How will Anthony Braxton be regarded 50 years from now, after the polemicists of today are dead and/or no longer interested, when something like an objective and knowledgeable evaluation of his work becomes possible? For all his undeniable brilliance as a composer, Braxton's seeming indifference toward the craft of composition will undermine his reputation to a significant degree. Which might not be fair, actually. Perhaps Braxton's problem is that he suffers from a condition virtually unprecedented in the history of Western art music -- he writes music for a type of musician that does not exist. Braxton writes the most technically demanding music of any composer working in a jazz-related idiom. His written lines are often incredibly difficult to play; their serial-like contours do not fall naturally under the fingers. His rhythms are irregular in the extreme and presumably very elaborately notated. Braxton's music calls for players who can read and interpret the written note in a manner of the very finest classical players, yet who can also improvise in a free jazz vernacular on a very high level. Such players are very rare, to say the least; improvisers rarely read especially well, and good readers rarely improvise, so Braxton is inevitably required to strike a balance. For obvious reasons, he almost always leans toward the improvisers when forming his large groups. Occasionally, he catches lightning in a bottle, and manages to harness a team of good free improvisers who can also read down his difficult written passages. This album is a fairly good example of that. Recorded with a septet of Finnish musicians that manifests a pronounced affinity for his music, Braxton's Compositions No. 144 and 145 are given a vigorous, warm, and reasonably tight rendering, of a sort made difficult by the usual lack of rehearsal time and scarcity of appropriate collaborators. The soloists, including and especially the leader, are uniformly excellent, but most importantly, the written parts are realized in a way that does justice to the concept. That said, Braxton's command over large forms is uncertain. One might not always be convinced of the necessity for so many extended group improvisations, for example. Yet this is a work of striking and substantive originality that should not be underestimated. Chris Kelsey
Tracklist :
1 Composition N. 144 / Composition N. 145 1:10:21
Credits :
Artwork – Lora Denis
Bass, Cello – Teppo Hauta-aho
Drums – Jukka Wasama
Flute, Sopranino Saxophone [Sopranino Sax], Soprano Saxophone [Soprano Sax], Alto Saxophone [Alto Sax] – Anthony Braxton
Flute, Soprano Saxophone [Soprano Sax], Alto Saxophone [Alto Sax] – Pentti Lahti
Flute, Tenor Saxophone [Tenor Sax], Baritone Saxophone [Baritone Sax] – Seppo Baron Paakkunainen
Flute, Tenor Saxophone [Tenor Sax], Soprano Saxophone [Soprano Sax], Bass Clarinet – Pepa Päivinen
Music By – Anthony Braxton
Trombone – Mircea Stan
Violin – Mikko-Ville Luolajan-Mikkola
17.1.23
ANTHONY BRAXTON - 2 Compositions (Järvenpää) 1988, Ensemble Braxtonia (1996) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
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Esbjörn Svensson has stood not only once on stage in Montreux. He was already a guest in the summer of 1998 at the jazz festival on Lake Gen...
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