Sometimes, unearthed documents can leave you cold, even though the intellect appreciates the historical gap being filled. With Withdrawal, history doesn't matter and the "archival document" ends up superseding the legit material by the Spontaneous Music Ensemble. This is gold -- pure artistic beauty. The year is 1966. John Stevens' group records the soundtrack for a movie (now lost) by George Paul Solomos. The continuous performance is edited into two parts for a total of 30 minutes of music. A slow piece dominated by a glockenspiel leitmotif, "Withdrawal Soundtrack" features beautiful trumpet work by a Kenny Wheeler who was just beginning to play free music. Other players are Stevens (drums), Paul Rutherford (trombone), Trevor Watts (saxophone, oboe), Barry Guy (bass, limited to sustained drones), and a very young and discreet Evan Parker (saxophone). A few months later, in early 1967, the same lineup, plus Derek Bailey on amplified guitar, recorded a reworked version of the soundtrack in three sequences, plus a suite called "Seeing Sounds & Hearing Colours," both intended for an LP release that never materialized. Watts plays some beautiful flute on "Withdrawal Sequence 2." Actually, the whole CD contains fantastic free music, almost completely detached from jazz -- very atmospheric, delicate, and highly organic with a strong sense of discovery. These are the earliest available recordings by Barry Guy and Evan Parker (even though the latter doesn't play much), and one of Bailey's earliest sessions playing free music (even though he is buried in the mix). Historical significance notwithstanding, Withdrawal is simply a great album, still very relevant and "new" today. François Couture Tracklist :
Credits :
Double Bass, Piano – Barry Guy
Drums, Cymbal [Cymbals], Percussion, Composed By – John Stevens
Guitar [Amplified] – Derek Bailey (tracks: 5 to 11)
Oboe, Alto Saxophone, Flute, Voice, Percussion – Trevor Watts
Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone, Percussion – Evan Parker
Trombone, Percussion – Paul Rutherford
Trumpet, Flugelhorn, Percussion – Kenny Wheeler
25.9.24
SPONTANEOUS MUSIC ENSEMBLE — Withdrawal 1966-7 (1997) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
23.2.23
EVAN PARKER | CECIL TAYLOR | BARRY GUY | TONY OXLEY - Nailed (CT: The Quartet) (1990-2000) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
A super-session in theory, this one-off gig was recorded in Berlin in 1990 during another of Cecil Taylor's extended stays. According to the liner notes, this gig was tense from the start because of some ill will between some of the band's members, hence the title of the album. Whatever. The two tracks that comprise this set are full of the explosive, full-bore playing each of this quartet's members is well-known for. It's easy to believe there is tension here, the playing from the outset starts at furious and gets wilder. But what's more interesting is that given Taylor's gigantic stature among musicians, even the three he's playing with, he doesn't dominate the proceedings. This is group improvisation the way it's supposed to be, with ideas being tossed into the fire from every angle. Some are picked up and extrapolated upon; others are left smoldering in the ashes. When it is time for Taylor to solo, none of the others stay out of the mix completely, not even Parker. Guy's bowed bass accompanies Taylor through each theme and phrase, each color and mode change until Taylor cedes the floor. Yes, it is all about muscle: all competition, all struggle, all music. As in the bebop days of old, this is a cutting contest in the purest sense of that word. Everybody bleeds here. At times, the playing is so intense the listener just wants to hate everyone on the bandstand, at others, so forceful (s)he is beaten into submission, and still at others, nothing but a resounding YEAH! Throughout the house or car will do. Sizing up the individual contributions to this mass of aural mayhem is fruitless. This is a group who insists on being individuals in a collective setting and, therefore, the listening level is so high -- so as not to miss any gauntlet laid down -- the attention to execution and imagination can't help but be top-notch. So, in essence, this is a super-session, but not one in the usual sense. It is among the finest of all the recordings released under Taylor's name from either of his Berlin periods, and, for the others, it charts with their best playing anywhere. This is group improvisation at its angriest, freest, and truest.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1 First 52:20
2 Last 25:48
Bass – Barry Guy
Drums – Tony Oxley
Piano, Composed By – Cecil Taylor
Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Evan Parker
22.2.23
EVAN PARKER | KEITH ROWE | BARRY GUY | EDDIE PRÉVOST - Supersession (New Edition) (1984-2015) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Recorded in 1984, a full 16 years after this quartet as individuals
began their investigation into free improvisation, the results are in.
Here are a group of four nearly peerless musicians who are standalone
comfortable in this medium, the one that creates something out of
nothing. Using the whatever elements are at their disposal, this group
of mates take the silence and fill it with noises, beautiful notes,
conical, breathless saxophone solos, electronic chaos, and thunderous,
rhythmic densities it would take God to undo. That this music, such as
it is as an unfolding process can happen in front of a live audience, as
it is with no agenda, is of particular credit to the British musicians
who flew in the face of the American free jazz of the late '60s. For one
thing, all of these cats can play their instruments well enough to
deconstruct them, and to discover new sounds in them -- check Evan
Parker's soprano about ten or 11 minutes into this, or Barry Guy's
bassing which brings in high-pitched electronic sounds to counter his
own pizzicato in key. This is music that doesn't mess around, but goes
straight for the heart of the beast: unquestioning conformity, academic
avant-gardism, and soulless tunes called art. Now, in the 21st century,
this music sounds as fresh as it did the day it was made. That is art.
This is the way, so step inside.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1 Supersession 36:55
Barry Guy / Evan Parker / Eddie Prévost / Keith Rowe
Double Bass, Electronics – Barry Guy
Guitar, Electronics, Design – Keith Rowe
Percussion, Liner Notes, Design – Eddie Prévost
Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Evan Parker
EVAN PARKER | BARRY GUY | PAUL LYTTON - Atlăn′tă (1990) APE (image+.cue), lossless
Recorded in 1986 at a concert in Atlanta, the trio of Parker, Guy, and Lytton had even then been playing together for over a decade, and here it shows. Over four pieces, all of them improvised on the spot, Parker leads the trio through the gyrations of his circular improvisation on both soprano and tenor and also through the small and basic elements of "jazz" he respects -- but they get mutated almost immediately, as one might expect. Parker's interplay with his rhythm section is akin to a rough dancer skidding along the floor to a graceful, elegant orchestra. The interplay between Guy and Lytton is so mesmerizing, so completely self-contained, it's Parker who has to focus on them or he'll be lost in the glorious tumult. The rhythmic communication -- especially as Guy pulls out three or four notes, legato, and then slides a chord up the bass as Lytton creates a rhythm around that phrase for Guy to come back to and extrapolate -- is breathtaking. As for Parker, there is little to say except that, despite having to be very physical on this evening, he was aware of everything, offering whatever color and shape, whatever texture or fragment that might be useful to the rhythmic dance, though he was the frontman. This is a must-have for fans of this trio.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1 Atlăn′tă 25:19
Written-By – Guy, Parker, Lytton
2 Two In One 9:03
Written-By – Guy
3 The Snake As Road Sign 17:05
Written-By – Parker
4 Geometry 20:47
Written-By – Guy, Parker, Lytton
Credits :
Bass – Barry Guy (pistas: 1, 2, 4)
Drums, Percussion – Paul Lytton (pistas: 1, 4)
Soprano Saxophone – Evan Parker (pistas: 3)
Tenor Saxophone – Evan Parker (pistas: 1, 4)
20.2.23
EVAN PARKER | BAARY GUY - Obliquities (1995) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
This is a wonderful duet date by two of the longest-running partners of the British vanguard music scene. First playing together in 1967 and infrequently through and after the foundation of Guy's London Composers Orchestra, which Parker remained a member of, through the '80s and '90s the pair saw their paths cross more frequently than Orchestra dates and sessions. This recording from 1994 finds the duo in fine form and extrapolating on the ideas they explore with Paul Lytton in their long-running trio. Here are new and different contexts for free improvisation as the duo expresses themselves dynamically and timbrally. Guy in particular seems bent on discovering in each exercise just what the bass itself is capable of, and his reactions are always those in which the bass speaks to the particular issue laid out by Parker's saxophones and then moves out a step further until retrenchment is necessary. For Parker's part, on most of the tracks here, especially "Marxbruder," "Belaqua," and "Punta Rversa," his playing is less external, it is focused on the timbral qualities made possible by Guy's playing and explores the softer edge of his improvisational palette. There are moments here when listeners can hear the voice of silence itself singing, and others where silence is punctured by only the most carefully made sounds, while still at others, silence is left to fend for itself as the emotions and the music come to a furied, mischievous pitch.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1 Marxbrüder 13:47
2 Botta Segreta 3:42
3 Ecliptic 6:32
4 Slope 8:39
5 Belacqua 6:01
6 Lurch 9:49
7 Balestra 9:38
8 Punta Reversa 5:44
9 Fleam 11:36
Credits :
Double Bass, Bass [Chamber Bass] – Barry Guy
Music By – Barry Guy, Evan Parker
Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Evan Parker
EVAN PARKER | ELECTRO-ACOUSTIC ENSEMBLE - Toward the Margins (1997) APE (image+.cue), lossless
Founded in 1992, Evan Parker's Electro-Acoustic Ensemble is a highly sophisticated grouping, which for this recording conceptually pairs three acoustic musicians with electronic tone manipulators. What keeps it so interesting is the different approaches to electronics, with Walter Prati transforming Parker's sounds, Marco Vecchi reformulating Paul Lytton's percussion, and violinist Philipp Wachsmann processing his own acoustic sounds and those of bassist Barry Guy. It is all fascinating stuff, and if it does not swing or fit into any easy definitions of "jazz," it takes the concept of improvisation to a new level. There is sometimes an aimlessness to it all that can be off-putting, but concentrated listening can produce wonderful rewards for the patient consumer. Parker's role seems less that of a leader than an instigator. He does, nonetheless, afford himself the opportunity to press his revolutionary technique to action. The detailed 20-page booklet, with extensive liner notes by Steve Lake is a real plus. Steve Loewy
Tracklist :
1 Toward The Margins 4:31
Music By – Guy, Parker, Wachsmann
2 Turbulent Mirror 5:51
Music By – Evan Parker
3 Field And Figure 7:06
Music By – Guy, Parker
4 The Regenerative Landscape (For AMM) 3:34
Music By – Evan Parker
5 Chain Of Chance 4:19
Music By – Vecchi, Lytton, Prati
6 Trahütten 6:17
Music By – Parker, Wachsmann
Shadow Without An Object (6:00)
Music By – Guy, Parker, Vecchi, Lytton, Wachsmann, Prati
7.1 (I) Engagement
7.2 (II) Reversal
7.3 (III) Displacement
8 Epanados 4:27
Music By – Guy, Parker, Vecchi, Lytton, Wachsmann, Prati
9 Born Cross-Eyed (Remembering Fuller) 2:49
Music By – Paul Lytton
10 Philipp's Pavilion 7:32
Music By – Parker, Wachsmann
11 The Hundred Books (For Idries Shah) 4:09
Music By – Evan Parker
12 Contra-Dance 3:38
Music By – Guy, Parker
Credits :
Cover – Mayo Bucher
Double Bass – Barry Guy
Electronics [Live Electronics], Effects [Sound Processing] – Marco Vecchi, Walter Prati
Percussion, Electronics [Live Electronics] – Paul Lytton
Soprano Saxophone, Gong – Evan Parker
Violin, Viola, Electronics [Live Electronics], Effects [Sound Processing] – Philipp Wachsmann
18.2.23
EVAN PARKER | BARRY GUY | PAUL LYTTON ft. JOE McPHEE — The Redwood Session (1996) Spirit Room Series – Vol.1 | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
This live set was the initial release by the mostly avant-garde CIMP
label. Evan Parker (on soprano and tenor) interacts with bassist Barry
Guy and drummer Paul Lytton on four lengthy, free sound explorations.
Parker generally dominates, achieving a wide variety of sounds out of
his horns. The closing "Then Paul Saw the Snake" is the actual high
point because trumpeter Joe McPhee sits in, making the trio a dynamic
quartet and the music a little more accessible. Those listeners with
very open ears should find this set of interest. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1 Not Yet 12:47
Barry Guy / Paul Lytton / Evan Parker
2 The Masks 10:47
Barry Guy / Paul Lytton / Evan Parker
3 Craig's Story 14:10
Barry Guy / Paul Lytton / Evan Parker
4 Pedal (For Warren) 9:22
Barry Guy / Paul Lytton / Evan Parker
5 Then Paul Saw the Snake (For Susan) 11:59
Barry Guy / Paul Lytton / Evan Parker
Credits :
Bass – Barry Guy
Drums, Percussion – Paul Lytton
Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Evan Parker
Trumpet – Joe McPhee (faixas: 5)
15.2.23
LOUIS MOHOLO | EVAN PARKER | PULE PHETO | GIBO PHETO | BARRY GUY QUINTET - Bush Fire (1997) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
While Phule and Gibo Pheto may not be household words among avant jazz
fans, the other three members of this ensemble should be well-known to
all. The mere presence of drummer Louis Moholo, saxophonist Evan Parker,
and bassist Barry Guy should and do guarantee a recording of very high
quality. Add to that Gibo Pheto's highly individualized style of bass
playing (that's right, two bassists) and the wooly, explosive pianism of
Phule Pheto and you have a quintet worth raving about. Bush Fire is
worth raving about for its execution certainly, but more important, it
is the defined and near-symbiotic musical relationship between Moholo
and Parker -- which drives these proceedings to their insanely feverish
pitch -- that is perhaps most astonishing. Indeed, on each of the ten
selections here, it is difficult to tell whom is leading whom, and the
identities of the two players seem to become liquid and switch. For
Parker's cascading multi-phonics that are at the heart of the title
track, "Baobab," and "For Chisa," Moholo rolls through a knotty attack
of snare accents and rim shots, only to be followed by Parker screaming a
series of arpeggios in return. When Moholo rides the crash cymbal in an
11/18 time signature for a full three minutes on "Flaming July," Parker
courses to the top of his ostinato speed with a phrase that is so
gnarly it accents the rhythm of the drum. Meanwhile the rest of the band
responds, not in kind, but in extremis, trying to keep the dynamics
fluctuating and liquid, adding color and space wherever possible and
solo as well. It's a breathtaking ride through the outer edges of free
jazz, but it's one so musical, so lyrically brilliant, it could never be
repeated. Thank the heavens for this recording.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1 Bush Fire 13:24
2 For Chisa 7:12
3 South Afrika Is Free - Ok? 11:48
4 Baobab 9:25
5 Mark Of Respect 4:18
6 Back Beat 6:26
7 Sticks 4:52
8 Coincidence 5:03
9 Flaming July 8:15
10 For Mpumi 8:03
Credits :
Bass – Gibo Pheto
Bass, Bass [Piccolo] – Barry Guy
Drums – Louis Moholo
Piano – Pule Pheto
Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Evan Parker
EVAN PARKER | ELECTRO-ACOUSTIC ENSEMBLE - Drawn Inward (1999) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Evan Parker has performed in so many contexts, but he seems to have hit a
particular stride with his Electro-Acoustic Ensemble, a strange
combination of saxophones, strings, and electronics. What makes this so
exceedingly attractive is the continuous wonder that permeates
throughout. Parker is no means the standout performer; his soprano and
tenor sometimes meld, at others lead, but it is his remarkable
companions, Philipp Wachsmann (on violin, viola, and electronics), Barry
Guy (on acoustic bass), Paul Lytton (on percussion and electronics),
plus three very different electronic sound manipulators, Lawrence
Casserly, Walter Prati, and Marco Vecchi, who combine to produce some
electrifying and starkly delightful music. Parker fans that have not
heard this group before may be surprised at the results. Although the
saxophonist embraces his now well-known advanced techniques, they are
clearly subordinate to the project. At times there is a busy intensity
to it all, at others a serene quality. Highly complex strokes for an
increasingly intricate society, perhaps, where moods change and so do
their contexts. Don't file under easy listening. Steve Loewy
Tracklist :
1 The Crooner (For Johnny Hartman) 9:13
Composed By – Parker, Wachsmann
2 Serpent In Sky 7:30
Composed By – Evan Parker
3 Travel In The Homeland 7:58
Composed By – Paul Lytton
4 Spouting Bowl 2:56
Composed By – Lawrence Casserley
5 Collect Calls [Milano-Kingston] [Bugged] 10:38
Composed By – Parker, Prati
6 Aka Lotan 4:24
Composed By – Parker, Wachsmann
7 Reanascreena 5:43
Composed By – Barry Guy
8 At Home In The Universe (For Stuart Kauffman) 3:20
Composed By – Evan Parker
9 Writing On Ice 3:43
Composed By – Philipp Wachsmann
10 Phloy In The Frame 3:49
Composed By – Parker, Lytton
11 DrawnInward 5:59
Composed By – Evan Parker
Credits :
Double Bass – Barry Guy
Electronics [Live Electronics], Effects [Sound Processing] – Lawrence Casserley, Marco Vecchi, Walter Prati
Percussion, Electronics [Live Electronics] – Paul Lytton
Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Khene [Khène] – Evan Parker
Violin, Viola, Electronics [Live Electronics], Effects [Sound Processing] – Philipp Wachsmann
EVAN PARKER | BARRY GUY | PAUL LYTTON - At the Vortex (1996) (1998) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Evan Parker, Barry Guy, Paul Lytton. This trio has been going on since the mid-'80s, but the musicians were already playing together in various outfits in 1966. There is no shortage of albums by this band, but At the Vortex ranks as one of, if not downright, its strongest recording. Why? Because it was done in perfect conditions, with all musicians in astonishing shape, on home court, so to speak: downtown London in front of an enthusiastic crowd of hard-core fans. And because that night's performance is presented unedited, all 78 minutes split into two extended sets. Listen to Parker's circular breathing solo at the beginning of the second set: He is literally smoking. Guy burns his double bass to the ground; Lytton is everywhere at once. The energy is discharged in spasms of sound, one cathartic moment after another. And yet, there is no going overboard or becoming your own stereotype. The strength, the inspiration, the spirit, the simple joy of playing together: That's what this music is all about. Of course the standard saxophone/bass/drums trio format calls for something a little jazzier than usual, but Parker remains true to himself, firmly anchored in free improv waters. Unless you are incapable of a long attention span, At the Vortex is an essential recording, even a good place to start for newcomers. One tip: In order to put all the music on one CD, applause has been edited out and only five seconds were left between sets. Do yourself a favor: After the first set, press the "pause" button and take a couple of minutes off, like the musicians and the audience must have had that night. You'll feel fresher when the magic starts happening all over again. Strongly and heartily recommended. François Couture
Tracklist :
1 At the Vortex (First Set) 38:19
Barry Guy / Paul Lytton / Evan Parker
2 At the Vortex (Second Set) 40:25
Barry Guy / Paul Lytton / Evan Parker
Credits :
Double Bass [Amplified], Music By – Barry Guy
Percussion, Drums, Cymbal, Music By – Paul Lytton
Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Music By – Evan Parker
PARKER | GUY | LYTTON | SCHLIPPENBACH TRIO - 2 X 3 = 5 (2001) FLAC (tracks), lossless
The title refers to the two trios of Parker/Schlippenbach/Lovens and Parker/Guy/Lytton, each of which groupings has performed on innumerable occasions, and some of which are documented on some extraordinary albums. Here, the two trios are united for one long, live piece, and the results are as good as to be expected. Considering that the piece is nearly 80 minutes, it is remarkable that Parker and colleagues are able to continuously maintain the listener's interest. This is a meeting of five like-minded, fully compatible, yet highly individual musical mavens who are capable of reaching extraordinary heights on their instruments. The use of two drummers might imply a certain fierceness that is simply not found here. The two Pauls (Lovens and Lytton) are each delicate performers, artists who never step on one another's toes, and who spur the music to sophisticated levels. Pianist Alexander von Schlippenbach and bassist Barry Guy, outstanding practitioners on their instruments, are in perfect harmony, as Schlippenbach's fingers glide across the piano keys with alarming rapidity, and Guy's bass performs in ways that must be heard to be believed. Parker, of course, is frenetic, with his usual blend of tricks on tenor and soprano saxes. While it is true that there is no new ground broken, this wonderful recording of the quintet should thrill Parker's legion of fans, and introduce others to his uniquely splendid approach. Steve Loewy
Tracklist :
1 2X3=5 1:17:07
Credits :
Bass – Barry Guy
Drums – Paul Lovens, Paul Lytton
Music By – A. Schlippenbach, B. Guy, E. Parker, P. Lovens, P. Lytton
Piano – Alex von Schlippenbach
Saxophone [Saxophones] – Evan Parker
PARKER | GUY | LYTTON and MARILYN CRISPELL - After Appleby (2000) 2CD | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Evan Parker continues to record session after session of outstanding music. This two-CD set features a splendid quartet with Parker alternating between soprano and tenor saxophones, Barry Guy on bass, Marilyn Crispell on piano, and Paul Lytton on percussion. The first disc is taken from a studio recording just one day before the live club recording captured on the second disk. Lytton and Guy, in particular, are longtime collaborators with Parker, but the addition of the pianist is a welcome addition to the mix, giving the proceedings an extra depth. Crispell can spurt fleetingly across the keyboard with clusters of notes, but she also shows a lyrical side that displays considerable depth. The longer tracks feature the quartet, while the others alternate between different combinations of the musicians. All are in perfect form, and the clear recording quality and lengthy recording time (more than two hours) commend this double-disc set to admirers of Evan Parker and freely improvised music. Steve Loewy
Studio Recording
1-1 Warp 3:38
Music By – Guy, Crispell
1-2 Blue Star Kachina 20:05
Music By – Guy, Parker, Crispell, Lytton
1-3 Wax 2:57
Music By – Crispell, Lytton
1-4 Falcon's Wing 2:54
Music By – Guy, Parker
1-5 Wane 3:10
Music By – Crispell, Lytton
1-6 Weft 2:32
Music By – Guy, Crispell
1-7 Where Heart Revive 25:14
Music By – Guy, Parker, Crispell, Lytton
1-8 Tchefit 3:05
Music By – Guy, Parker
Live Recording
2-1 Capnomantic Vortex (For David Mossman) 51:36
Music By – Guy, Parker, Crispell, Lytton
2-2 Fond Farewell 15:59
Music By – Guy, Crispell, Lytton
2-3 (applause) 0:20
Credits :
Artwork [Front Cover Sculpture] – Neil Ferber
Bass – Barry Guy
Percussion – Paul Lytton
Piano – Marilyn Crispell
Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Evan Parker
14.2.23
PARKER | GUY | LYTTON and MARILYN CRISPELL - Natives and Aliens (1997) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
The billing is a bit misleading: rather than a duo album, Natives and Aliens features the Evan Parker Trio -- saxophonist Parker plus longtime collaborators Barry Guy on bass and Paul Lytton on drums and percussion -- working with avant-garde pianist Marilyn Crispell. Originally recorded in the early '80s and first released in a small vinyl edition before gaining a wider distribution on CD in 2001, these 11 tracks are fluid, small-group improvisations that slot Crispell neatly into the practiced interplay of Parker's trio. Crispell's playing blends the best characteristics of her two acknowledged inspirations, with Paul Bley's fluidity (best heard on the speedy, rippling cascades of notes that color "Sumach") and Cecil Taylor's percussive, rhythmically free attack (as on "Day of Small Truths," where the pianist interjects booming, sustained chords into a lyrical solo by Guy). The Evan Parker Trio, as always, play with the intuition and improvisatory grace that comes when skilled musicians are in tune with each other's idiosyncracies, giving Natives and Aliens a light -- almost swinging, in the old-school sense -- touch that's often missing in this brand of modern jazz. Stewart Mason
Tracklist :
1 Stag's Horn 9:48
2 Sumach 6:35
3 Rhus 8:05
4 Friends From Above 6:35
5 Hirta 4:25
6 Sippenaeken Visitation 8:22
7 And The Tints 3:55
8 A Deeper Red 1:47
9 In Velvet 2:38
10 Day Of Small Truths 7:19guy
11 Natives And Aliens 10:21
Credits :
Double Bass, Bass [Piccolo Bass] – Barry Guy
Music By [All Ttiles Are Collective Works] – Barry Guy, Evan Parker, Marilyn Crispell, Paul Lytton
Percussion – Paul Lytton
Piano – Marilyn Crispell
Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Evan Parker
13.2.23
BARRY GUY | EVAN PARKER - Birds and Blades (2003) 2CD | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
In 2002, the rage for free expression was readily apparent in this pair of gigs between bassist Barry Guy and saxophonist Evan Parker. Made of up two discs, this set represents two days' work by the duo. The first is a studio date under Guy's mantle, on which the pair engage in seven wildly different improvisations. As Guy's sense of situation and tension is one of the very best in the world, he opens up a road for Parker tonally and dynamically. Using his fingers, a bow, his palms, and anything else at his disposal, Guy charges into a kind of tonal inquiry that requires force. Parker, on soprano, takes the rough stuff and runs with it. On the latter disc, the duo plays live and the four improvs here are left by Parker, who plays both tenor and soprano. These pieces are a bit more speculative in origin, but quickly get to the place where the fire meets the sky. This is an exhilarating pair that, together, practices a kind of poetry of the infinite in their explorations. Far from difficult to listen to; if anything, this is so compelling one will want to repeat it.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Studio
1-1 Alar 3:52
1-2 Swordplay 10:27
1-3 Cut And Thrust 6:41
1-4 Froissement 11:33
1-5 Coulé 5:44
1-6 Barrage 5:37
1-7 Birds And Blades 14:25
Live
2-1 Angulation 19:03
2-2 Circling 18:23
2-3 Point In Line 14:06
2-4 Lunge 15:47
Credits :
Double Bass, Composed By – Barry Guy
Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone, Composed By – Evan Parker
12.2.23
EVAN PARKER | ELECTRO-ACOUSTIC ENSEMBLE - Memory/Vision (2003) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
The Evan Parker Electro-Acoustic Ensemble has been an ever-changing entity in both personnel and musical direction. Originally structured as a free jazz unit whose players were given "electronic shadows," this model has given way to something entirely other in composition and execution. The ensemble now numbers nine members. Only five of these players -- Parker (saxophones, tapes, samples), Philipp Wachsmann (violin, electronics), Augusti Fernandez (piano, prepared piano), Barry Guy (double bass), and Paul Lytton (percussion, electronics) -- are considered "free jazz" players in anything resembling proper usage. Six members of the ensemble play electronics (the others are Joel Ryan, Walter Prati, Marco Vecchio, and Lawrence Casserley). Memory/Vision is a work commissioned by the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival and Oslo's Ultima Festival. These recordings of the work were taken from those performances. What is so remarkable about this work is that four of the ensemble members (the final four mentioned above) make music by transforming sounds and phrases from the musicians in real time according to individual interpretation and re-offering them as improvisational material. Talk about walking on a wire; this all happened live in front of an audience! In his introductory notes, Parker gives credit for the inspiration for the structure of this work to Charles Arthur Musés and his concept of "chronotopology." At each of the seven stages here a "strand" of prior recordings exists, sometimes already containing prior recorded improvisations. These are reacted to and acted upon, creating within their new framework the resonances of something previous, something other. Sure, it's interesting, but how does it "sound"? Like excitement, like something emerging that moves beyond itself in each phase; it sounds like a dialogue that cannot be insular because of its input from "outside" as each member contributes from previously held notions not only of the music itself, but from previous improvisations; it sounds like movement directed at other movement for the purpose of moving further still. And finally, it sounds like a group, an ensemble, fixed on a direction where many articulations create seams and cracks from which emerge musico-linguistic utterance that becomes a communicative language both poetic and speculative. It is at times startling, wondrous, puzzling, and beautiful. It is always compelling, engaging, and full of interest for any listener with an open mind. Ultimately, this is one of the most emotionally resonant works Parker has given listeners. And one hopes that such a description will not insult his brilliant mind or his aesthetic sensibilities. Wonderful.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
Memory / Vision - Staring Into The Time Cone
1 Part 1 10:22
2 Part 2 11:18
3 Part 3 5:09
4 Part 4 13:21
5 Part 5 12:43
6 Part 6 9:10
7 Part 7 8:31
Credits :
Computer, Effects [Sound Processing] – Joel Ryan
Design – Sascha Kleis
Double Bass – Barry Guy
Electronics, Effects [Sound Processing] – Marco Vecchi, Walter Prati
Music By – Evan Parker
Percussion, Electronics – Paul Lytton
Piano, Piano [Prepared Piano] – Agustí Fernandez
Soprano Saxophone, Tape [Tapes], Sampler [Samples], Liner Notes – Evan Parker
Violin, Electronics – Philipp Wachsmann
9.2.23
EVAN PARKER - Free Zone Appleby 2004 (2005) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
In 2004, the Free Zone feature of the Appleby Jazz Festival presented a sequence of duo and trio combinations featuring bassist Barry Guy, percussionist Paul Lytton, saxophonist Evan Parker, violinist Philipp Wachsmann, and Joel Ryan on live computer processing. Free Zone Appleby 2004 culls pieces taken from each of the four sets. Every set was twofold, starting with a duo between Ryan and one of the acoustic players, followed by a trio between the three other musicians. The track list on the CD reflects this organization, systematically permuting players. Ryan's work with free improvisers never ceases to amaze; his approach is much more complementary than the usual fragmentation processes of other computer artists working in live situations. His duo with Wachsmann ranks among the best material he has recorded yet. The two of them are literally fused together, each one reinventing the language of the other. The duo with Barry Guy also reaches impressive heights. The other duos fall more within expectations -- strong, but not surprising. The trios are also rather uneventful, as Guy, Lytton, Parker, and Wachsmann have been improvising together for so many years. Each lineup produces good interaction levels, with a special mention going to "Trio-3" by Parker, Guy, and Wachsmann, but these pieces present nothing different that would recommend them over earlier recordings. That said, Ryan's presence on over half of the album is reason enough to add this title to your collection. François Couture
Tracklist :
1 Duo-1 11:38
2 Trio-1 7:28
3 Duo-2 6:33
4 Trio-2 6:50
5 Duo-3 11:45
6 Trio-3 8:44
7 Duo-4 18:24
8 Trio-4 7:57
Credits :
Bass – Barry Guy (pistas: 2, 3, 6, 8)
Effects [Live Processing] – Joel Ryan (pistas: 1, 3, 5, 7)
Painting – Phil Morsman
Percussion – Paul Lytton (pistas: 2, 4, 5, 8)
Soprano Saxophone – Evan Parker (pistas: 2, 4, 6, 7)
Violin, Electronics – Philipp Wachsmann (pistas: 1, 4, 6, 8)
AGUSTÍ FERNÁNDEZ | EVAN PARKER | BARRY GUY | PAUL LYTTON | - Topos (2007) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Tracklist :
1 Coalescence 1:58
2 Open Systems 9:44
3 In Praise Of Shadows 5:20
4 Air/Luft 4:30
5 Still Listening 6:43
6 Moon Over BCN 6:28
7 Smart Set 3:46
8 This One Is For Kowald 6:31
9 Inner Silence 3:51
Credits :
Artwork [Cover Art] – VANCHE
Composed By – Fernández, Guy (pistas: 1 to 4, 6 to 8), Parker (pistas: 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 9), Lytton (pistas: 1 to 6, 8, 9)
Double Bass – Barry Guy (pistas: 1 to 4, 6 to 8)
Percussion – Paul Lytton (pistas: 1 to 6, 8, 9)
Piano – Agustí Fernández
Producer [Produced By] – Agustí Fernández, Maya Recordings
Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Evan Parker (pistas: 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 9)
6.2.23
PARKER | GUY | LYTTON - Zafiro (2006) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Zafiro (52:04)
1 ID 1 (Start) 11:11
2 ID 2 (Bass, Perc) 4:34
3 ID 3 (Enter Tenor Sax) 8:38
4 ID 4 (Perc. Solo) 3:47
5 ID 5 (Enter Bass) 2:48
6 ID 6 (Enter Soprano Sax) 2:03
7 ID 7 (Soprano Sax Solo) 7:58
8 ID 8 (Bass, Perc) 1:53
9 ID 9 (Enter Soprano Sax) 9:09
10 ID 10 Zafiro Encore 8:45
Credits :
Composed By – Barry Guy, Evan Parker, Paul Lytton
Double Bass – Barry Guy
Drums, Percussion – Paul Lytton
Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Evan Parker
EVAN PARKER | TRANSATLANTIC ART ENSEMBLE - Boustrophedon (2008) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Boustrophedon (In Six Furrows) was recorded in Munich during September of 2004 -- immediately following the night Roscoe Mitchell recorded Composition/Improvisation Nos. 1, 2 & 3. What the two recordings have in common is that they were both created using a transatlantic group of musicians, some of whom played on both dates. This disc was conceived as its counterpart. The group here is an interesting one: it consists of Evan Parker and his longtime mates and partners in crime Paul Lytton, Barry Guy, Philipp Wachsmann, and John Rangecroft. It also features Mitchell and his brilliant Note Factory quartet with Craig Taborn, Tani Tabbal, and Jaribu Shahid, with other friends such as Anders Svanoe, Neil Metcalfe, Corey Wilkes, Nils Bultmann, and Marcio Mattos -- all told, a 14-piece orchestra. Parker, who composed this music and conducts, is featured here on soprano. Like Mitchell's offering, this is a music based on strategies, as the title would suggest. Boustrophedon is a Greek word meaning "turning like an ox while plowing" -- hence, the word "furrows" in the title. In fact, Parker quotes a beautiful passage from Samuel Beckett's The Expelled that offers its own explanation by trying to count stairs adequately first by climbing up and then again when walking down. The music here moves in much the same way, with vertical ascent and descent according to innate scalar challenges and horizontally in both directions as well. Textural elements, tonal colors by the different combinations of contrasting players on any given track, drama, dynamic, and (of course) the degree of improvisation held within this manner of working all present numerous challenges as well as opportunities. This music is not jazz -- free or otherwise -- nor is it merely classical formalism or improvisation deconstruction. Instead, Parker's compositions are scored with the idea of bringing together, through his very European outlook, the different ways region, distance, cultural difference, and discipline combine to make something else: a new work that maintains an identity that is transcultural and trans-aesthetic. This is one work divided into six sections for easy CD programming (on LP this would never happen). Parker is more restrained, much more patient to let his lines and chromatic changes occur as they begin to appear, enhancing them with spirited improvisation that nonetheless leaves its edges at the door. It is as compelling as Mitchell's album, although very different. It is an exercise in musical mystery, chance, and opaque textures that get inside the listener and stay there a bit before moving on toward the next plateau.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Boustrophedon (In Six Furrows)
1 Overture 1:21
2 Furrow 1 8:09
3 Furrow 2 5:46
4 Furrow 3 11:07
5 Furrow 4 5:21
6 Furrow 5 8:20
7 Furrow 6 12:52
8 Finale 6:19
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – Anders Svanoe
Alto Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Roscoe Mitchell
Cello – Marcio Mattos
Clarinet – John Rangecroft
Double Bass – Barry Guy, Jaribu Shahid
Drums, Percussion – Paul Lytton, Tani Tabbal
Ensemble – The Transatlantic Art Ensemble
Flute – Neil Metcalfe
Piano – Craig Taborn
Recorded By – Manfred Eicher, Stefano Amerio
Soprano Saxophone, Music By – Evan Parker
Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Corey Wilkes
Viola – Nils Bultmann
Violin – Philipp Wachsmann
5.2.23
EVAN PARKER ELECTRO-ACOUSTIC ENSEMBLE - The Moment's Energy (2009) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
It has been fascinating to listen to the ways Evan Parker's Electro-Acoustic Ensemble has developed its approach over the past 13 years. Some of its members, such as Paul Lytton, Barry Guy, Lawrence Casserley, Walter Prati, and Philipp Wachsman, have been here continuously since 1996's Toward the Margins, and the original sextet has now grown to 14 members, including new ones Peter Evans, Ned Rothenberg, and Kô Ishikawa. The Moment's Energy, an extended work in seven sections, is their fifth recorded outing. What is so immediately striking about this piece of music is how formally constructed it is. That does not mean there isn't improvisation -- after all, this is an Evan Parker-led group -- but more important is the place of composition in the framework of the whole. The Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival commissioned Parker to write something for their event, and this piece, with its cascading sonics shaping the international array of acoustic sounds, includes Parker's soprano, Ishikawa's sho, Agusti Fernández's piano and prepared piano, Rothenberg's clarinets and shakuhachi, Guy's bass, and Lytton's live percussion. Much of the work is restrained, full of space and a muted color palette -- though at all times there is a lot going on. In certain movements, such as "II," and "V," full-blown free improvisation between the acoustic instruments almost overwhelms the electronic elements -- half the ensemble is involved in the creation or projection of these sounds and their processing -- in the longer middle section of the piece. Elsewhere, color and dynamic -- such as on the moody, and even harrowing "IV," and the forcefulness of the work's closing movement "VII" -- offer proof of just how rich, disciplined, and wide-ranging the soundworld of this ensemble is. In addition, Parker's compositional method has employed a different scale here: he seems to have composed not only a work for performance by this particular ensemble, but has written with the ideal scale of the group itself as a principle concern. Hence, this work is more modern composition than merely free or experimental jazz. This is a gorgeous work when taken as a whole, a musical journey through multi-dimensional landscapes and sonic shadows that seems to stretch time itself.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
The Moment's Energy
1 I 9:29
2 II 9:45
3 III 9:34
4 IV 4:19
5 V 9:23
6 VI 8:11
7 VII 11:14
8 Incandescent Clouds 5:05
Credits :
Clarinet, Bass Clarinet, Shakuhachi – Ned Rothenberg
Double Bass – Barry Guy
Effects [Computer Processing] – Walter Prati
Effects [Sample And Signal Processing] – Joel Ryan
Effects [Sound Projection] – Marco Vecchi
Electronics [Live Electronics] – Paul Obermayer, Richard Barrett
Instruments [Signal Processing Instrument] – Lawrence Casserley
Music By – Evan Parker
Percussion, Electronics [Live Electronics] – Paul Lytton
Piano, Piano [Prepared Piano] – Agustí Fernández
Sho [Shô] – Ko Ishikawa
Soprano Saxophone – Evan Parker
Trumpet, Piccolo Trumpet – Peter Evans
Violin, Electronics [Live Electronics] – Philipp Wachsmann
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ESBJÖRN SVENSSON TRIO — Winter In Venice (1997) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
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...