads of the releases of the Russian Long Arms and DOM records: http://www.leorecords.com/lr/w/music/rec/L...1140779278PTtX/ Quote
Д.Д. Posted February 26, 2006 Report Posted February 26, 2006 (edited) 25-minute track by Doug Theriault. I like it. --------------- Check out the Charhizma label mp3s. Good stuff. Erstwhile carries Charhizma CDs for $14. I'll be placing an order soon (beofre Erst sale is over). Edited February 26, 2006 by Д.Д. Quote
David Ayers Posted February 27, 2006 Report Posted February 27, 2006 (edited) UK mail order company The Woods is offering BS/SN titles for £5 each (minimum order 2) inclusive of UK shipping. http://www.the-woods.co.uk/html/Black_Saint_Offer.html For my own uses I made this copy of their in print list: Edited February 27, 2006 by David Ayers Quote
king ubu Posted February 27, 2006 Report Posted February 27, 2006 picked up these two in a sale: Played the Taylor once so far, sounded ok. Haven't heard the Lowe yet. Any opinions? Quote
Guest Chaney Posted February 27, 2006 Report Posted February 27, 2006 Looks like The Jazz Loft has Warne Warsh: Ne Plus Ultra up for sale. Quote
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