Showing posts with label avant garde. Show all posts
Showing posts with label avant garde. Show all posts

Saturday, August 30, 2014

The Low Down on Frank Lowe



Frank Lowe didn’t like the studio system much and so didn’t leave behind the kind of legacy that he deserved.  He was an avant garde jazzman to his core but, as is often the case, there were deep streaks of tradition in his locks.  I have been listening today to a new acquisition: Decision in Paradise (1985).  All the comments on the recording I have read describe it as “conservative”.  It is in fact a genuine exploration of the bop sentiment.  In many ways, this is my favorite kind of jazz recording: an avant garde revolutionary trying out the old whiskey. 
I chose the album mostly for the band.  Don Cherry on trumpet suggests wild, but the suggestion goes wide of the mark.  Grachan Moncur III on trombone also misleads.  But I am a big fan of Moncur.  Geri Allen on piano, well, what’s not to like?  Charnette Moffett plays bass and Charles Moffett beats the skins. 
I am playing the title cut and ‘You Dig!’  This is one album that you will dig.  It’s available from Amazon for about $5.  Get it and dig it. 
I am also playing a cut from The Flam (1976), a more characteristic Lowe recording, I suspect, and a flamboyant avant garde document.  Joseph Bowie plays a spitting trumpet, Leo Smith draws from a quiver of horns, Alex Blake is on bass and Charles Bobo Shaw is on drums.  Lowe’s tenor is squelching and screechy, in a Charles Gaye sort of way.  Let it run. 

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Fred Anderson




I have been neglecting both this blog and my Live365 station over the last couple of months.  Well, I’m back!  This holiday weekend I have been listening to tenor man Fred Anderson.  Anderson passedaway on June 24, 2010 at the age of 81.  Only in his last years, so far as I can tell, did he do much recording. 
Blessedly, he laid down quite a bit of signal from the 1990’s to his death.  This was largely because of his association with the Chicago avant garde culture, including especially Hamid Drake and Ken Vandermark.  I first became aware of Anderson because of his presence on a DKV Trio disc (Hamid Drake, Kent Kessler, and Ken Vandermark). 
Anderson was a consummate avant garde tenor player and improviser.  He did better than almost anyone what AG does best‑cut up human passion into its constituent elements and then reassemble them into new tapestries that leave you wondering whether you ever felt anything real before.  There is a pronounced spiritual dimension to most great avant garde jazz, which ought not to be surprising.  Anderson’s work is transcendent. 
I am playing ‘By Many Names’, from Timeless (2006), with Drake on drums and Harrison Bankhead on bass.  I confess a deep affection for this kind of number: a soft, heartfelt cry repeated over and over buoys up everything else in time and space. 
‘Dark Day’ goes back to 1979.  I got it from Dark Day + Live in Verona.  Drake is on drums, with Billy Brimfield on trumpet and Steven Palmore on bass.  It is structured set of solos riding on Drake’s marvelous thunder. 
Finally there is ‘Strut Time’, a twenty minute piece on Anderson and Drake’s splendid From the River to the Ocean (2007).  Joining are Bankhead on cello, Josh Abrams on bass, and Jeff Parker on guitar.  I have to say that the cello work with guitar reminds me of Jean Luc Ponty.  Anderson’s work here will appeal to any hard bop fan.  I could listen to this thing all day. 
Oh yeah…  I added a cut from Fred Anderson & DKV Trio (1996). 

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Brilliant Avant Garde from Kaze



Appreciating brilliant avant garde jazz is a little like sudden enlightenment in the Zen tradition, or maybe being born again.  Before it happens to you, say those to whom it has happened, it is very difficult to believe in it.  So just sit still, pray, and listen to Cecil Taylor.  Sooner or later you will raise the Bodhi mind. 
Unfortunately, there is a logical obstacle to plunging in.  Just because some brilliant and compelling music is inscrutable on the first few hearings doesn’t mean that all inscrutable music is brilliant.  I still think Jackson Pollock was a fraud and that James Joyce’s Finnegan’s Wake is not only unreadable but is not even a book. 
All I can tell us that I love a lot of music now that I once found disturbing or incoherent.  I would add to that list some pieces of music that I now find so compelling that I cannot imagine how they were ever opaque.  Beethoven’s Second Piano Concerto is one.  Eric Dolphy’s Out To Lunch is another. 
Tonight I am reviewing I am reviewing an astonishingly strong album that displays all the strengths and makes virtues of the weaknesses of avant garde jazz.  Tornado (August 20, 2013) is the second offering by Kaze, a quartet consisting of:

1.       Satoko Fujii (piano)
2.      Natsuki Tamura (trumpet)
3.      Christian Pruvost (trumpet)
4.      Peter Orins (drums)

I have a rather restrictive definition of the terms “avant garde” and “free” jazz.  The latter refers to the production of music without any advance score or even theme.  You just start playing.  The former refers to the way that the music is composed.  Avant garde jazz cuts music up into some set of constituent parts (themes, moods, etc.) and then rearranges it.  The arrangement is guided by the parts rather than any imposed narrative. 
Tornado is textbook avant garde and I found it immediately accessible and delicious.  It has a lot of the conspicuous instruments of the subgenre.  You get horns pretending to be screeching or farting or grinding the edge of a surgeon’s blade, passages that narrow to a single instrument or two pensively weaving a tale and then explode into a circus of sound, a little cookie monster warbling, and the occasional romantic waltz. 
The trick is in the weaving.  Each turn has to keep you interested and some have to make you want to cry.  Our lives are made up of vast array of sounds and stories.  Passion rises out of the burdens of flesh.  This music works that kind of magic. 
Fujii and Tamura are Japanese, I am guessing.  Pruvost and Orins are borrowed from the “French improvisers collective” Muzzix.  I am not sure what an improvisers collective is, or how many are running around loose, but the pairing of the two cultures pays dividends.  We get some Asian bells followed by horn work that could properly introduce a bull fight.  We also get, I think, a little spookiness.  That impression may be due to the fact that I watched The Conjuring yesterday.  If so, it is a testament to the power of this music to draw in elements of my own consciousness. 
This music is evidence of the existence of entire jazz worlds that most listeners and even collectors might easily be unaware of.  Satoko Fujii is obviously a master and a visit to her website reveals a rich catalog of recordings.  That such music can be recorded is evidence that such worlds can be easily visited by wanders who fly about in their internet tardis.  Tornado was released by Circum-Libra Records.  You can also get solo recordings by Fujii (Gen Himmel) and Tamura (Dragon Mat) on Libra Records.  I will review these in short order. 
I urge you to seek out and purchase these recordings.  This is music worth investing money, time, and heart in.