The first of two Enja sets matching Marty Ehrlich (on clarinet, bass clarinet, alto, flute and alto flute) with Stan Strickland (tenor, soprano and flute), this inside/outside music also features bassist Anthony Cox and drummer Bobby Previte. The complex yet consistently colorful repertoire has plenty of variety, including one piece ("After After All") that is totally composed by and has Ehrlich as the only musician, overdubbing on several of his horns. The many tone colors provided by the two horn players and the strong originals make this a set worth searching for by listeners into the more adventurous side of jazz. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1. Celebration In Capetown 7:26
2. The All Told Alto Blues 3:53
3. After After All 2:25
4. Pliant Plaint 7:50
5. After All 10:26
6. Willie Whipporwill's Back Slidin' Heart Throb Two-Step 6:29
7. What I Know Now 4:00
Credits :
Alto Saxophone, Clarinet, Bass Clarinet, Flute, Alto Flute, composed by – Marty Ehrlich
Double Bass – Anthony Cox
Drums – Robert Previte
Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone, Flute – Stan Strickland
24.10.25
MARTY EHRLICH — Pliant Plaint (1988) Two Version | FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless
MARTY EHRLICH — The Traveller's Tale (1990) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Tracklist :
1. The Short Circle In The Long Line 6:46
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
2. The Reconsidered Blues 4:52
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
3. The Traveller's Tale 8:58
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
4. March 5:33
Composed By – Robin Holcomb
5. Alice's Wonderland 6:32
Composed By – Charles Mingus
6. Melody For Madeleine 7:43
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
7. Plowshare People 7:40
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
8 Lonnie's Lament 5:55
Composed By – John Coltrane
Credits :
Alto Saxophone [Alto Sax], Clarinet, Bass Clarinet, Composed By, Producer [Produced By] – Marty Ehrlich
Artwork [Cover Painting] – Oliver Jackson
Double Bass – Lindsey Horner
Drums – Bobby Previte
Soprano Saxophone [Soprano Sax] – Marty Ehrlich (tracks: 4, 8), Stan Strickland (tracks: 1)
Tenor Saxophone [Tenor Sax], Voice – Stan Strickland
22.10.25
MARTY EHRLICH — Can You Hear A Motion? (1994) Two Version | FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless
Tracklist :
1. The Black Hat 10:28
Written-By – Marty Ehrlich
2. The Welcome 8:08
Written-By – Marty Ehrlich
3. Pictures In A Glass House 4:41
Written-By – Marty Ehrlich
4. North Star 8:38
Written-By – Marty Ehrlich
5. Ode To Charlie Parker 6:19
Written-By – Jaki Byard
6. Reading The River (For John Carter) 4:42
Written-By – Marty Ehrlich
7. One For Robin 6:40
Written-By – Marty Ehrlich
8. Comme Il Faut 4:56
Written-By – Marty Ehrlich
Credits :
Bass – Michael Formanek
Clarinet, Alto Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Marty Ehrlich
Drums – Bobby Previte
Flute, Tenor Saxophone – Stanley Strickland
21.10.25
MARTY EHRLICH'S TRAVELER'S TALES — Malinke's Dance (2000) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
After a seven-year recording hiatus, Ehrlich's Travelers Tale quartet revives the spirit of that band with new material and a couple of older faves. Fellow saxophonist Tony Malaby, electric bass guitarist Jerome Harris, and drummer Bobby Previte are in the fold for these highlights of a four-day club date at the Knitting Factory/NYC. Except for the Julius Hemphill post-bop cartoonish, off-kilter harmonic line "Pigskin" with Harris's two-note bass and Bob Dylan's pop ballad alto feature for the leader "Tears of Rage," this is a program of Ehrlich's original, modern creative music. A boppish paeon to Ornette Coleman "Rhymes" kicks off the date, with the two saxes separate and equal. "Story" lines from the soprano (Ehrlich)/tenor (Malaby) front lines with an ostinato bass groove weave through the intricate title track for Malinke Elliott, spaced alto and soprano unison lines swim in funky or swinging marinade during a recapitulation of "North Star," while Ehrlich's signature pungent alto leads Malaby's agreeable tenor in the free, open terrain, traded extended lines of "Line on Love." Based on the changes of "I Remember You" is "Bright Remembered," a solo alto line building with bass, then drums popping and swinging on snare as Malaby decides to go for it as well. Ehrlich's most memorable writing is heard on "The Cry Of," as churning hand drums with ostinato bass in measures of repeated five's and four's extend an invitation to Ehrlich's flute and Malaby's tenor in a mysterious Middle Eastern feel, a rather calmed swirling dervish. The familiar but modified "Willy Whippoorwill" tacks on "Steals a Bow," merging from visceral funk to free bridge squawking, a 6/8 counterpoint section, 4/4 unison, and a reggae feel. Ehrlich continues to assert himself as a premier purveyor of current-day jazz, and this is another clear example of his high status in this modern age. Recommended. Michael G. Nastos
Tracklist :
1. Rhymes 8:40
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
2. The Cry Of 9:48
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
3. Malinke's Dance 8:16
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
4. Line On Love 7:38
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
5. Pigskin 6:47
Written-By – Julius Hemphill
6. Tears Of Rage 8:09
Written-By – Bob Dylan, Richard Manuel
7. North Star 4:17
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
8. Bright Remembered 9:16
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
9. Willy Whippoorwill Steals A Bow 5:52
Composed By – Marty Ehrlich
Credits :
Alto Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Flute, Producer – Marty Ehrlich
Bass Guitar [Acoustic] – Jerome Harris
Drums – Bobby Previte
Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Tony Malaby
28.6.22
JOHN ZORN - Cobra (1989) 2CD | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
John Zorn's Cobra game piece has enjoyed quite a life of its own since this, its original recording, from 1985-1986. Zorn developed several similar pieces, but Cobra would see renditions by various ensembles with varying instrumentation, with the composer at the helm and without, and would become something of a staple for undergraduate musicians exploring improvisational strategies. One of the central sources for the conception behind this piece, oddly enough, was the Avalon Hill game company, which created strategic simulation games involving arcane sets of rules, dice rolls, etc., in an effort to approximate, for example, war planning and theory. Zorn, a games aficionado with an affinity for elastic rules systems, developed a unique, expansive, and highly flexible series of prompts and rules, taught and distributed them to many of the downtown New York City musicians of the early '80s, and staged numerous highly entertaining performances of the ensuing "conflicts." At such an event, inevitably more viscerally enjoyable than a recording of same, Zorn would hold up cards with symbols, usually choosing certain small combinations of players. These symbols could instruct, among many other things, that the musicians improvise in a certain style (surf guitar, free noise, punk, etc.) and/or could delimit the duration, volume, and so on. He would thus spontaneously organize a composition that, for all its apparent anarchy, was actually following a relatively strict set of assumptions. The kicker was that the players could counteract his commands, forming ad hoc blocs, cooperate or betray said blocs, form alliances "against" other players, etc. As an audience member, one saw a wonderful display of real-time politics combined with art creation, and the result was often spectacular. Unfortunately, an enormous amount is sacrificed when Cobra is encountered as only an aural document (here, one live session and one in the studio). The kernels of collective sound tend to appear arbitrary, any strategic rationale necessarily going unseen. Listened to at home, one hears a series of sonic postcards, enjoyable or otherwise on their own but bearing little obvious relationship to what came before or after. One can certainly appreciate the music in just that manner, as a random, Cage-ian series of musical fragments, but one is left with the nagging (and correct) sense of something crucial being missed. As a document in Zorn's career, Cobra is essential. As a purely musical experience, it is, quite unfortunately, less so. Brian Olewnick
Cobra: Studio Version 59:25
1 Opening 0:59
2 Allegro 4:32
3 Largo 6:13
4 Moderato 7:42
5 Fantasia 3:44
6 Presto 1:39
7 Adagio Maestoso 2:40
8 Violento 4:16
9 Allegro Scorrevole 2:35
10 Capricciocongusto 4:40
11 False Start/ Giocoso 0:52
12 Scherzo 5:47
13 Maestoso Meccanico 1:22
14 Variations/Furioso 8:40
15 Epilogue 3:44
Cobra: Live Version 53:25
1 Prologue/Maestoso 6:05
2 Capriccio 13:23
3 Prestissimo 14:04
4 Lento/Mysterioso 9:29
5 Allegro 10:24
Credits :
Accordion – Guy Klucevsek
Celesta – David Weinstein (pistas: 1-1 to 1-15)
Conductor [Prompter], Composed By – John Zorn
Electric Guitar – Bill Frisell
Electric Guitar, Voice – Arto Lindsay (pistas: 1-1 to 1-15)
Electronic Drums – Bobby Previte (pistas: 2-1 to 2-5)
Guitar [Doubleneck], Bass [Doubleneck], Voice – Elliott Sharp
Guitar [Soprano] – Elliott Sharp (pistas: 1-1 to 1-15)
Harp – Carol Emanuel (pistas: 1-1 to 1-15), Zeena Parkins (pistas: 1-1 to 1-15)
Harpsichord, Celesta – Anthony Coleman (pistas: 1-1 to 1-15)
Organ [Hammond], Celesta – Wayne Horvitz (pistas: 1-1 to 1-15)
Organ [Pipe] – Anthony Coleman (pistas: 2-1 to 2-5)
Percussion – Bobby Previte (pistas: 1-1 to 1-15)
Piano, Organ [Yamaha] – Anthony Coleman
Piano, Synthesizer [DX7] – Wayne Horvitz
Synthesizer [Trombone Synthesizer], Electronics – J.A. Deane (pistas: 2-1 to 2-5)
Tape – Bob James
Trombone – Jim Staley (pistas: 1-1 to 1-15)
Turntables – Christian Marclay
26.6.22
JOHN ZORN : Godard / Spillane (1999) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
Two of Zorn’s most influential compositions, one long out of print, now sound better than ever in this newly remastered critical edition, complete with detailed notes, session photos, reminiscences and more. A lot has been written about Zorn’s "file card" compositions, of which Godard and Spillane are the first and purest examples. Described as "aural movies," these exciting tributes to the life and work of two of the world’s most original and infamous artists feature many of Zorn’s most important musical colleagues: Bill Frisell, Fred Frith, Bobby Previte, Anthony Coleman, Christian Marclay, John Lurie, and Richard Foreman among others. Essential Zorn from the mid ’80s. Also included as a bonus: the rare and delightful Christmas track Blues Nöel. TZADIK
Tracklist :
1 Godard 18'37
Drums, Percussion – Bobby Previte
Guitar, Banjo – Bill Frisell
Harp – Carol Emanuel
Keyboards, Sampler [Sampling] – David Weinstein
Narrator [Chinese] – Wu Shao-Ying
Narrator [English] – Richard Foreman
Narrator [French], Reeds – John Zorn
Narrator [Japanese], Voice – Luli Shioi
Piano, Organ, Celesta [Celeste], Harpsichord – Anthony Coleman
Turntables – Christian Marclay
2 Spillane 23'12
Bass, Tuba – David Hofstra
Clarinet, Alto Saxophone – John Zorn
Drums, Percussion, Timpani – Bobby Previte
Effects [Compact Disc], Tape [Tapes] – Bob James
Guitar [Guitars] – Bill Frisell
Harp – Carol Emanuel
Keyboards, Sampler [Sampling] – David Weinstein
Piano, Organ, Celesta [Celeste], Harpsichord – Anthony Coleman
Trombone – Jim Staley
Voice – John Lurie, Robert Quine
3 Blues Nöel 5'51
Alto Saxophone – John Zorn
Bass, Guitar [Guitars] – Fred Frith
Percussion, Voice – Michael Blair
Piano, Organ, Celesta [Celeste], Harpsichord – Anthony Coleman
Sampler – David Weinstein
Voice, Drum Machine – Ikue Mori
Credits :
Composed, Producer – John Zorn
25.6.22
JOHN ZORN - Filmworks I : 1986-1990 (1997) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
For Zorn, filmscores have always been a place to experiment and the Filmworks Series is in many ways a microcosm of his output. This original installment of the Filmworks Series presents three scores ranging from punk-rockabilly (featuring the nasty guitars of Bob Quine, Marc Ribot and Arto Lindsay); a jazzy Bernard Herrmann fantasy; to a quirky classical/improv/world music amalgam for Raul Ruiz's bizarre film The Golden Boat. Zorn's infamous one minute arrangement of Morricone's classic The Good, The Bad and The Ugly, is included as a bonus track. Out of print for several years, these classic recordings are made available here with the original cover art intact. This is the place where it all began. TZADIK
White And Lazy
1 Main Title 0:55
2 Homecoming 1:15
3 The Heist 3:20
4 Meat Dream 1:15
5 Phone Call 0:50
6 End Title 1:59
The Golden Boat
7 Fanfare 0:30
8 Theme 2:59
9 Jazz I 2:51
10 Horror Organ 1:06
11 Mexico 1:56
12 Mood 3:17
13 Rockabilly 2:01
14 Slow 2:47
15 Jazz Oboes 2:33
16 The Golden Boat (Turntable Mix) 2:58
Mixed By – David Shea
17 End Titles 2:53
The Good, The Bad And The Ugly
18 The Good, The Bad And The Ugly 1:04
Composed By – Ennio Morricone
She Must Be Seeing Things
19 Main Title 1:04
20 Swirling Shot 1:20
21 Homecoming 3:22
22 Catalina Flash 0:28
23 Seduction 4:54
24 Sex Shop Boogaloo 2:47
25 Catalina Escapes 1:11
26 Worms 1:04
27 Death Waltz Fantasy 1:24
28 Following Sequence 3:03
29 Movie Set 1:20
30 Climax 2:55
31 Going To Dinner 2:38
32 End Titles 3:27
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – John Zorn (pistas: 7 to 17, 19 to 32)
Arranged By, Producer, Executive-Producer, Liner Notes – John Zorn
Bass – David Hofstra (pistas: 19 to 32), Fred Frith (pistas: 18), Mark Dresser (pistas: 7 to 17), Melvin Gibbs (pistas: 1 to 6)
Bass Clarinet – Ned Rothenberg (pistas: 1 to 6)
Composed By – John Zorn (pistas: 1 to 15, 17, 19 to 32)
Drums – Anton Fier (pistas: 1 to 6), Bobby Previte (pistas: 7 to 32)
French Horn – Tom Varner (pistas: 19 to 32)
Guitar – Bill Frisell (pistas: 18 to 32), Robert Quine (pistas: 1 to 18)
Guitar, Vocals – Arto Lindsay (pistas: 1 to 6)
Harp – Carol Emanuel
Keyboards – Anthony Coleman (pistas: 7 to 17), David Weinstein (pistas: 1 to 6, 18 to 32)
Marimba – Bobby Previte (pistas: 7 to 17)
Oboe – Vicki Bodner (pistas: 7 to 17)
Organ [Hammond] – Wayne Horvitz (pistas: 18 to 32)
Percussion – Cyro Baptista (pistas: 7 to 17), Naná Vasconcelos (pistas: 19 to 32)
Percussion, Vibraphone, Timpani, Bells [Orchestra] – Bobby Previte (pistas: 19 to 32)
Piano – Wayne Horvitz (pistas: 19 to 32)
Piano, Organ, Celesta, Harpsichord – Anthony Coleman (pistas: 19 to 32)
Tenor Saxophone, Clarinet – Marty Ehrlich (pistas: 19 to 32)
Trombone – Jim Staley (pistas: 19 to 32)
Vocals – Bobby Previte (pistas: 18), Shelley Hirsch (pistas: 19 to 32)
Vocals, Turntables – David Shea (pistas: 7 to 17)
24.6.22
JOHN ZORN - Filmworks VII : Cynical Hysterie Hour (1997) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
The holy grail of Zornthologists is finally available in a newly remastered definitive edition.
Released in Japan for only a few short months in 1990, this is the original music Zorn created for a series of four shorts by one of Japan's most endearing cartoonists: Kiriko Kubo.
A long time champion of Warner Bros. cartoon composer Carl Stalling, Zorn considers this to be his finest and most personal take on cartoon music to date, a genre that has influenced him deeply. The all-star band includes Bill Frisell, Marc Ribot, Arto Lindsay, Robert Quine, Wayne Horvitz, Bobby Previte and Cyro Baptista. TZADIK
Trip Coaster
1 Hysteric Logo 0:24
2 Walk To Park 2:10
3 Coaster 2 0:47
4 Fighting Pirates 0:26
5 Yakisoba 1:14
6 Coaster Trip 1:39
Ch Ch Chang
7 1st Hit / 2nd Hit 0:27
8 Punk Rock Hero 0:56
9 Abacus Waltz 0:38
10 Punk Rebel / Tsunta's Theme 3:36
11 End Title 0:13
Through The Night
12 Through The Night 1:30
13 Home Sweet Home 1:43
14 Making Ramen At Midnight 0:32
15 Scary Moonlight 1:55
Bubblin' Singin'
16 My Favorite Things 2:18
17 Omelet Punk 0:20
18 Classical 0:16
19 Stink Of An Onion 0:34
20 Onion Samba 0:59
21 Omelet Punk 2 0:16
22 Me And My Hamburger / Final Samba 1:05
23 Surfing Samba 1:10
Credits :
Acoustic Bass, Electric Bass – David Hofstra (pistas: 7 to 23), Kermit Driscoll (pistas: 1 to 6)
Cello – Maxine Neuman (pistas: 12 to 15)
Composed, Producer, Arranged By – John Zorn
Drum Machine – Ikue Mori (pistas: 12 to 15)
Drums, Percussion – Bobby Previte (pistas: 1 to 11, 16 to 23)
Electric Guitar – Arto Lindsay (pistas: 7 to 11), Robert Quine (pistas: 7 to 11, 16 to 23)
Electric Guitar, Banjo – Bill Frisell (pistas: 1 to 6, 16 to 23), Marc Ribot (pistas: 7 to 15)
Harp – Carol Emanuel
Keyboards – Peter Scherer (pistas: 7 to 23), Wayne Horvitz (pistas: 1 to 6)
Percussion [Brazilian Percussion] – Cyro Baptista
Turntables – Christian Marclay (pistas: 1 to 6)
Violin, Viola – Jill Jaffe (pistas: 12 to 15)
Vocals – Arto Lindsay (pistas: 16 to 23), Kiriko Kubo (pistas: 16 to 23)
JOHN ZORN — The Bribe : Variations And Extensions On Spillane (1998) Archival Series | Two Version | APE + FLAC (image+.tracks+.cue), lossless
Written a few months after the session that created one of Zorn's most influential compositional masterpieces "Spillane," The Bribe is a major new discovery in the Zorn oeuvre. Recorded in the same style as "Spillane," with the same engineer, and very close to the same ensemble, these cues are not unlike an extended version of that classic piece. Created originally for three thirty minutes radio plays produced by Mabou Mines theater company back in 1986, this exciting music features lush moody orchestrations, swinging jazz, hard rock, groovy funk, noise, improvisations, exotic ambience and much, much more. With all the music squeezed onto one extended CD (over 76 minutes), The Bribe is one of Zorn's most eclectic and stimulating releases. TZADIK
Part 1 Sliding On The Ice
1 Gill's Theme 2:07
2 Hydrant Of The Vogue 0:41
3 The Big Freeze 1:01
4 Meters 2:24
5 The Bridge / Cocktails 4:06
6 The Willies 1:01
7 The Taxman Cometh 1:16
8 Night Walk 1:09
9 Skit Rhesus 2:43
10 The Boxer 0:59
11 Trick Or Treat 3:22
12 The Latin Trip / Gill's Theme 3:30
Part 2 The Arrest
13 A Taste Of Voodoo 3:20
14 Inhaling The Image 1:49
15 City Chase 3:27
16 Dreams Of The Red Chamber 11:38
17 Rash Acts 1:30
18 Chippewa 1:24
19 The Hour Of Thirteen 0:47
20 Radio Mouth / Gill's Theme 2:57
Part 3 The Art Bar
21 Midnight Streets 3:58
22 Victoria Lake 3:12
23 Strip Central 5:26
24 Pink Limousine 9:18
25 Skyline 3:19
26 Ordinary Lies / Gill's Theme 2:04
Credits :
Anthony Coleman : Piano
Marty Ehrlich : Reeds
Carol Emanuel : Harp
David Hofstra : Bass
Wayne Horvitz : Organ
Christian Marclay : Turntables
Ikue Mori : Drum Machines
Zeena Parkins : Harp
Bobby Previte : Percussion
Robert Quine : Guitar
Reck : Rhythm Guitar
Jim Staley : Trombone
John Zorn : Alto Sax
+ last month
SUZANNE VEGA — Lover, Beloved : Songs from an Evening with Carson McCullers (2021) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Suzanne Vega has always been a songwriter with a literary sensibility, displaying a feel for character and wordplay that was noticeably more...


