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
17.5.24
CARLA BLEY — Tropic Appetites (1974-1998) FLAC (image + .cue), lossless
1.3.24
DON CHERRY — Symphony for Improvisers (1967-2005) RM | RVG Edition Series | APE (image+.cue), lossless
For his second album, Symphony for Improvisers, Don Cherry expanded his
Complete Communion quartet -- tenor saxophonist Gato Barbieri, bassist
Henry Grimes, and drummer Ed Blackwell -- to a septet, adding
vibraphonist Karl Berger, bassist Jean François Jenny-Clark, and tenor
saxophonist Pharoah Sanders (who frequently plays piccolo here). The
lineup has a real international flavor, since Barbieri was from
Argentina, Berger from Germany, and Jenny-Clark from France; Cherry had
gigged regularly with all three during his 1964-1965 sojourn in Europe,
and brought them to New York to record. With all the added firepower,
it's remarkable that Symphony for Improvisers has the same sense of
shared space and controlled intelligence as its predecessor, even when
things are at their most heated. Once again, Cherry sets up the album as
two continuous medleys that fuse four compositions apiece, which allows
the group's improvisational energy and momentum to carry straight
through the entire program. The "Symphony for Improvisers" suite is the
most raucous part of Cherry's Blue Note repertoire, and the "Manhattan
Cry" suite pulls off the widest mood shifts Cherry had yet attempted in
that format. Even though the album is full of passionate fireworks,
there's also a great deal of subtlety -- the flavors added to the
ensemble by Berger's vibes and Sanders' piccolo, for example, or the way
other instrumental voices often support and complement a solo
statement. Feverish but well-channeled, this larger-group session is
probably Cherry's most gratifying for Blue Note. Steve Huey
Tracklist
1 Symphony for Improvisers:
Symphony for Improvisers/Nu Creative Love 19:43
Don Cherry
2 Manhattan Cry: Manhattan Cry/Lunatic/Sparkle Plenty/Om Nu 19:17
Don Cherry
Credits
Bass – Henry Grimes, Jean-François Jenny-Clark
Cornet, Composed By – Don Cherry
Drums – Edward Blackwell
Tenor Saxophone – Gato Barbieri
Tenor Saxophone, Piccolo Flute – Pharoah Sanders
Vibraphone, Piano – Karl Berger
GATO BARBIERI — Chapter One : Latin America (1973-2009) RM | Serie Impulse! Originals | WV (image+.cue), lossless
When Gato Barbieri signed to Impulse! Records in 1973 for a series of critically lauded albums, he had already enjoyed a celebrated career as a vanguard musician who had worked with Don Cherry and Abdullah Ibrahim (then known as Dollar Brand), recorded for three labels as a leader, and scored and performed the soundtrack to director Bernardo Bertolucci's film Last Tango in Paris. Chapter One: Latin America was a huge step forward musically for the Argentinean-born saxophonist, even as it looked to the music of his heritage. This turned out to be the first of four chapters in his series on Latin America, and for it he teamed not with established jazz musicians, but instead folk and traditional musicians from his native country, and recorded four of the album's five cuts in Buenos Aires -- the final track, a multi-tracked solo piece, was recorded in Rio de Janeiro. The music found here doesn't walk a line between the two worlds, but freely indulges them. The enormous host of musicians on the date played everything from wooden flutes to electric and acoustic guitars, bomba drums and quenas, and Indian harps and charangos, creating a passionate and deeply emotive sound that echoed across not only miles but also centuries. At the helm was Barbieri, playing in his rawest and most melodic style to date, offering these melodies, harmonies, and rhythms as a singular moment in the history of jazz. While the entire album flows seamlessly from beginning to end, the A-side, comprised of Barbieri's own "Encuentros" and J. Asunción Flores and M. Ortiz Guerrero's classic "India," is the clear standout. That said, the four-part suite that commences side two -- "La China Leoncia Arreo la Correntinada Trajo Entre la Muchachada la Flor de la Juventud" -- is a work of such staggering drama and raw beauty that it is perhaps the single highest achievement in Barbieri's recorded catalog as an artist. Simply put, this album, like its remaining chapters, makes up one of the great all but forgotten masterpieces in 1970s jazz. Thankfully, Verve has brought this set back into print on CD as part of its wonderfully mastered, budget-priced Originals series.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist
1 Encuentros 12:29
2 India 8:58
3 La China Leoncia Arreo La Correntinada Trajo Entre La Muchachada La Flor De La Juventud 13:38
4 Nunca Mas 5:40
5 To Be Continued 2:29
Vocals – Gato Barbieri
Credits
Acoustic Guitar – Quelo Palacios (tracks: 1 to 3)
Bandoneon – Dino Saluzzi (tracks: 4)
Bass [Fender] – Adalberto Cevasco (tracks: 1 to 4)
Charango – Isoca Fumero (tracks: 1, 3)
Drums – Pocho Lapouble (tracks: 1, 3)
Drums [Indian] – Domingo Cura (tracks: 1 to 3)
Electric Guitar – Ricardo Lew (tracks: 1, 3)
Flute [Indian] – Raul Mercado (tracks: 1 to 3)
Harp [Indian] – Amadeo Monges (tracks: 1 to 3)
Percussion – El Zurdo Roizner (tracks: 1 to 3), Jorge Padin (1 to 3)
Piano – Osvaldo Bellingieri (tracks: 4)
Tenor Saxophone – Gato Barbieri
Written-By – G. Barbieri (tracks: 1, 3 to 5), J. A. Flores (tracks: 2), M. O. Guerrero (tracks: 2)
21.12.23
OLIVER NELSON — Swiss Suite (1972-2014) RM | Flying Dutchman Jazz Classics Series | FLAC (tracks), lossless
Recorded at the 1971 Montreux Jazz Festival, this big-band outing features a mostly all-star band and altoist Oliver Nelson (who wrote all of the arrangements and compositions) and trumpeter Danny Moore on remakes of "Stolen Moments," "Black, Brown & Beautiful" and "Blues and the Abstract Truth." However it is the nearly 27-minute "Swiss Suite" that dominates this album and although tenorman Gato Barbieri has a couple of raging solos, it is a five-minute segment when guest altoist Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson plays the blues that is most memorable. Vinson's classic spot alone is worth the price of this hard-to-find LP. Scott Yanow Tracklist & Credits :
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
22.6.21
GATO BARBIERI - The Third World (1970-1995) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
The Third World is the initial session that mixed Gato Barbieri's free jazz tenor playing with Latin and Brazilian influences. It's also the album that brought Barbieri positive attention from the college crowds of the late '60s. He would expand on this musical combination with his next few Flying Dutchman releases as well as his first recordings for the Impulse! label. The records made between 1969 through 1974 find Barbieri creating a danceable yet fiery combination of South American rhythms and free jazz forcefulness. Strangely, once Barbieri signed with A&M, he began making commercial records geared to fans of Herb Alpert, sounding nothing like his earlier albums. by Al Campbell
Tracklist :
1. Introduction / Cancion Del Llamero / Tango 11:02
(Barbieri, Piazzola, Quiroga)
2. Zelao 8:00
(Ricordo)
3. Antonio Das Mortes 9:24
(Barbieri)
4. Bachianas Brasileiras / Haleo And The Wild Rose 10:58
(Villa-Lobos)
Musicians :
Gato Barbieri - Tenor Sax, Flute, Vocals
Charlie Haden - Bass
Beaver Harris - Drums
Richard Landrum - Percussion
Roswell Rudd - Trombone
Lonnie Liston Smith - Piano
GATO BARBIERI - Fenix (1971-1996) APE (image+.cue), lossless
Some artists totally change directions; some reinvent their
personalities. It is hard to know exactly what to make of the case of
this Argentinian tenor saxophonist, who first appeared as a sideman on
several extremely important Don Cherry projects, making such an
essential contribution to the overall feel of these records that
listeners expected great things. After a few attempts at finding a
meeting place between the energy and harshness of free jazz and the his
own rhythmic roots, he created this album in which everything seemed to
come together perfectly. If a judgement is to be made based on
Barbieri's overall career, then a lot of credit would be given to his
accompanying musicians here, who are strictly the cream of the crop. A
horn player certainly couldn't complain about a rhythm section featuring
bassist Ron Carter, drummer Lenny White, and pianist Lonnie Liston
Smith, the last fresh out of the band of Pharoah Sanders, where he had
established himself as the absolute king of modal, vaguely Latin or
African sounding vamps. Smith was able to fit right in here, and he of
course knew just what to do when the saxophonist went into his screaming
fits, because he surely had plenty of practice with this kind of stuff
playing with Sanders. The leader adds a nice touch of ethnic percussion
with some congas and bongos and Na Na on berimbau; in fact, this was the
first time many American listeners heard this instrument. From here,
Barbieri continued to build, reaching a height with a series of
collaborations with Latin American musicians playing traditional
instruments. He would then switch gears, tone down the energy, and
become kind of a romantic image with a saxophone in his mouth, producing
music that brought on insults from reviewers, many of whom would have
bit their tongues if they'd known much worse sax playing was to come via
later artists such as Kenny G. But at this point in 1971, well before
the Muppets would create a caricature out of him, Barbieri was
absolutely smoking, and for a certain style of rhythmic free jazz, this
is a captivating album indeed. by Eugene Chadbourne
Tracklist :
1 Tupac Amaru 4:14
Gato Barbieri
2 Carnavalito 9:08
Gato Barbieri
3 Falsa Bahiana 5:50
Geraldo Pereira
4 El Dia Que Me Quieras 6:12
Carlos Gardel / Alfredo Le Pera
5 El Arriero 7:22
Atahualpa Yupanqui
6 Bahia 6:22
Ary Barroso
Credits :
Berimbau, Congas – Naná Vasconcelos
Congas, Bongos – Gene Golden
Drums – Lenny White
Electric Bass – Ron Carter
Piano, Electric Piano – Lonnie Liston Smith
Tenor Saxophone – Gato Barbieri
GATO BARBIERI - El Pampero (1971-2002) RCA Victor Gold Series / RM / FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
This record chronicles a flavorful and unforgettable night during a live show recorded in Montreux, Switzerland. Gato Barbieri leads his fantastic group of musical friends with hurricane-like flair on his tenor sax. At times surreal and mind-boggling, Barbieri shows just how far one can let the music go to break the borders of jazz, sending his music into fresh and uncharted territory. Barbieri's chops and melodic sweeps are daring and bold, while the back crew brings vitality and utter life to the music, from the record's beginning to its very end. Within the first tune, "El Pampero," Barbieri plays a home tone riff over and over, changing only the keys of the song, with improvisation in between that gets the audience into dancing. Lonnie Liston Smith plays with great sweeping ease on the piano, while percussionists Pretty Purdie, Na-Na, and Sonny Morgan send their rhythms into soaring heights. A wondrous sense of dynamics is displayed here and throughout the record. The call and response between Na-Na and Morgan is a featured key ingredient, keeping the mood of the percussion section fluid and tight. Yes, the listeners were mesmerized, and one can feel lifted in spirit again with each playing of this recording. Perhaps the focus and direction of the music, which latched on greatly to the home key and initial melody, gives the music a more solid foundation. This was certainly a special night in Switzerland, in which Barbieri proudly shared his music, credited in a natural more than economic fashion, breathing spirit into the audience rather than taking money. For this performance was priceless, a can't-miss that left audience members bedazzled, talking among themselves years later, saying, "Do you remember when?...I was there!" With passion and faith in music, this group of musicians thrived here in this recorded moment, to demonstrate art, haunting art, vivid imagination, and victory in art.
For real jazz fans, two words suffice for this recording: Get it. El Pampero is one of the greatest live jazz recordings ever made, a showcase for the soaring tenor saxophone of Gato Barbieri and a primer on what spontaneous jazz music can aspire to at its most passionate and joyous. The ensemble work by Gato's partners on this outing is superb. And after all these years, I still believe that the way Gato Barbieri weaves the hypnotic folk music of South America into the very North American textures of mainstream jazz points the way to the future for this still vibrant form of music. by Shawn M. Haney
Tracklist :
1. El Pampero 13:44
Gato Barbieri
2. Mi Buenos Aires Querido 6:21
Carlos Gardel / Alfredo Le Pera
3. Brasil 9:36
Ary Barroso / Bob Russell
4. El Arriero 11:59
Atahualpa Yupanqui
- Bonus Tracks -
5. El Gato 12:25
Oliver Nelson
Credits :
Gato Barbieri (Tenor Saxophone)
Lonnie Liston Smith (Piano)
Chuck Rainey (Electric Bass)
Bernard Purdie (Drums)
Sonny Morgan (Conga)
Naná Vasconcelos (Percussion)
GATO BARBIERI - Ruby, Ruby (1977-2007) Verve Originals / RM / FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Charming and romantic fit the description of Gato Barbieri and the work
he presents here, the album Ruby, Ruby. The production of the record,
mastered and engineered handsomely by Herb Alpert, is very lush and
beautiful to a lasting degree. Barbieri turns his first song, "Ruby,"
from an early-on haunting love ballad to an appealing and gripping
all-out Latin jam session. This theme happens to find itself playing
roles several times over throughout the record. The musicianship
explored is captivating and adventurous, taking the listener on a
passionate journey to whatever part of the soul he or she wishes to find
or dares to pursue. A soaring sound at times, with Barbieri's splendid,
racing saxophone melody lines. "Nostalgia" brings the delicate and
eloquent guitar work of Lee Ritenour, who also takes part in the
creation of "Sunride" and bits of "Ruby." As with most jazz records,
percussion is responsible for playing a key role in the inception of the
groove and depth of the material. Because of this album's Latin
context, Barbieri does a wonderful job inspiring his friends in the
rhythm section to come to life. Joe Clayton plays the textured conga on
"Latin Reaction," and Lenny White leads a band of fellow passionate
drummers, including Paulina da Costa, Steve Gadd, Steve Jordan, and
Bernard Purdie. The entire atmosphere of the record changes smoothly in
texture and tempo, drifting like a channeling stream from subdued and
slow to rampant and passionately loud. Certainly, Barbieri intended it
to be a delight of the first degree in the Latin scene, and one listen
should win the hearts and minds of the listener. Conjuring up romance
and scenes of a starry night in Latin America, this music is the soul of
Latin music at its peak in the late '70s. A soothing and ethereal
delight, even considering its only weakness: the lack of words and
lyrics. by Shawn M. Haney
Tracklist :
1 Ruby 6:29
Written-By – Heinz Roemheld, Michael Parish
2 Nostalgia 5:25
Written-By – Gato Barbieri
3 Latin Reaction 4:58
Written-By – Marvin Gaye
4 Ngiculela - Es Una Historia - I Am Singing 5:45
Written-By – Stevie Wonder
5 Sunride 5:55
Written-By – Gato Barbieri
6 Adios 4:42
Written-By – Gato Barbieri
7 Blue Angel 5:46
Written-By – Gato Barbieri
8 Midnight Tango 4:27
Written-By – Herb Alpert
Credits :
Bass – Chuck Domanico (tracks: 7), Eddie Guagua (tracks: 6), Gary King
Congas – Joe Clayton (tracks: 3)
Contractor [Strings] – David Nadien
Drums – Bernard Purdie (tracks: 7), Lenny White, Steve Gadd (tracks: 5), Steve Jordan (tracks: 6)
French Horn – John Gale, Peter Gordon , Tom Malone
Guitar – David Spinozza, Joe Caro, Lee Ritenour (tracks: 1, 2, 5)
Keyboards – Eddy Martinez
Organ – Don Grolnick (tracks: 3)
Percussion – Cachete Maldonado, Paulinho Da Costa (tracks: 1, 2, 4 to 7), Portinho (tracks: 6)
Piano – Don Grolnick (tracks: 1)
Producer, Arranged By – Herb Alpert
Synthesizer – Ian Underwood (tracks: 2 to 4)
Tenor Saxophone, Arranged By – Gato Barbieri
Trombone – David Taylor, Paul Faulise, Wayne Andre
Trumpet – Herb Alpert (tracks: 2)
Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Alen Rubin, Jon Faddis, Lou Soloff, Marvin Stamm
+ last month
e.s.t. — Retrospective 'The Very Best Of e.s.t. (2009) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
"Retrospective - The Very Best Of e.s.t." is a retrospective of the unique work of e.s.t. and a tribute to the late mastermind Esb...