Mostrando postagens com marcador Carla Bley. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Carla Bley. Mostrar todas as postagens

17.5.24

CARLA BLEY — Tropic Appetites (1974-1998) FLAC (image + .cue), lossless

Following their superb "chronotransduction," Escalator Over the Hill, composer Carla Bley and poet Paul Haines once again teamed up for Tropic Appetites, a somewhat different, but equally compelling effort. The instrumentation is scaled down to an octet and the lyrics revolve around trips to Southeast Asia, particularly Bali, made by Haines over the preceding years. Bley makes an inspired choice for lead vocalist by enlisting the extraordinary Julie Tippetts who had attained rock stardom in the late '60s (as Julie Driscoll) in Brian Auger's Trinity.

After a powerful introductory "overture" led by the still incendiary Gato Barbieri who, for contractual reasons, is referred to in the credits as "Unidentified Cat," the hothouse atmosphere of the recording is established by the next song, "In India," with its humid, surreal lyrics.Bley consistently provides rich, imaginative, and varied underpinnings for Tippett's crystalline vocal work. From the ferocious and angry "Enormous Tots" to the yearning "Caucasian Bird Riffles" to the delightful singsong "Funnybird Song" featuring priceless vocals from Howard Johnson and Bley's very young daughter Karen Mantler (who would go on to a career of her own), the music is strong and memorable throughout.

All of the musicians are in top form, but special mention should be made of the dream rhythm team of David Holland and Paul Motian. Their tonal colors and supple interplay is a major factor of the success of this album. Tropic Appetites is one of Carla Bley's greatest successes; one could only wish that she had continued in this vein rather than opting for the jazz-funk bands she led from 1980 forward. Brian Olewnick
Tracklist :
1    What Will Be Left Between Us And The Moon Tonight?    11:04
 Carla Bley / Paul Haines
2    In India    1:10
 Carla Bley / Paul Haines
3    Enormous Tots    6:05
 Carla Bley / Paul Haines
4    Caucasian Bird Riffles    5:06
 Carla Bley / Paul Haines
5    Funnybird Song    1:18
 Carla Bley / Paul Haines
6    Indonesian Dock Sucking Supreme    8:54
 Carla Bley / Paul Haines
7    Song Of The Jungle Stream    10:15
 Carla Bley / Paul Haines
8    Nothing    3:34
 Carla Bley / Paul Haines
Credits :
Cello, Acoustic Bass, Bass Guitar – Dave Holland
Drums, Percussion – Paul Motian
Producer – Carla Bley, Michael Mantler
Tenor Saxophone, Percussion – Gato Barbieri
Trumpet, Valve Trombone – Michael Mantler
Violin, Viola – Toni Marcus
Voice – Julie Tippetts
Voice, Clarinet, Bass Clarinet, Soprano Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone, Bass Saxophone, Tuba [Tubas] – Howard Johnson
Voice, Recorder [Recorders], Piano, Electric Piano, Clavinet, Organ, Marimba, Celesta [Celeste], Percussion, Music By – Carla Bley

25.2.24

CHARLIE HADEN | LIBERATION MUSIC ORCHESTRA — Not In Our Name (2005) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Charlie Haden brings another incarnation of his Liberation Music Orchestra to tape. This intermittent project began at the height of the Vietnam War in 1969 and was recorded for Impulse. Carla Bley has been the only constant member of this project. She plays piano and does the arranging of these eight tunes. Other members include trumpeter Michael Rodriguez, Curtis Fowlkes on trombone, guitarist Steve Cardenas, drummer Matt Wilson, Miguel Zenon on alto, Chris Cheek on the tenor horn, Joe Daley playing tuba, and Ahnee Sharon Freeman playing French horn. The music is a lively and diverse set of covers, except for the title track -- composed by Haden -- and "Blue Anthem" by Bley. The seamlessness with which Bley melds her aesthetic to Haden's is remarkable. The tone and timbre is warm throughout. The reggae-fueled "This Is Not America" -- written by Pat Metheny, Lyle Mays, and David Bowie -- dryly quotes from "Battle Hymn of the Republic" at its end. The hinge piece of the album is the nearly-17-minute "American the Beautiful" that contains a wondrous, stately, if somewhat dissonant, read of Samuel Ward's famous tune, bursts into post-bop before a fine solo by Zenon, and then slips into Gary McFarland's jazz opus by the same name. The tune travels -- with solos by virtually everyone -- then to the African-American gospel church where it stops at "Lift Every Voice and Sing" by James Weldon Johnson, and winds up at a cross between the original tune and Ornette Coleman's elegiac slipstream dream anthem "Skies of America" before returning full circle to the original theme. The Liberation Music Orchestra goes even deeper into the national consciousness with a bluesy, New Orleans brass band-inspired version of "Amazing Grace." Then they dig into the gorgeous "Goin' Home," Antonin Dvorak's largo theme from the New World Symphony -- with jazz liberties taken, of course. The set ends with the adagio from Samuel Barber's "Adagio for Strings." Again, Bley's arrangement is stunning, understated, and finessed, yet full of dynamic reach. This is a beautiful album, one that makes a case for vision, creativity, and concern. Not in Our Name pulls together a wide range of aesthetic possibilities that all reflect the American consciousness and simultaneously mourns the passage of it while resisting with a vengeance that nadir. While a jazz recording, this album crosses the boundaries of the genre and becomes a new world music, a new folk music: one to be celebrated, perhaps even cherished.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1. Not In Our Name 6:17
Charlie Haden
2. This Is Not América 6:39
David Bowie / Lyle Mays / Pat Metheny
3. Blue Anthem 7:48
Carla Bley
4. America The Beautiful (Medley) 16:53
Katherine Lee Bates / Samuel A. Ward
5. Amazing Grace 7:12
John Newton / Traditional
6. Goin' Home (from Dvorak's New World Symphony) 7:49
Antonin Dvorák
7. Throughout  8:54
Bill Frisell
8. Adagio (from Barber's Adagio For Strings) 7:20
Samuel Barber
Personnel :
Michael Rodriguez, Seneca Black – Trumpet
Curtis Fowlkes – Trombone
Ahnee Sharon Freeman – French Horn
Joe Daley – Tuba
Miguel Zenon – Alto Saxophone
Chris Cheek, Tony Malaby – Tenor Saxophone
Steve Cardenas – Electric and Acoustic Guitars
Carla Bley – Piano, Arranged and Conducted
Charlie Haden – Bass
Matt Wilson – Drums

29.11.23

CHARLIE HADEN — Liberation Music Orchestra (1970) Two Version | 1996, RM | BONUS TRACK | Impulse! – IMP 11882 + 2001, RM | Impulse! Best 50 – 38 | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

A fascinating reissue that comfortably straddles the lines of jazz, folk, and world music, working up a storm by way of a jazz protest album that points toward the Spanish Civil War in particular and the Vietnam War in passing. Haden leads the charge and contributes material, but the real star here may in fact be Carla Bley, who arranged numbers, wrote several, and contributed typically brilliant piano work. Also of particular note in a particularly talented crew is guitarist Sam Brown, the standout of "El Quinto Regimiento/Los Cuatro Generales/Viva la Quince Brigada," a 21-minute marathon. Reissue producer Michael Cuscuna has done his best with the mastering here, but listeners will note a roughness to the sound -- one that is in keeping with the album's tone and attitude. Steven McDonald 
Tracklist :
1  The Introduction 1:15
Carla Bley 
2  Song of the United Front 1:52
Bertolt Brecht / Hanns Eisler 
3  El Quinto Regimiento (The Fifth Regiment)/Los Cuatro Generales (The Four G 20:58
Carla Bley / Traditional 
4  The Ending to the First Side 2:07
Carla Bley 
5  Song for Ché 9:29
Charlie Haden 
6  War Orphans 6:42
Ornette Coleman 
7  The Interlude (Drinking Music) 1:24
Carla Bley 
8  Circus '68 '69 6:10
Charlie Haden 
9  We Shall Overcome 1:19
Guy Carawan / Frank Hamilton / Zilphia Horton / Pete Seeger / Traditional 
Credits :
Bass, Producer – Charlie Haden
Clarinet – Perry Robinson
Cornet, Flute [Indian Wood Flute, Bamboo Flute] – Don Cherry (tracks: 3, 5) 
French Horn, Wood Block [Hand Wood Blocks], Bells, Reeds [Crow Call], Whistle [Military Whistle] – Bob Northern
Guitar, Kalimba [Thumb Piano] – Sam Brown (tracks: 1, 3 to 7) 
Percussion – Andrew Cyrille (tracks: 8), Paul Motian
Tambourine, Arranged By – Carla Bley
Tenor Saxophone, Alto Saxophone – Dewey Redman
Tenor Saxophone, Clarinet – Gato Barbieri
Trombone – Roswell Rudd
Trumpet – Michael Mantler
Tuba – Howard Johnson

2.7.21

CARLA BLEY | STEVE SWALLOW — Duets (1988) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

With Steve Swallow on bass, their tremendous musical rapport and precise wit are really beautiful. It comes highly recommended. David Nelson McCarthy
Tracklist :
1     Baby Baby 6:27
Carla Bley
2     Walking Batteriewoman 4:01
Carla Bley
3     Útviklingssang 4:52
Carla Bley
4     Ladies in Mercedes 5:46
Steve Swallow
5     Romantic Notion, No. 3 7:01
Carla Bley
6     Remember 5:25
Steve Swallow
7     Ups & Downs 6:26
Carla Bley
8     Reactionary Tango, Pts. 1-3 8:47
Carla Bley / Steve Swallow
9     Soon I Will Be Done With the Troubles of This World 7:00
Traditional
Credits :
Bass – Steve Swallow
Piano – Carla Bley

CARLA BLEY — Fleur Carnivore (1989) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

On Fleur Carnivore, pianist Carla Bley deftly integrates her beautiful melodies into five complex, yet effortless sounding pieces. Taken from 1988 live dates at Copenhagen's Montmartre club, Carnivore spotlights Bley's very accomplished big band, which includes, amongst several others, trumpeter Lew Soloff, alto saxophonist Wolfgang Pusching, trombonist Gary Valente, tenor saxophonist Andy Sheppard, and organist/harmonica player Karen Mantler (Bley's daughter). The title track is a romantically bittersweet ballad swinger, which includes impassioned solos from Pusching and Soloff, while, in nice contrast, there's the buoyant, Latin-tinged "Song of the Eternal Waiting of Canute," featuring rousing solos by Valente and tenor saxophonist Christof Lauer. In addition to these extended pieces, there is the suite composition, "The Girl Who Cried Champagne (Parts 1/2/3)." This breezily swinging bossa nova features meaty tenor work from Sheppard and a minimalist harmonic solo by Mantler. Rounding out the set are the whimsical "Ups and Downs" and the gospel R&B tune "Healing Power." Combining surprising arrangements and pop song melodies, Bley creates a unique jazz language, setting herself apart from both traditionalist bandleaders (Wynton Marsalis, Thad Jones) and more avant-garde stylists (Muhal Richard Abrams, George Russell). Fleur Carnivore is one of Bley's best titles and good place to start for newcomers. Stephen Cook  
Tracklist :
1. Fleur Carnivore - 11:12
Carla Bley
2. Song of the Eternal Waiting of Canute - 9:48
Carla Bley
3. Ups and Downs - 7:05
Carla Bley
4. The Girl Who Cried Champagne Parts 1-3 - 17:15
Carla Bley
5. Healing Power - 10:27
Carla Bley
Personnel
Carla Bley - Piano
Lew Soloff, Jens Winther - Trumpet
Frank Lacy - French Horn, Flugelhorn
Gary Valente - Trombone
Bob Stewart - Tuba
Daniel Beaussier - Oboe, Flute
Wolfgang Puschnig - Alto Saxophone, Flute
Andy Sheppard - Tenor Saxophone, Clarinet
Christof Lauer - Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone
Roberto Ottini - Baritone Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone
Karen Mantler - Harmonica, Organ, Vibes, Chimes
Steve Swallow - Bass Guitar
Buddy Williams - Drums
Don Alias - Percussion

CARLA BLEY | STEVE SWALLOW — Go Together (1993) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

After years spent emphasizing her compositions and bandleading abilities, in the late '80s, Carla Bley finally started featuring her own piano playing to a much greater degree. A melodic but explorative player, Bley (whose use of space sometimes recalls Thelonious Monk) interacts closely with the electric bass of Steve Swallow on this excellent duet session, performing six of her originals and two of Swallow's. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1     Sing Me Softly of the Blues 5:53
Carla Bley
2     Mother of the Dead Man 5:55
Carla Bley
3     Masquerade in 3 Parts: Carnation, Dark Glasses, Mustache 13:09
Steve Swallow
4     Ad Infinitum 5:56
Carla Bley
5     Copyright Royalties 6:31
Carla Bley
6     Peau Douce 4:46
Steve Swallow
7     Doctor 4:21
Carla Bley
8     Fleur Carnivore 6:24
Carla Bley
Credits :
Bass, Producer, Recorded By – Steve Swallow
Piano, Producer – Carla Bley

CARLA BLEY — Fancy Chamber Music (1998) APE (image+.cue), lossless

Always the iconoclast, here pianist Bley applies her keen musical skill on baroque and chamber styles with tongue firmly in cheek and a fine string section to set the mood. The opening track, "Wolfgang Tango," is a brooding romantic excursion with humorous undertones. "The End of Vienna" features subtle keyboard work by Bley in a beautiful panoramic melody.
But the trickster in Bley can't help but mix things up with the more challenging angles of "Tigers in Training." The closing track, a moving and rather creepy "JonBenet," is presumably an homage to the murdered child beauty queen. Tim Sheridan
Tracklist :
1     Wolfgang Tango 14:29
Carla Bley
2     Romantic Notion, No. 4 2:26
Carla Bley
3     End of Vienna 9:00
Carla Bley
4     Tigers in Training 19:02
Carla Bley
5     Romantic Notion, No. 6 1:05
Carla Bley
6     Jon Benet 7:17
Carla Bley
Credits :
Bass – Steve Swallow
Cello – Emma Black
Clarinet, Glockenspiel – Sara Lee
Flute – Alison Hayhurst
Percussion – Chris Wells
Piano – Carla Bley
Viola – Andrew Byrt
Violin – Steve Morris

CARLA LEY | STEVE SWALLOW — Are We There Yet? (1999) APE (image+.cue), lossless

Carla Bley and Steve Swallow's third outing as a duo captures them live on their 1998 European tour sounding fabulous. Three of the seven tunes are by Bley: "Major," an infectious triadic shell game; "King Korn," a whimsical run through rhythm changes in the keys of E flat and C; and "Musique Mecanique," an ambitious three-part suite adapted from Bley's 1978 album of the same name. Three other compositions are by Swallow: "A Dog's Life," a Ray Charles-style tune in a slow 6/8; "Satie for Two," an affecting tribute to the minimalist composer; and "Playing With Water," a bossa nova previously performed by Swallow's 1991 sextet. The only non-original of the set is Kurt Weill's ballad "Lost in the Stars," which Bley and Swallow play beautifully.
Bley's piano is remarkably versatile and passionate, and Swallow's signature electric bass sound tickles the senses, especially during the Weill song where one moment he makes the room vibrate with low notes, and the next reaches the stratosphere of his range with singing melodies. David R. Adler  
Tracklist :
1     Major 3:36
Carla Bley
2     A Dog's Life 7:15
Steve Swallow
3     Satie for Two 8:42
Steve Swallow
4     Lost in the Stars 5:16
Kurt Weill
5     King Korn 4:38
Carla Bley
6     Playing With Water 4:42
Steve Swallow
7     Musique Mecanique Pt. 1/Pt. 2 (At Midnight) /Pt.3 13:25
Carla Bley
Credits :
Bass – Steve Swallow
Piano – Carla Bley

CARLA BLEY — The Lost Chords (2003) APE (image+.cue), lossless

The Lost Chords are Carla Bley (piano), Andy Sheppard (saxophones), Steve Swallow (electric bass), and Billy Drummond (drums). This self-titled album is a document from the quartet's 2003 European tour. The set begins with the three-part suite "3 Blind Mice," a decidedly straight-ahead set comprised of bluesy hard bop and post-bop tropes. Bley and Sheppard solo and play the front line with great rapport; they complement one another well and their exchanges are relaxed and lyrical. The slightly dissonant angularity of "Hip Hop" reflects Bley's sense of humor as well as her affinity for the funky blues of Horace Silver and Bobby Timmons. "Lost Chords," the nearly 17-minute three-part suite that bookends the album at its close, is one of the most beautifully lyrical pieces Bley has ever composed. Its wide reach across ballad, bop, and modal developments is ambitious, and yet it is also seamless. As showcased to great effect here, Swallow's bass playing, while always subtle and unobtrusive, is such a force in this band that he becomes its entire spine. The depth of communication here is marvelous, and given the level of comfort these musicians have with one another, that feeling of ease is communicated to the listener as well.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1     3 Blind Mice: 3 Blind Mice 5:29
Carla Bley
2     3 Blind Mice: Wink Leak/Traps/Leonard Feather 5:30
Carla Bley
3     3 Blind Mice: The Maze/Blind Mice Redux 4:13
Carla Bley
4     Hip Hop 7:42
Carla Bley
5     Tropical Depression 7:37
Carla Bley
6     Red 6:01
Carla Bley
7     Lost Chords: I 9:07
Carla Bley
8     Lost Chords: II 4:23
Carla Bley
9     Lost Chords: III 3:37
Carla Bley
Credits :
Bass, Mixed By, Producer – Steve Swallow
Drums – Billy Drummond
Piano, Composed By – Carla Bley
Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Andy Sheppard

CARLA BLEY — The Lost Chords Find Paolo Fresu (2007) WV (image+.cue), lossless

Composer and pianist Carla Bley has been very consistent, if not exactly prolific, for most of her 40 years in jazz. When she and bassist/life partner Steve Swallow hired British saxophonist Andy Sheppard -- then one of his country's young lions as both a composer and as a reedman -- in 1989, they hired him on and he's been with the group ever since. The recorded evidence was heard on Sheppard's first appearance with Bley on the utterly beguiling Fleur Carnivore, and later on the fine trio recording Songs with Legs in 1995. Drummer Billy Drummond joined the unit as a permanent member in the early part of this century, and on 2004's Lost Chords debut, locked in with a unit that seemed to be evenly weighted all around. This quartet has been responsible for some astonishing gigs, and conceivably, Bley could record this group over and over. But she's a restless composer, whether writing for big band or smaller units. The silly but delightful story in the liner notes tells us that she'd been hearing the sound of a trumpet when writing, and found the perfect foil in the sounds coming from Sheppard's headphones. Closer to the truth is it was Sheppard who encouraged Bley to enlist Paolo Fresu for this recording. Simply put, after the great Enrico Rava there is no finer Italian trumpeter than Fresu, an intensely lyrical, warm-toned player who is capable of speedy bebop runs, to be sure (check his early sides for proof), but who favors a more lyrical approach to the music as many Italian jazzers do.
Evidenced by Bley's compositions here, hiring Fresu for this outing was an inspired idea. The combination of Sheppard's big, raw-edged tenor with Fresu's rich and textured approach to both in-line exchange playing and as a soloist is perfect. The disc opens with the six-part "Banana Quintet." (It's obvious that Bley hasn't lost any of her dry ironic wit since her last outing.) It begins slowly on "One Banana," with Fresu's trumpet playing a six-note line, and is joined by the band repeating it with either extra or fewer notes from the same sequence to keep Bley's bars clean. They trade like this for three repetitions before the ballad unfolds with Fresu's solo, as lyrical and pastoral as a warm summer rain in the country. His long solo is followed by a gorgeous one by Swallow before the tune begins to wind down with Swallow coloring the lead line on his high strings in the high register. It's one of the most beautiful songs she has ever composed. The blues enters on "Two Banana," and the listener is treated to the utterly striking and beautiful contrast to this two-horn line. Sheppard solos first on tenor, as the band shuffles along and Bley colors his phrasing with elegant chords that nonetheless contain the hint of something darker in their force. Fresu picks up on the tail end of that solo with his own after twinning on long sustained notes, and he slides into the opposite chair, articulating something more graceful, but no less emotive.
"Third Banana" reveals some of Bley's humor. Its odd phrasing, with Drummond punching in Sheppard's solo with accents, is belied by the sparseness of Bley's own comping, which certainly swings but is also highly idiosyncratic. "Four" is introduced by a bass and piano ostinato line that deeply resembles the Beatles' "I Want You/She's So Heavy." The coolest thing about the cut is the way Drummond comes on more forcefully as it unwinds. He's driving it whether it's from the bell of his cymbal, his snare, his oddly punctuated bass drum accents, or the entire kit, and that force begins to push the other players to meet him. Sheppard finally does, blowing right out of the blue with a deep dark blues line. It becomes apparent about two thirds of the way through that Bley is using that Beatles line verbatim, but it leads somewhere else before the tune empties itself out. There's a subtle yet groovy Latin vibe on "Five Banana" that has some very compelling and tighter, hotter solo work from Fresu. The rhythmic interplay between Swallow and Drummond is utterly entrancing and remarkable. The gorgeous chord voicing that underscore the solo lines by both Fresu and Sheppard are among some of Bley's tastiest yet. It's a kind of pronounced rhythmic counterpoint that uses the dynamic shapes and shades to offer something a little darker to the mix.
There are three cuts outside "The Banana Quintet." There's the languid, sloping swing of "The Liver of Life," with some wonderful harmonic head playing by Sheppard and Fresu. "Death of Superman/Dream Sequence, No. 1: Flying" begins with another deeply song-like bass solo by Swallow and opens onto a limpid palette with breezy tones, at a ballad tempo. Sheppard's solo is spare but exquisite. Finally, "Ad Infinitium" offers Bley's post-bop composition at its best with a fine swinger that walks a line between mid- and quick tempo, gaining in both musculature and a chameleon-like set of changes that are negotiated wonderfully -- especially by their notation in Drummond's skittering breakbeats. Once more, Fresu rises to a faster, tighter flight solo and is answered by Sheppard, the distance between those two sounds breached by the shifting of Bley's big chords, giving them both a wonderful chromatic line to walk.
With all of her strengths on display here, from humor and a strict reliance on substance over her own considerable instrumental virtuosity, to her canny compositional skill at writing balanced and nuanced, elegant works that add to the actual literature of the music, this baby trumps the Lost Chords quartet date (it's sort of amazing that's even possible) in all the right places, making it arguably the finest small group record Bley's ever made.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1. One Banana 8:31
Carla Bley
2. The Two Banana 6:38
Carla Bley
3. The Three Banana
Carla Bley
4. The Four 4:52
Carla Bley
5. The Five Banana 7:52
Carla Bley
6. One Banana More 1:23
Carla Bley
7. Liver of Life 7:14
Carla Bley
8. Death of Superman/Dream Sequence #1--Flying; Ad Infinitum. 7:50
Carla Bley
9. Ad Infinitum 7:43
Carla Bley
Personnel:
Paolo Fresu: Trumpet, Flugelhorn
Andy Sheppard: Soprano and Tenor Saxophones
Carla Bley: Piano
Steve Swallow: Bass
Billy Drummond: Drums

CARLA BLEY AND HER REMARKABLE! BIG BAND — Appearing Nightly (2008) APE (image+.cue), lossless

As is made all but plain by the title, Appearing Nightly is a live outing recorded by Carla Bley's big band over two nights at New Morning in Paris in the summer of 2006. Of course we've heard Bley's large group in live settings many times over the years, but in this case it's been five years since we've heard them at all -- at least on a recording. Her last outing with a large ensemble was in 2003 for the pre-election year political album Looking for America.
Bley's last couple of records were made with her Lost Chords group, all of whom are present here: tenor saxophonist and flutist Andy Sheppard, bassist Steve Swallow, and Billy Drummond on the trap kit. Other players include trumpeters Lew Soloff, Florian Esch, and Earl Gardner; trombonists Gary Valente, Richard Henry, and Gigi Grata; Wolfgang Puschnig, Christophe Panzani, and Julian Arguelles make up the saxophone section, with Karen Mantler holding down the organ chair. Most of these players have been with Bley for many years.
The cover of the album also offers a solid clue as to what it sounds like: while it is no doubt a Bley record, meaning its compositions and arrangements are quite contemporary, and if it doesn't have the sound and feel of what it might have in the 1950s for an ensemble this size, it nonetheless echoes both. Furthermore, Bley's tunes go to some length to consciously draw these parallels by freely employing elements of well-known tunes from the great American songbook in both her compositions and in her solos. All of these tracks are filled with her requisite sophistication and humor, but standouts include "Appearing Nightly at the Black Orchid," a 25-minute long suite where Tin Pan Alley composers are paid clever homage in Bley's own solo, which quotes from "Someone to Watch Over Me" within the very framework of the composition. Other highlights include the fingerpopping swinger "Awful Coffee" with beautiful electric bass work by Swallow, and tough solos from Sheppard and Pusching. Bley's playful sense of elegance is also at work here, using many classic jazz tunes in her own piano break including a nice nod to Herbie Hancock's "Watermelon Man." Another standout is the slightly, but pleasantly schizophrenic "Greasy Gravy" with strong work by Sheppard in a chart that references Duke Ellington and Stan Kenton. All of Bley's compositions here are rooted in the rhythm section, where melodies are simple and time signatures vary slightly, but her horn charts take the stuns somewhere far beyond that humble aspiration. The big-band stomp of "Someone to Watch" (not the Gershwin tune) swings along a multi-linear framework, where knotty harmonics and counterpoint give way to brief but fiery solos by some of her bandmates -- check Soloff's trumpet break a minute or so in. Ultimately, this is a very enjoyable set, one that begs repeated playing and deeper listening to get all the referent points, at the very least. But the truth is that it is so enjoyable, you'll find yourself getting lost in the music so often you'll forget to check.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1     Greasy Gravy 8:50
Carla Bley
2     Awful Coffee 6:11
Carla Bley
3     Apearing Nightly at the Black Orchid: 40 On-20 Off/Second Round/What Wo 25:23
Carla Bley
4     Someone to Watch 5:56
Carla Bley
5     I Hadn't Anyone 'Till You 7:38
Ray Noble
Credits :
Alto Saxophone, Flute – Wolfgang Puschnig
Baritone Saxophone – Julian Argüelles
Bass – Steve Swallow
Drums – Billy Drummond
Organ – Karen Mantler
Piano, Conductor – Carla Bley
Soprano Saxophone, Alto Saxophone, Flute – Roger Jannotta
Tenor Saxophone – Andy Sheppard, Christophe Panzani
Trombone – Beppe Calamosca, Gary Valente, Gigi Grata, Richard Henry
Trumpet – Earl Gardner, Florian Esch, Giampaolo Casati, Lew Soloff

CARLA BLEY | STEVE SWALLOW | ANDY SHEPPARD — Andando el Tiempo (2016) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

For over 20 years, the trio of pianist Carla Bley, bassist Steve Swallow, and saxophonist Andy Sheppard have shared each other's creative company. The group's 2016 album, Andando el Tiempo, is a delicately passionate, classically influenced set. A follow-up to 2013's equally compelling Trios, Andando el Tiempo is, surprisingly, only the third album from the group after their initial live 1995 album Songs with Legs. Whereas on Trios they delved into various Bley compositions from throughout her career, on Andando el Tiempo they focus on several more recently penned works. "Naked Bridges/Diving Bridges" brings to mind the impressionism of composer Claude Debussy. It's fascinating to hear the trio move from the moody beginning of the song into the more breezy, straight-ahead mid-section where Swallow, playing fluidly on the upper end of his bass, evinces the lyricism of West Coast trumpeter Chet Baker. The West Coast vibe is also palpable on the ruminative, noir-ish "Saints Alive!" However, it's the title track composition "Andando el Tiempo" that takes center stage on the album. With its three movements meant to represent three of the steps to addiction recovery, "Andando el Tiempo" (meaning "with the passing of time") is a restrained, yet nuanced piece that balances the group's knack for tempered chamber work and fluid, in-the-moment improvisation. Anchored at all times by Bley's measured, atmospheric piano, Sheppard and Swallow take turns dancing in the spotlight. The final movement in particular, the Latin-tinged "Camino al Volver," provides plenty of space for each member of the trio to twirl around each other in focused reverie. Ultimately, it's that shared intensity, born out of the trio's decades-long partnership, that makes Andando el Tiempo such an engaging listen. Matt Collar  
Tracklist :
1     Sin Fin 10:21
Carla Bley
2     Potación de Guaya 9:48
Carla Bley
3     Camino al Volver 8:27
Carla Bley
4     Saints Alive! 8:35
Carla Bley
5     Naked Bridges/Diving Brides 10:05
Carla Bley
Credits :
Bass – Steve Swallow
Piano – Carla Bley
Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Andy Sheppard

1.1.19

MICHAEL MANTLER — The Hapless Child and Other Inscrutable Stories (1976) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

A surprising step after his earlier work with the Jazz Composer's Orchestra and their juxtaposition of avant-garde soloists in a modern orchestral context, Mantler created a virtual prog rock album, setting Edward Gorey's Freudian/gothic texts to music that owes far more to Henry Cow than Cecil Taylor. Enlisting ex-Soft Machine drummer Robert Wyatt on vocals and Jan Garbarek alumnus Terje Rypdal for some soaring guitar work, he managed to create a very convincing, enjoyably literary recording with potentially large appeal. The song structures are fairly consistent and the melodies often catchy, alternating from somber dirges (quite appropriate to the text) to up-tempo rockers. Much of the success accrues to Wyatt, whose reedy, intelligent voice gives exactly the right ironic inflection to Gorey's eerie tales. When in the title track he lightly sings the opening line, "There was once a little girl named..." then drops into a minor mode for, "Charlotte Sophia," you know things don't bode well for the song's heroine. Indeed, all of the lyrics are compelling little stories and it's to Mantler's credit that his compositions couch and project them instead of competing for attention. The Hapless Child has assumed a bit of cult classic status as a one-off prog rock project and it largely deserves the rep, holding up reasonably well over time. Brian Olewnick 
Tracklist :
1 The Sinking Spell 5:10
Vitti Gorey / Michael Mantler
2 The Object-Lesson 5:00
Vitti Gorey / Michael Mantler
3 The Insect God 4:58
Vitti Gorey / Michael Mantler
4 The Doubtful Guest 4:47
Samuel Beckett / Vitti Gorey / Michael Mantler
5 The Remembered Visit 6:27
Samuel Beckett / Vitti Gorey / Michael Mantler
6 The Hapless Child 7:02
Vitti Gorey / Michael Mantler
Credits
Bass Guitar – Steve Swallow
Drums, Percussion – Jack DeJohnette
Guitar – Terje Rypdal
Music By – Michael Mantler
Piano, Clavinet, Synthesizer [String Synthesizer], Producer – Carla Bley
Vocals – Robert Wyatt
Voice [Additional Speaker] – Albert Caulder, Nick Mason
Voice [Speaker] – Alfreda Benge
Words By – Edward Gorey

RAN BLAKE — Epistrophy (1992) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Ran Blake's re-interpretations of 12 Thelonious Monk songs and four standards that Monk enjoyed playing are quite different than everyon...