Mostrando postagens com marcador Wadada Leo Smith. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Wadada Leo Smith. Mostrar todas as postagens

18.9.24

ANDREW CYRILLE | WADADA LEO SMITH | BILL FRISELL — Lebroba (2018) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Lebroba, Andrew Cyrille's second leader date for ECM, finds the septuagenarian rhythm explorer trading in all but guitarist Bill Frisell from the quartet that recorded 2016's fine The Declaration of Musical Independence (with bassist Ben Street and pianist Richard Teitelbaum). This bass-less trio also features trumpeter/composer Wadada Leo Smith. While this setting is somewhat unusual, Frisell is quite familiar with it, performing in this same setting on Ron Miles' 2014 offering Circuit Rider. Back in 2010, the guitarist led another unusual trio for Beautiful Dreamers with sidemen Eyvind Kang on viola and Rudy Royston on drums.
In fact, this set's opener is a redo of the guitarist's "Worried Woman," from the latter album, a lithe charmer of a melody wherein Frisell envelops himself in a call-and-response conversation on the lyric with Smith's as Cyrille colors time around the beat rather than on it. The longest piece here is Smith's nearly formless "Turiya: Alice Coltrane Meditations and Dreams: Love" at over 17 minutes. The tune is mostly "free," though the trumpeter, in true signature fashion, sketches out spaces for emphasis on dialogic exchanges that evolve from melodic fragments to dissonance and back again, with Cyrille's colorful, textured rhythmic pulses bridging the gap between frontline players. Despite the fragmented nature of the piece, the intuitive interplay between the trio's members is canny, welcoming, and thoroughly enjoyable. Cyrille's title track is based on an eight-bar blues, but it's a chameleon-like work. There are lyric aspects that recall Charles Mingus' "Good-Bye Pork Pie Hat," but Smith's soulful, muted trumpet abstractions -- ever the picture of tasteful economy -- highlight and underscore Frisell's turnarounds and expressionist reflections of deep blue Americana from the Delta to Chicago. The five-plus-minute "TGD" is credited to the group, commencing with Cyrille's dancing snares and whispering cymbals through Frisell's effects-laden soloing and sonic smears and fills and Smith's interrogatory improvisation above and around the paying of his bandmates. The only complaint is that given the nearly symbiotic nature of communication in this improvisation, the track doesn’t go on long enough. The juxtaposition of Frisell's subtly shaded chordal voicings and long single notes by Smith in the intro to the drummer's closing rubato ballad, "Pretty Beauty," are breathtakingly poignant. Cyrille's hushed and spacious use of brushes around the lyric line, highlight its dips and subtle assertions, which are exchanged by guitarist and trumpeter to create an achingly beautiful groupspeak that seemingly creates a narrative language from air. While much of Lebroba is gentle, none of it is nebulous or speculative. This trio engages in the kind of magical interplay that only extremely experienced players can conjure.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1    Worried Woman 7:35
Music By – Bill Frisell
2    Turiya:Alice Coltrane / Meditations And Dreams:Love 17:24
Music By – Wadada Leo Smith
3    Lebroba 5:44
Music By – Andrew Cyrille
4    TGD 5:17
Music By – Andrew Cyrille, Bill Frisell, Wadada Leo Smith
5    Pretty Beauty 6:24
Music By – Andrew Cyrille
Credits :
Drums – Andrew Cyrille
Guitar – Bill Frisell
Trumpet – Wadada Leo Smith

16.9.24

WADADA LEO SMITH | AMINA CLAUDINE MYERS — Central Park's Mosaics of Reservoir, Lake, Paths and Gardens (2024) FLAC (tracks), lossless

"Wherever two or three are gathered..." Kudos to Red Hook Records and producer Sun Chung for this release as well as the Qasim Naqvi "Two Centuries" trio album featuring Wadada Leo Smith and drummer Andrew Cyrille from 2022. This is prayer to Smith's love of nature, of communal space, a patient, soft-spoken dialogue between two masters. Both 82, just a few months apart in age, Smith and Myers, are longtime contributors to Chicago's AACM as well as the evolution of African-American improvisation. Myers' piano drops its notes like slowly turned meditation beads as Smith illuminates them with sparks that never jar, fireworks seen from a distance sufficient to mute the shock. I hear a slowly incanted Blues throughout, the mantra of wisdom collected over long years and shared, concurred between two spirits of import. Wish the album was twice as long, but, yet again, it is as beautiful as anything I've heard. Mark B
Tracklist :
1    Conservatory Gardens    9:02
Composed By – Wadada Leo Smith
2    Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Reservoir     1:52
Composed By – Wadada Leo Smith
3    Central Park At Sunset    5:17
Composed By – Wadada Leo Smith
4    When Was    5:33
Composed By – Amina Claudine Myers
5    The Harlem Meer    3:07
Composed By – Wadada Leo Smith
6    Albert Ayler, A Meditation In Light    6:30
Composed By – Wadada Leo Smith
7    Imagine, A Mosaic For John Lennon    5:07
Composed By – Wadada Leo Smith
Credits :
Piano, Organ [Hammond B3] – Amina Claudine Myers
Trumpet – Wadada Leo Smith
Artwork [Cover Art] – Laura Arteaga Charlton

29.1.23

ANTHONY BRAXTON - 3 Compositions of New Jazz (1968-1991) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

While it is not as powerful or as revelatory as For Alto, Anthony Braxton's second album for Delmark, 3 Compositions of New Jazz is his debut as a leader and showcases just how visionary -- or out to lunch depending on your point of view -- he was from the very beginning. Recorded nine months after his debut with Muhal Richard Abrams on Levels and Degrees of Light, Braxton's compositional methodology and his sense of creating a band are in full flower. For one thing, there is no use of a traditional rhythm section, though drums and a piano are used. The band is comprised of Leroy Jenkins on violin and percussion, Braxton on everything from alto to accordion to mixer, Leo Smith on trumpet and bottles, and Abrams on piano (and alto clarinet on one track). All but one track -- "The Bell" -- are graphically titled, so there's no use mentioning titles because computers don't draw in the same way. There is a sonorous unity on all of these compositions, which Braxton would draw away from later. His use of Stockhausen is evident here, and he borrows heavily from the melodic precepts of Ornette Coleman. The use of Jenkins' violin as a melodic and lyric device frees the brass from following any kind of preset notion about what should be done. Abrams plays the piano like a percussion -- not a rhythm -- instrument, and colors the textural figures in, while Smith plays all around the open space trying hard not to fill it. This is a long and tough listen, but it's a light one in comparison to For Alto. And make no mistake: It is outrageously forward-thinking, if not -- arguably -- downright visionary. Braxton's 3 Compositions of New Jazz is an essential document of the beginning of the end.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1    (840M) / Realize 44M / 44M 20:03
Composed By – Braxton
2    N / M488 / 44M / Z / 12:57
Composed By – Braxton
Piano – Muhal Richard Abrams
3    The Bell 10:31
Composed By – Leo Smith
Piano, Cello, Alto Clarinet – Muhal Richard Abrams
Credits :
Alto Saxophone [Alto Sax], Soprano Saxophone [Soprano Sax], Clarinet, Flute, Musette, Accordion, Bells, Snare, Other [Mixer Etc.] – Anthony Braxton
Trumpet, Mellophone, Xylophone, Percussion [Bottles], Kazoo – Leo Smith
Violin, Viola, Harmonica, Bass Drum, Recorder, Cymbal [Cymbals], Slide Whistle – Leroy Jenkins

ANTHONY BRAXTON - B-X° / NO-I-47ᴬ (1969-2002) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Anthony Braxton's first recording during his three-year stay in Europe is in some ways a continuation of his initial release, utilizing a similar personnel. The music performed by altoist Anthony Braxton (who also plays soprano, clarinet, contrabass clarinet, flute, "sound machine" and chimes), trumpeter Leo Smith, violinist Leroy Jenkins and drummer Steve McCall is very freely improvised, includes "little instruments" for their variety in sound, and contrast high-energy playing with space. This Affinity Lp will be difficult to find and the music (one composition apiece from Braxton, Smith and Jenkins) is far from accessible but is generally worth the struggle. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1    The Light On The Dalta 10:06
Written-By, Arranged By – Leo Smith
2    Simple Like 9:26
Written-By, Arranged By – Leroy Jenkins
3    B-X° / NO-I-47ᴬ
Written-By, Arranged By – Anthony Braxton
Credits :
Alto Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Clarinet, Contrabass Clarinet, Flute, Performer [Sound Machine], Chimes, Liner Notes – Anthony Braxton
Drums, Goblet Drum [Darbouka], Percussion – Steve McCall
Trumpet, Flugelhorn, Horns, Percussion [Logs], Siren – Leo Smith
Violin, Viola, Flute, Organ [Mouth], Organ [Hohner], Harmonica – Leroy Jenkins

28.1.23

CREATIVE CONSTRUCTION COMPANY - Creative Construction Company Vols. 1 & 2 (2021) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

In the early '70s, musicians from Chicago with origins in the AACM began to slowly migrate to New York City, sometimes with an intermediary stop in Europe. The Creative Construction Company, which consisted of violinist Leroy Jenkins, multi-reedist Anthony Braxton, trumpeter Leo Smith, and percussionist Steve McCall, had been based in Paris for several years and this concert signaled their U.S. return in a stunning sextet augmented by AACM co-founder Muhal Richard Abrams and legendary bassist Richard Davis. The two album-length compositions are both by Jenkins and showcase two of the "opposite" sides exemplified in the music of AACM outgrowth bands like the Art Ensemble of Chicago. "Muhal" is one of Jenkins' gorgeously heart-rending and plaintive ballad lines with an evocatively longing quality and deep romanticism, and Davis' bass counterpoint is a thing of singular beauty. It serves as a strong framework for some remarkable improvisations, especially that of the composer in rare pyrotechnic mode. But here, as on its companion piece, the emphasis is never on individual soloing but on group interaction; the underlying matrix is always kept full and busy by the use of various "little instruments" beloved by AACM alumni. The second piece, "No More White Gloves," lives up to its title. A furious, churning work, it encapsulates the high energy end of the spectrum as practiced by the late-'60s avant-garde and, among other highlights, features a tumultuous, screaming alto solo by Braxton that ranks with his best work. This live concert, happily captured on tape, provides a wonderful glimpse into what each of these musicians would go on to achieve in ensuing decades, but is also simply a stellar event in and of itself. Very highly recommended. Brian Olewnick  
Tracklist :
1    Muhal (Part I)    19:20
2    Muhal (Part II) (Live Spiral)    17:22
3    No More White Gloves (With Sand Under Your Shoes Doing a Dance) (Part I)    17:31
4    No More White Gloves (With Sand Under Your Shoes Doing a Dance) (Part II)    16:59
Credits :
Alto Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Clarinet, Flute, Contrabass Clarinet, Chimes – Anthony Braxton
Bass – Richard Davis
Drums, Percussion – Steve McCall
Piano, Cello, Clarinet – Muhal Richard Abrams
Trumpet, Flugelhorn, French Horn – Wadada Leo Smith
Violin, Viola – Leroy Jenkins

ANTHONY BRAXTON — Trio and Duet (1974-2002) FLAC (tracks), lossless

 This is a well-rounded album that features the remarkable Anthony Braxton in two separate settings. Braxton (on clarinet, contrabass clarinet and percussion) interacts with trumpeter Leo Smith and Richard Teitelbaum's synthesizer on an abstract original for 19 minutes. The remainder of the program has Braxton (on alto) performing three standards ("The Song Is You," "Embraceable You" and "You Go To My Head") in duets with bassist Dave Holland; those successful interactions are superior to Braxton's earlier "In The Tradition" projects. Recommended. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1    HM 421 (RTS) 47 19:00
Clarinet, Contrabass Clarinet, Chimes, Bass Drum – Anthony Braxton
Composed By – Anthony Braxton
Synthesizer [Moog], Percussion – Richard Teitelbaum
Trumpet, Flugelhorn, Trumpet [Pocket], Percussion, Performer [Small Instruments] – Leo Smith

2    The Song Is You 12:00
Written-By – Jerome Kern And Oscar Hammerstein II
3    Embraceable You 5:39
Written-By – George And Ira Gershwin
4    You Go To My Head 8:33
Written-By – Haven Gillespie, Fred Coot
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – Anthony Braxton (pistas: 2 to 4)
Bass – Dave Holland (pistas: 2 to 4)

27.1.23

ANTHONY BRAXTON - Creative Orchestra Music 1976 (1987) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

This is one of Braxton's most interesting recordings. Six of his compositions are performed by groups ranging from 15-20 pieces and featuring such soloists as trumpeters Cecil Bridgewater, Leo Smith, Kenny Wheeler and Jon Faddis, baritonist Bruce Johnstone, trombonist George Lewis, reed player Roscoe Mitchell, bassist Dave Holland, pianist Muhal Richard Abrams and Braxton himself. There is a lot of variety on this set. One of the pieces finds Braxton combining free elements with a Sousa-type march while another one looks toward Ellington. There are quite a few memorable moments on this program. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1    Piece One 5:10
Alto Saxophone – Anthony Braxton, Seldon Powell
Baritone Saxophone – Bruce Johnstone
Bass – Dave Holland
Bass Trombone – Earl McIntyre
Conductor – Leo Smith
Drums – Warren Smith
Piano – Muhal Richard Abrams
Tenor Saxophone – Ronald Bridgewater
Trombone – Garrett List, George Lewis
Trumpet – Cecil Bridgewater, Jon Faddis, Kenny Wheeler
Tuba – Jonathan Dorn
2    Piece Two 7:36
Bass – Dave Holland
Bass Clarinet – Bruce Johnstone
Bass Trombone – Jack Jeffers
Clarinet – Ronald Bridgewater, Seldon Powell
Contrabass Clarinet – Anthony Braxton
Gong [Gongs], Percussion – Barry Altschul
Percussion – Philip Wilson
Piano – Frederic Rzewski, Muhal Richard Abrams
Soprano Saxophone – Roscoe Mitchell
Synthesizer – Richard Teitelbaum
Timpani, Bass Drum – Warren Smith
Trombone – Garrett List, George Lewis
Trumpet – Cecil Bridgewater, Jon Faddis, Kenny Wheeler, Leo Smith
Tuba – Jonathan Dorn
3    Piece Three 6:43
Alto Saxophone [Alto Sax], Clarinet – Anthony Braxton
Alto Saxophone [Alto Sax], Flute – Seldon Powell
Baritone Saxophone [Baritone Sax], Bass Clarinet – Bruce Johnstone
Bass – Dave Holland
Bass Drum – Frederic Rzewski
Bass Saxophone [Bass Sax] – Roscoe Mitchell
Bass Trombone – Jack Jeffers
Cymbal [Marching Cymbals] – Philip Wilson
Glockenspiel – Karl Berger
Snare [Snare Drum] – Barry Altschul, Warren Smith
Tenor Saxophone [Tenor Sax] – Ronald Bridgewater
Trombone – Garrett List, George Lewis
Trumpet – Cecil Bridgewater, Kenny Wheeler
Trumpet [Solo Trumpet], Conductor – Leo Smith
Trumpet, Piccolo Trumpet – Jon Faddis
Tuba – Jonathan Dorn
4    Piece Four 6:26
Bass Clarinet – Bruce Johnstone
Bass Trombone – Jack Jeffers
Bells, Percussion, Chimes [Orchestra] – Barry Altschul
Cello – Dave Holland
Clarinet – Ron Bridgewater
Drums, Percussion – Philip Wilson
Flute – Seldon Powell
Flute, Bass Saxophone [Bass Sax] – Roscoe Mitchell
Flute, Contrabass Saxophone [Contrabass Sax] – Anthony Braxton
Marimba [Bass Marimba], Chimes [Orchestra] – Warren Smith
Piano – Frederic Rzewski, Muhal Richard Abrams
Trombone – Garrett List, George Lewis
Trumpet – Cecil Bridgewater, Jon Faddis, Kenny Wheeler, Wadada Leo Smith
Tuba – Jonathan Dorn
Vibraphone, Xylophone, Chimes [Orchestra] – Karl Berger
5    Piece Five 7:19
Alto Saxophone [Alto Sax] – Seldon Powell
Alto Saxophone [Alto Sax], Contrabass Saxophone [Contrabass Sax] – Anthony Braxton
Baritone Saxophone [Baritone Sax] – Bruce Johnstone
Bass – Dave Holland
Bass Trombone – Jack Jeffers
Conductor – Leo Smith
Drums – Warren Smith
Piano – Muhal Richard Abrams
Tenor Saxophone [Tenor Sax] – Ron Bridgewater
Trombone – Garrett List, George Lewis
Trumpet – Cecil Bridgewater, Jon Faddis, Kenny Wheeler
Tuba – Jonathan Dorn
Vibraphone – Karl Berger
6    Piece Six 6:40
Alto Saxophone [Alto Sax], Soprano Saxophone [Soprano Sax], Bass Saxophone [Bass Sax] – Roscoe Mitchell
Bass Clarinet – Bruce Johnstone
Bass Trombone – Earl McIntyre
Cello – Dave Holland
Clarinet – Ronald Bridgewater
Conductor – Muhal Richard Abrams
Flute – Seldon Powell
Sopranino Saxophone [Sopranino Sax], Clarinet, Contrabass Clarinet – Anthony Braxton
Trombone – Garrett List, George Lewis
Trumpet – Cecil Bridgewater, Jon Faddis, Kenny Wheeler, Leo Smith
Tuba – Jonathan Dorn
Credits :
Composed By [All Music Composed By], Arranged By [All Music Arranged By] – Anthony Braxton

22.1.23

ANTHONY BRAXTON — Creative Orchestra (Köln) 1978 (2CD 2009) + Creative Orchestra (Guelph) 2007 (2008) Serie Line – LINE 30 | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

This expansive two-LP set captures an entire, nearly two-hour live set by Anthony Braxton's Creative Orchestra recorded in Koln, Germany, in 1978. Braxton, like most members of the AACM (Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, a loose Chicago-based collective that also included the Art Ensemble of Chicago and others), normally performed in small groups, from duos to quartets. Braxton's Creative Orchestra -- in which the saxophonist does not play, but merely conducts his own compositions -- is a 20-member exception to this rule. Many of Braxton's compositions explore near-silence in ways similar to John Cage, but this group is nothing if not loud.

Thanks to Braxton's skill as a composer, the results never devolve into mere cacophony, even in those passages where all 20 members -- including an accordionist and a synthesizer player -- are playing at once, as in the opening "Language Improvisations." This is a powerful document of a little-appreciated side of Anthony Braxton's work. Rovi Staff  
Tracklist :
1-1    Language Improvisations    14:34
1-2    Composition 55    12:27
1-3    Composition 45    25:21
2-1    Composition 59    21:45
2-2    Composition 51    17:19
2-3    Composition 58    12:56
Credits :
Accordion – Birgit Taubhorn
Bass – Brian Smith, John Lindberg
Conductor, Composed By – Anthony Braxton
Electric Guitar – James Emery
Percussion, Marimba – Thurman Barker
Piano – Marilyn Crispell
Saxophone [Saxophones], Clarinet [Clarinets], Flute [Flutes], Piccolo Flute [Piccolo], Nadaswaram [Nagaswaram], Ocarina – Dwight Andrews, J.D.Parran, Marty Ehrlich, Ned Rothenberg, Vinny Golia
Synthesizer – Robert Ostertag
Trombone, Tuba – George Lewis, James King Roosa, Ray Anderson
Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Kenny Wheeler, Michael Mossman, Rob Howard, Leo Smith
Vibraphone – Bobby Naughton

Tracklist :
1    Language Improvision    5:02
2    Composition 306    7:04
3    Language Improvision    15:09
4    Composition 307 / Language Improvisation    25:36
5    Composition 91    9:00
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – Evan Shaw
Bass – Rob Clutton, Victor Bateman
Cello – Tilman Lewis
Clarinet [Eb Clarinet], Bass Clarinet – Ronda Rindone
Conductor, Soprano Saxophone, Composed By – Anthony Braxton
Drums – Joe Sorbara, Nick Fraser
Flute – Rob Piilonen
Guitar – Ken Aldcroft
Guitar, Harmonica – Justin Haynes
Piano – Tania Gill
Soprano Saxophone – Kyle Brenders
Tenor Saxophone – Colin Fisher
Trombone – Scott Thomson
Trumpet – Nicole Rampersaud
Violin – Parmela Attariwala
Voice – Christine Duncan
Xylophone – Brandon Valdivia

12.1.23

ANTHONY BRAXTON | WADADA LEO SMITH — Saturn, Conjunct the Grand Canyon in a Sweet Embrace (2004) FLAC (tracks), lossless

It is apparent at the beginning of "Composition No. 316" that the duo of trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith and saxophonist Anthony Braxton is very complete. A rhythm section is not needed for these two masterful musicians, who have played together on an infrequent basis since the late '60s, for they form their own themes, harmonies, and rhythms. Braxton's "Composition No. 316" is comparatively lighthearted in spots yet serious in its development, featuring a forward movement, the musicians' quick reactions to each other, a very passionate soprano (or sopranino) solo, a series of patterns, some heated moments, and a quiet ending. Smith's "Saturn" begins somewhat sarcastically with long tones from Smith and Braxton, with the latter utilizing excessive vibrato. It gradually becomes much more fiery before returning to long tones at its conclusion. "Goshawk" is a group improvisation and a bit looser, although logical in its own way. Fans of Wadada Leo Smith and Anthony Braxton should welcome this long overdue reunion and the fact that after all these years, they are still stretching themselves. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1     Composition No. 316 28:40
Anthony Braxton
2     Saturn, Conjunct the Grand Canyon in a Sweet Embrace 13:23
Wadada Leo Smith
3     Goshawk 8:58
Anthony Braxton / Wadada Leo Smith
Credits :
Saxophone [F], Alto Saxophone [Eb], Soprano Saxophone [Bb], Sopranino Saxophone [Eb] – Anthony Braxton
Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Wadada Leo Smith

9.1.23

ANTHONY BRAXTON | RICHARD TEITELBAUM - Silence / Time Zones (1996) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

This Black Lion release is an odd reissuing of two albums that, aside from Braxton's presence, have little to do with each other. The first is Silence, originally issued on Freedom in 1975 but recorded in 1969, one of his earliest sessions. He's part of a cooperative trio with violinist Leroy Jenkins and trumpeter Leo Smith (the group was also often joined by the late drummer Steve McCall) performing two lengthy, suite-like pieces. They're wonderful works, exploring a terrain similar to that being investigated by the Art Ensemble of Chicago around the same time: barebones themes allowing for substantial free improvisation that dealt as much with sonic space and the generation of unusual textures as anything else. "Silence," as the title implies, is largely concerned with the disposition of sounds in space and shows the strong influence that the contemporary classical world, particularly John Cage, had on these musicians in their early years. The two duo performances with synthesizer pioneer Richard Teitelbaum are also from separate dates, both in the summer of 1976. The two had a long and fruitful relationship and these pieces give a good idea why: both possessed probing intelligence that enabled them to dig deep into each other's individual musical languages, unearthing surprising common ground as well as acknowledging differences. "Crossing" is an extended conversation, replete with arguments and jokes, while "Behemoth Dreams" showcases Braxton's monstrous contrabass clarinet against Teitelbaum's throbs. The latter, presumably with a nod to the title's biblical associations, includes allusions to hymns like "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God." As these two fine releases are tough to come by in their original forms, this fortuitous, though unlikely, pairing is one that shouldn't be passed up. Brian Olewnick  
Tracklist :
1    Anthony Braxton, Leroy Jenkins, Leo Smith–    Off The Top Of My Head 16:43
Composed By – Jenkins
Saxophone, Instruments [Miscellaneous] – Anthony Braxton
Trumpet, Instruments [Miscellaneous] – Leo Smith
Violin, Instruments [Miscellaneous] – Leroy Jenkins

2    Anthony Braxton, Leroy Jenkins, Leo Smith–    Silence 14:43
Composed By – Smith
Saxophone, Instruments [Miscellaneous] – Anthony Braxton
Trumpet, Instruments [Miscellaneous] – Leo Smith
Violin, Instruments [Miscellaneous] – Leroy Jenkins

3    Richard Teitelbaum With Anthony Braxton–    Crossing (Dedicated To Roscoe Mitchell) 23:08
Composed By – Teitelbaum
Recorded By – Bill Warrell
Sopranino Saxophone, Alto Saxophone, Contrabass Clarinet – Anthony Braxton
Synthesizer [Modular Moog], Synthesizer [Micromoog] – Richard Teitelbaum

4    Richard Teitelbaum With Anthony Braxton–    Behmoth Dreams (Dedicated To Maryanne Amacher) 18:24
Composed By – Teitelbaum
Recorded By – Thomas Mark
Sopranino Saxophone, Alto Saxophone, Contrabass Clarinet – Anthony Braxton
Synthesizer [Modular Moog], Synthesizer [Micromoog] – Richard Teitelbaum

Notas.
1, 2 recorded on July 18, 1969 in Paris, France.
3 recorded live in concert on June 10, 1976 at the Creative Music Festival, Mount Temper, N. Y., and mixed at Sound Ideas, New York City.
4 recorded on September 16, 1976 at Bearsville Sound, Woodstock, New York.

7.1.23

ANTHONY BRAXTON - The Complete Arista Recordings Of Anthony Braxton (2008) 8xCD BOX-SET | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Since he released the completely solo For Alto in 1968, the accepted image of Anthony Braxton has been that he is more a theoretician and art music composer than a jazz musician. Therefore, it might seem strange that Mosaic Records is giving his Complete Arista Recordings one of their fabled box set treatments. But Braxton is both -- and much more. This set -- as well as the original Arista recordings -- were produced by Michael Cuscuna, Mosaic/Blue Note label head. The sheer scope of these recordings is staggering. What we get in this amazingly detailed collection is the weightiest argument yet for Braxton's range and depth of field as a musical thinker and his role as a pillar of modern jazz. The individual albums -- New York, Fall 1974; Five Pieces, 1975; Creative Orchestra Music, 1976; Duets, 1976; For Trio; The Montreux/Berlin Concerts; Alto Saxophone Improvisations, 1979; For Four Orchestras; For Two Pianos -- showcase him in a rainbow of settings, from quintets and duets, to trios, quartets, and solo; as the leader of a big band, and as a playing conductor. The players are a who's who of the vanguard in both America and Europe: Muhal Richard Abrams, Leroy Jenkins, Kenny Wheeler, Dave Holland, Jerome Cooper, Leo Smith, Cecil Bridgewater, Roscoe Mitchell, George Lewis, Karl Berger, Ursula Oppens, Frederic Rzewski, Phillip Wilson, Henry Threadgill, and many more.

Given the wide variations in track times, sequencing this set to make it even remotely affordable must have been somewhat frustrating. Comparing the track list to the discographical notes, the full context of this is realized. The box is impeccably organized album by album to be sure, but not necessarily in the chronological order of release. An example: on discs one and two, the albums New York, Fall 1974, and its successor, Five Pieces, 1975 are successive, but then Duets, 1976 (with Abrams) was released after Creative Orchestra Music 1976. This is followed by the first four tracks from Alto Saxophone Improvisations, 1979, which continues and is completed on disc three, etc. That said, there is wonderful aesthetic and principled logic involved in the sound and dynamic of the organization of these discs. In other words, even if an original album is split by disc, it makes complete sense. For instance, while some records are split over various CDs, the decision to give For Four Orchestras its own disc (the final one) was a wise one. The package itself is typical Mosaic: high class presentation with an amazing track by track essay by Braxton's student and collaborator Mike Heffley, a brief reminiscence by Cuscuna, a boatload of killer session photographs, and exhaustive discographical and personnel information. The sound is literally pristine and full of warmth. One can hear no flaws from the source material even when A-B'ed against the original LPs; this is even true of the live Montreux/Berlin Concerts.

Most importantly, however, is that this music from Braxton sounds and feels so on time in the 21st century. This is not only true in its scope and vision, but also in what is realized in its execution. Where John Coltrane, and Ornette Coleman expanded the possibilities for new colors and sounds in jazz, less (or no) credit is given to West Coast players like Jimmy Giuffre and Warne Marsh, except in Braxton's sound worlds. His investigations in using the jazz tradition in order to unmake it in terms of tonality, sound, and texture, while preserving its sense of inventive rhythm, melody, harmonic structures, and even swing (check Creative Orchestra Music, 1976), do not feel remotely academic all these decades later. One can hear humor and warmth in the deep paradoxes of a brilliant mind wrestling with the issues of jazz and new music, challenging his own and accepted notions of their accepted places in the world of sonic architecture. Also, in his most direct exercises, there lies the deep expressiveness of his incessant effort to assimilate his discoveries into an ever-expanding organizational system of sound. This is heard, whether it's in his playing of jazz standards or his original compositions. It's there in the process of conception as well as technical articulation. Nothing here feels quaint or nostalgic. Instead, it's revelatory and engaging, inviting and still provocative. The historic reissue of this material adds yet another level if we wish to deepen our understanding of the myriad ways Braxton has enhanced and expanded each of the traditions he's involved himself with.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
New York, Fall 1974    
1-1    Opus 23B    8:51
1-2    Opus 23C    3:11
1-3    Opus 23D    7:04
1-4    Opus 38A    6:27
1-5    Opus 37    8:17
1-6    Opus 23A    5:29
Five Pieces 1975    
1-7    Opus 23H    4:40
1-8    Opus 23G    8:13
1-9    Opus 23E    17:17
1-10    Opus 40M    3:23
2-1    You Stepped Out Of A Dream 7:11
Written-By – G. Khan, M. H. Brown
Duets 1976    
2-2    Miss Ann 4:09
Written-By – Eric Dolphy
2-3    Opus 60    9:19
2-4    Opus 40P    7:02
2-5    Maple Leaf Rag 3:37
Written-By – Scott Joplin
2-6    Opus 62    13:04
2-7    Nickie
3:15
Written-By – A. Braxton, M. R. Abrams
Alto Saxophone Improvisations 1979    
2-8    Opus 77A    7:35
2-9    Opus 77C    6:30
2-10    Red Top 6:15
Written-By – B. Kynard, L. Hampton
2-11    Opus 77D    7:25
3-1    Opus 77E    4:26
3-2    Opus 26F    6:22
3-3    Opus 77F    6:20
3-4    Opus 26B    6:58
3-5    Along Came Betty 8:00
Written-By – Benny Golson
3-6    Opus 77G    5:17
3-7    Opus 26E    6:17
3-8    Giant Steps 6:22
Written-By – John Coltrane
3-9    Opus 77H    7:05
For Trio    
3-10    Opus 76 (Version One) 20:10
Engineer – Jim Dolan
4-1    Opus 76 (Version Two) 21:28
Engineer – Jim Dolan
For Two Pianos    
4-2    Opus 95 For Two Pianos 49:28
Engineer – Carlo Martenet
Creative Orchestra Music 1976    
5-1    Opus 51    5:11
5-2    Opus 56    7:33
5-3    Opus 58    6:44
5-4    Opus 57    6:25
5-5    Opus 55    7:19
5-6    Opus 59    6:41
The Montreux / Berlin Concerts  
 
5-7    Opus 63    23:32
6-1    Opus 40N    7:48
6-2    Opus 23J    13:59
6-3    Opus 40    7:35
6-4    Opus 6F    8:17
6-5    Opus 40K    15:32
6-6    Opus 6C    10:00
For Four Orchestras    
7-1    Opus 82, Part One    54:04
8-1    Opus 82, Part Two    58:26

All Credits 

WADADA LEO SMITH | ANTHONY BRAXTON - Organic Resonance (2003) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Tracklist :
1    Tawaf (Cycles 1 - 7)    11:48
 Wadada Leo Smith
2    Composition, No. 314    15:13
 Anthony Braxton
3    Composition, No. 315    16:39
 Anthony Braxton
4    A Celestial Bow, Stone Rivers And Silver Stars Overlayed In Red    9:37
 Wadada Leo Smith
Credits :
Painting [Cover], Saxophone [F], Alto Saxophone [Eb], Soprano Saxophone [Bb], Sopranino Saxophone [Eb] – Anthony Braxton
Trumpet, Flugelhorn, Producer – Wadada Leo Smith

17.7.22

VIJAY IYER | WADADA LEO SMITH - A Cosmic Rhythm with Each Stroke (2016) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

 In his liner notes to A Cosmic Rhythm with Each Stroke, pianist/electronicist Vijay Iyer writes that while working in trumpeter/composer Wadada Leo Smith's Golden Quartet/Quintet between 2005 and 2010, the pair often became "a unit within a unit." Evidenced by Tabligh in 2008 and Golden Quintet's half of the 2009 double-disc Spiritual Dimensions, this album (marking the trumpeter's first appearance on ECM in more than two decades) underscores that assertion via distillation. It is one of essences. It reveals the intricacies of music-making according to principles of instinct as well as close listening. Iyer's opening "Passage" is a surprise. The pianist's gently investigatory chords and thematic harmonics offer the hallmarks of a chamber piece. Smith illuminates them with expressive songlike statements, though more insistent staccato speech occurs near the end as Iyer builds to an implied crescendo. The majority of the album is claimed by the title work, a seven-part suite inspired by the drawings of the late Indian artist Nasreen Mohamedi. Its various sections offer a complete portrait of how deep and wide this duo can go. "All Become Alive" offers Smith's bleating, sometimes fragmented high notes. Iyer offers quiet, gently pulsing electronic backdrops, a simple keyboard bassline, and eventually a piano solo that alternately moves along a line that weds jazz balladry and lieder to modal improvisation before the trumpeter reenters to combine and sum. "Labyrinths" is more abstract, choppy, and kinetic. It is a quick-thinking conversation that offers breathtaking exchanges, not only back and forth, but through the moment. At the album's heart is "A Divine Courage." Introduced by the subtlest of electronic bass/drone pulses, Smith doesn't enter for nearly a full minute, giving the impression he is coming from silence. When he does, it's with halting yet fully formed lyric statements. (One briefly quotes Miles Davis from "Saeta" on Sketches of Spain.) As the intensity of the bass pulse slowly increases, Smith responds with expanded lyricism, played straight from the heart. Eventually Iyer's piano enters to frame it with droning middle-register chords and single notes. "A Cold Fire" commences with the pianist rumbling in the low register, alternately cascading notes and chords. Smith balances force and nuance in his playing, adding flow to the immense energy in their interplay. "Notes on Water" closes the suite with a moody ballad that could stand alone from it. Iyer's Rhodes piano shines darkly underneath the carefully articulated blues and angular shapes in Smith's playing. The trumpeter's "Marian Anderson" bookends the album in a resonant assertion of tribute. Iyer's care in responding highlights sometimes quizzical elucidations in the melody, moving the tune toward the unknown. It is the perfect consummation for A Cosmic Rhythm with Each Stroke. The instincts these players offer in these works display the duo's mutual desire for intimate communication and spiritual trust through the medium of sound. Their uncompromising movement toward them results in a shared musical mind that speaks in a distinctive, unique emotional language.
>This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa'<
Tracklist :
1    Passage 6'15
(Vijay Iyer)
2    All Becomes Alive 9'09
(Vijay Iyer / Wadada Leo Smith)
3    The Empty Mind Receives 4'55
(Vijay Iyer / Wadada Leo Smith)
4    Labyrinths 6'43
(Vijay Iyer / Wadada Leo Smith)
5    A Divine Courage 9'12
(Vijay Iyer / Wadada Leo Smith)
6    Uncut Emeralds 7'43
(Vijay Iyer / Wadada Leo Smith)
7    A Cold Fire 5'55
(Vijay Iyer / Wadada Leo Smith)
8    Notes On Water 7'58
(Vijay Iyer / Wadada Leo Smith)
9    Marian Anderson 8'23
(Wadada Leo Smith)
Credits :
Vijay Iyer - Piano, Fender Rhodes, Electronics
Wadada Leo Smith - Trumpet


20.6.22

JOHN ZORN : The Unknown Masada (2003) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The third installment in this Tenth Year celebration is the most exciting yet. Fourteen tunes from Zorn’s legendary Masada songbook that have never been heard before. Performed and arranged by an incredible lineup of musicians, the music here touches upon hard rock, world beat, klezmer and jazz, often all in the same arrangement! Highlights include a lyrical ballad by Wadada Leo Smith, two explosive rock tracks by the powerful Japanese duo the Ruins and Mike Patton’s Fantomas, and a gorgeous solo performance by Ukrainian bandura virtuoso Julian Kytasty. TZADIK
Tracklist :
1    Erik Friedlander–    Kinyan 4'50
Bass – Stomu Takeishi
Percussion – Satoshi Takeishi
Producer, Arranged By, Cello, Mandolin, Engineer – Erik Friedlander
Saxophone, Clarinet – Andy Laster

2    Rashanim–    Olamim 3'48
Drums, Percussion – Mathias Künzli
Electric Bass – Shanir Ezra Blumenkranz
Engineer – Jamie Saft
Guitar – Jon Madof

3    Dave Douglas–    Vehuel 5'32
Alto Saxophone – John Zorn
Bass – Greg Cohen
Drums – Ben Perowsky
Engineer – Jamie Saft
Producer, Arranged By, Trumpet, Electric Piano [Fender Rhodes] – Dave Douglas
Tenor Saxophone – Greg Tardy

4    Tatsuya Yoshida–    Shofetim 3'02
Producer, Arranged By, Voice, Drums, Synthesizer – Tatsuya Yoshida
5    Naftule's Dream–    Partzuf 4'22
Clarinet – Glenn Dickson
Drums – Eric Rosenthal
Electric Guitar – Brandon Seabrook
Engineer – Mark Tanzer
Piano, Arranged By – Michael Mclaughlin
Trumpet – Gary Bohan
Tuba – Jim Gray

6    Jamie Saft–    Zarach 6'57
Producer, Arranged By, Guitar, Drums, Keyboards, Programmed By, Engineer – Jamie Saft
7    Zahava Seewald–    Shagal 6'46
Arranged By, Accordion – Tuur Florizoone
Arranged By, Oud, Fiddle [Medieval] – Michaël Grébil
Vocals, Arranged By, Producer – Zahava Seewald
Written-By [Lyrics] – Solomon Ibn Gabirol

8    Koby Israelite–    Herem 5'06
Baritone Saxophone – John Telfer
Bass, Guitar – Yaron Stavi
Drums, Percussion, Accordion, Guitar, Keyboards, Clarinet, Vocals, Engineer, Arranged By, Producer – Koby Israelite
Flugelhorn – Sid Gauld

9    Julian Kytasty–    Kadmut 4'44
Producer, Arranged By, Bandura – Julian Kytasty
10    Fantômas–    Zemaraim 3'34
Bass, Arranged By – Trevor Dunn
Drums – Dave Lombardo
Guitar – King Buzzo
Voice, Electronics – Mike Patton

11    Wadada Leo Smith–    Demai 6'22
Computer [Laptop], Electronics, Arranged By – Ikue Mori
Engineer – Jamie Saft
Trumpet, Arranged By, Producer – Wadada Leo Smith

12    Eyvind Kang–    Belimah 4'09
Producer, Arranged By, Guitar, Drums, Strings – Eyvind Kang
Credits :
Composed By, Executive-Producer – John Zorn
Painting [Cover Painting (Ma'dah, 2000)] – Karen Liebowitz

19.6.22

WADADA LEO SMITH | SUSIE IBARRA | JOHN ZORN - 50⁸, John Zorn 50th Birthday Celebration Volume Eight (2004) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The pioneer creator of the rhythm unit, the master of the game piece and one of the most dynamic drummers in the downtown scene square off head to head in duo and trio improvisations. Two full sets of music are presented here, beginning with a brilliant set of duos by Ibarra and Zorn, who have been working together for many years. Both surprising and inevitable, the second set features the historic musical meeting of Wadada Leo Smith and John Zorn, and was one of the improvisational highlights from 2003's month of Zorn. Striking and radical sculptures of sound and silence from three generations of improvisational masters. TZADIK
Tracklist :
1    Meridian    4:20
2    Rising Sign    7:01
3    Spirit Writing    6:10
4    By The Mark, Eight    7:06
5    Visitation    8:34
6    Ipsissimi    15:59
7    Ghost Writing    11:57
8    The Ascending Arc    8:03
9    Full Fathom Five    6:50
Credits :
Alto Saxophone, Producer – John Zorn
Drums – Susie Ibarra
Music By – John Zorn, Susie Ibarra, Wadada Leo Smith
Trumpet – Wadada Leo Smith

9.6.22

WADADA LEO SMITH | GEORGE LEWIS | JOHN ZORN - Sonic Rivers (2014) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Tzadik introduces its new SPECTRUM series with a very special and exciting new group featuring three of the most creative wind players in new music. Friends and colleagues since the '70s, these three musicians share a vision of improvisation and composition that is unique, virtuosic and cooperative. Performing compositions and collective improvisations, they sculpt sound and silence with masterly assurance. Surprising yet completely inevitable, this is an essential document of improvisational music in the 21st century by three contemporary masters. TZADIK
Tracklist :
1.    Cecil Taylor 8'54
2.    The Art of Counterpoint 3'50
3.    North 7'14
4.    South 5'44
5.    East 4'06
6.    West 3'56
7.    Screaming Grass 5'50
8.    The Culture of Gun Violence in the US 5'43
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – John Zorn
Trombone, Electronics – George Lewis
Trumpet, Artwork, Illustration [Scores] – Wadada Leo Smith

14.1.19

JEANNE LEE - Natural Affinities (1992) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Jeanne Lee was always an unusual singer, one of the most adventurous to emerge out of the 1960s in jazz. Listening to this 1992 recording, one hears many moments that sound a bit like Cassandra Wilson would a decade later. Lee has a warm but dark voice, often floating as part of the ensemble rather than dominating the music, although in reality she is the dominating force. During this set, although there are conventional moments (particularly a straightforward "I Thought About You" and parts of the closing number, which is Brazilian-oriented), much of the haunting music is quite atmospheric and beyond any specific style. "Mingus Meditations" has Lee at a couple points reciting the words of Charles Mingus from his semi-fictional memoirs, "Peace Chorale" and "Free Space" are not too conventional, and in some spots Lee gives prominent roles (even during her vocals) to bassist Dave Holland, trumpeter Leo Smith, and altoist Mark Whitecage. The overall results are intriguing and will take several listens to fully appreciate. by Scott Yanow
Tracklist:
1 Mingus Meditations 12:06
Dave Holland / Jeanne Lee / Charles Mingus
Bass, Music By – Dave Holland
Vocals, Music By – Jeanne Lee
Words By – C. Mingus
2 I Thought About You 5:04
James Van Heusen / Johnny Mercer
Bass – Lisle Atkinson
Drums – Newman Baker
Music By, Lyrics By – J. Van Heusen, J. Mercer
Piano, Vocals – Paul Broadnax
Vocals – Jeanne Lee
3 Journey to Edaneres 12:22
Gunter Hampel / Jeanne Lee
Bass – Lisle Atkinson
Drums – Newman Baker
Piano, Vocals – Amina Claudine Myers
Vibraphone, Flute, Music By – Gunter Hampel
Vocals, Lyrics By – Jeanne Lee
4 Peace Chorale I/Bushwacked/Peace Chorale II 8:37
Jeanne Lee
Bass – Lisle Atkinson
Drums – Newman Baker
Music By – Jay Clayton
Trumpet – Leo Smith
Vocals – Jeanne Lee
Words By – Lao Tse
5 Free Space 2:52
Sharon Freeman
Alto Saxophone – Mark Whitecage
Bass – Lisle Atkinson
Drums – Newman Baker
Music By, Lyrics By – L. Sharon Freeman
Trumpet – Leo Smith
Vocals – Jeanne Lee
6 Trilogy 10:46
L. Michael Smith
Bass – Lisle Atkinson
Drums – Newman Baker
Trumpet, Music By, Lyrics By – Leo Smith
Vocals – Jeanne Lee
7 Ambrosia Mama/Celebration of a State of Grace 8:00
Jeanne Lee / Ntozake Shange
Bass – Lisle Atkinson
Drums – Newman Baker
Guitar – Jerome Harris
Lyrics By – N. Shange
Vocals, Music By – Jeanne Lee

RICHIE BEIRACH & GREGOR HUEBNER — Live At Birdland New York (2017) FLAC (tracks), lossless

"Live at Birdland New York" is a document of the long-standing and intense collaboration between two masters. It is also a stateme...