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Tanja Feichtmaier, Celine Voccia and Alexander Frangenheim

Sowieso, Berlin. June 2024.

Aki Takase & Alexander von Schlippenbach

Galiläakirche, Berlin. June 2024.

Camila Nebbia (s), James Banner (b), Max Andrzejewsk (d)

Jazz in E. Eberswalde, Germany. May 2024

Trio Oùat: Simon Sieger (p), Joel Grip (b), Michael Griener (dr)

Jazz in E. Eberswalde, Germany. May 2024

Tuesday, October 22, 2024

Rasmussen / Sakata / O'Rourke / Corsano - Live at SuperDeluxe - Volume 1 (Trost, 2024)

By Ferruccio Martinotti

Ever used the banal claim “stellar line up”? We did. Ever dropped the boring line “the total exceeds the sum of the parts”? We did. Ever had the childish dream to gather a band, like a football trainer would do with a team? We did. So, we apologize in advance, saying that the subject matter of this review is the amazing outcome of a stellar line-up, the one that every listener would’ve gathered on a daydream, where the whole performance goes far beyond the sum of the skills and the contribution of every single member. The location is the the legendary SuperDeluxe in Tokyo, aptly self-described as “a place to be inspired and a place to inspire others”; the date is the 20th of may 2017; the radioactive black vinyl jewel we’re dealing with is Live at SuperDeluxe Volume 1 edited by Trost Records and, hey, look what a hell of a team is placed on the field. Akira Sakata, saxophone, clarinet and voice. Could someone dare to add something about this guy on a blog like this? Certainly not us. Allow us just to say that we always seen this guy as the quintessential Japanese artist, like Ozu as movie director, Mishima as writer, Merzbow, Boris, Ruins or Guitar Wolf as musician, just to name a few: sheer genius, total craziness, untamed attitude of burning down the bridges not after crossing them but WHILE crossing them. A vital and hyper necessary presence in this rotten world, period. Chris Corsano, drums. Collaborator of the likes of Evan Parker, Bill Orcutt, Kim Gordon, Thurston Moore, Bjork, Nate Wooley, Sylvie Courvoisier, Paul Flaherty and many more, his thunder rumbling elvinjonesque powerhouse, enriched with a beautiful multi-coloured palette perfectly fits in the mix. Jim O’Rourke, guitars. No way to miss to invite at this mad sonic party the most Japanese of the western musicians. After teaming up with a roster of artists such as Herzog, Wilco, Faust, Mayo Thompson, Merzbow, Fahey, Sonic Youth, Ishibashi, our beloved American is pushing away once more the borders of his infinite curiosity and musical research. Mette Rasmussen, saxophone. If it’s silly to file music under genre, race, religion etc, it is undeniable that Women Rule again and again (and we are happy of it): as soon as Zoh Amba’s records were finishing to be on heavy rotation on our turntable, this year we have Mette’s full blasting prime time, too easy to predict Okse as one of 2024 aces, without forgetting she lent in the recent past her reeds to Chris Corsano, Mats Gustafsson, Ken Vandermark, Barry Guy, Ikue Mori, Kent Kessler, Steve Noble, Gard Nilssen, Nate Wooley. The music. The two sides of the record are setting the pace in a pretty different way: the first sees the squad engaged in devastating, sheer fury, super hardcore free impro, pedal to metal, no prisoners, definitely our cup of tea. The second side offers a time to “breathe” through the intricate guitar noises, O’Rouke’s trademark, then Corsano is delivering his drumming in a total “rumble in the jungle” mood, just before Sakata starts with his sinister, guttural voices, no matter if it’s the groceries list, it’s always icing of the cake to our palate. Pretty predictable, the final storm is taking shape and in fact, after some moments with Akira on clarinet, the closing is a grade 5 hurricane, calling the end of a true astonishing performance that, quoting Trost’s notes, is “bridging generations, continents and individual aesthetics”. We would have not been able to say it better and, for what is worth, this will certainly be one of our personal best of the year. 

Monday, October 21, 2024

Laura Jurd & Paul Dunmall - Fanfares and Freedom (Discus, 2024)

By Gary Chapin

Fanfares and Freedom makes sense when you think of it—as the notes suggest—as a jazz quartet paired with a brass band, the two in dialogue. The brass band tradition has a strong but oddly retro-subversive role in jazz history, and not just the early years. Many AACM masters, for example, honed their chops playing in military bands. Witness Lester Bowie’s Brass Fantasy, and Butch Morris’ conductions for explicit connections.

The titles of the pieces on Fanfares and Freedompoint to the brass/New Orleans connections. We’ve got two fanfares, a stomp, and a “toodle-oo.” Laura Jurd’s compositions center the brass element as a frame. The first track, “Fanfare 1,” begins with a repetitive, rolling, sequence from which Dunmall’s sopranino emerges like a brilliant spasm, cascading like a flooded pachinko machine. It’s glorious. The second track begins in a “March of the Wooden Soldiers” place, a twisted, humorous, light travelog. The quartet comes in, led by Dunmall’s tenor, moving us from black and white to color. “Chorale” starts with beautiful brass chord/melodies, then has us walking scattered in the ruins, and brings us to rest somewhere safe.

So far I’ve been distinguishing between the elements, but, inevitably, they merge and a unified set of compositions and improvisations are the result. Dunmall is kind of a monster, playing Paul Gonsalves to Jurd’s Ellington. The brass group sometimes takes on a chamber vibe, but can (and does) let rip. The trombone solos (I can’t tell which of the two trombonists, Alex Paxton or Raphael Clarkson is playing) are wonderful, raunchy—for example in the opening of the third track, “Onward Stomp,” a 13 minute masterpiece, where the ‘bone and the piano engage in mutual malfeasance. Later the brass all engage in a jump scare blatty-blat-blat right at a Dunmall exaltation.

I’m always interested, as a listener and writer, in the relationship between improvisation and composition. This is one of the few cases where the composer, Jurd, is also explicitly interested in that tension! All of that, though, is secondary to the fact that the record sounds fantastic, fun, and intense.

Sunday, October 20, 2024

Jack Wright - Sunday Interview

Jack Wright with Ben Bennett
  1.   What is your greatest joy in improvised music?

    Performing or playing a session interactively with friends--no structure, concept, or notion of what would be good music. Only the relation between us is involved. And I know I am at the height when I start laughing in the middle of playing.

  2. What quality do you most admire in the musicians you perform with?

    The need to enter into total enjoyment of what they are doing, whether the audience “gets it” or not. But if playing free is their way of having fun, then people almost always join in. Incidentally, that is why free playing is not avant-garde—it is too much fun, so it is a strange kind of seriousness.

  3. Which historical musician/composer do you admire the most?

    Iannis Xenakis 

  4. If you could resurrect a musician to perform with, who would it be?

    I would not do that to them; they have given us a gift for us to build upon as we choose.

  5. What would you still like to achieve musically in your life?

    Ever since I stopped trying to be accepted as a professional musician, thirty years ago, I have not thought in terms of achievement. It was a great emancipation that I would recommend. To truly live one's life takes the place of achieving anything. If what I and my friends do is art, then it reaches no goals and achieves nothing.

  6. Are you interested in popular music and - if yes - what music/artist do you particularly like?

    Yes, but the artists are mostly unknown, or they don't call themselves artists, or I don't care about the names. Anyway, there’s no ranking of them: non-western village music, sixties R and B, Soul, Rock, and early Punk, and today, Playboi Carti comes to mind—playful and always fresh.

  7. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

    I just don't think that way. I guess I like myself and sometimes get upset but get past it. There's no point in trying to be a better person; there is no such thing as “better.”

  8. Which of your albums are you most proud of?

    I'm not proud of anything I have done musically. Or ashamed either!

  9. Once an album of yours is released, do you still listen to it? And how often?

    I record most sessions and performances in order to make judgments, and often enjoy, but the recording quality must be high. I only "release" for the purpose of touring, to give people a chance to decide whether to come, or to persuade promoters to book a gig. Free playing is a performance music; the recordings might lead you to want to hear the musicians perform, but only those who are hungry for experience will come. Others who come leave quickly. Recorded music is so available today that hardly anyone actually needs it.

  10. Which album (from any musician) have you listened to the most in your life?

    Maybe Eric Dolphy, but this is a quantitative question. You can hear someone once and that can be a total experience that changes your life. For me, that was a certain moment in Coltrane’s Love Supreme. I fell on the floor at that moment, 1974, I think.

  11. What are you listening to at the moment?

    I pretty much only listen to other people’s music when I’m in the car on tour in the US, and I’m not there now! But also I listen to other sets when I’m performing.

  12. What artist outside music inspires you?

    Mr. Nobody, whose art is beyond expression. “They” are outside the outside.  

 Jack Wright on the Free Jazz Blog:

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Special Note: Jack Wright is be in Greece to talk about his book "The Free Musics", which was recently translated to Greek by Free Jazz Blog writer Fotis Nikolakopoulos.

Presentation of the book "The Free Musics - The improvisational side of jazz in America from the counterculture of the 60's to today" and discussion with the author of the book and musician-improviser Jack Wright. Foreword by the translator of the book, Fotis .

Tonight at To Pikap in Thessaloniki. More info here.

Saturday, October 19, 2024

Elephant9 with Terje Rypdal - Catching Fire (Rune Gramophone, 2024)


By Eyal Hareuveni

Norwegian guitar hero Terje Rypdal joined the performances of local free-prog-rock power trio Elephant9 - keyboard player Ståle Storløkken (of Supersilent, who played with Rypdal since the mid-nineties, including in his last studio album, Conspiracy, ECM, 2020), bassist Nikolai Hængsle and drummer Torstein Lofthus. Catching Fire captures the best of these performances, at Oslo’s Nasjonal Jazzscene - Victoria in January 2017, a few months before Rypdal celebrated his 70th birthday.

You may feel goosebumps when you will hear the familiar, sustained-icy melodic guitar lines of Rypdal in the opening piece, “I Cover the Mountain Top”, sending you immediately to the iconic ECM albums of Rypdal from the seventies like After The Rain and Odyssey. But Rypdal rarely takes solos in these powerful performances, and there are extended times that he listens to the Keith Emerson-tinged Storløkken’s Hammond attacks and the aggressive-propulsive rhythm section of Hængsle and Lofthus, updating the Miles Davis’ electric era bands sound with psychedelic fireworks.

Rypdal plays only when his intervention is crucial but every time he plays the guitar is pure gold. Rypdal injects masterful melodic finesse and rhythmic fiery wisdom into the explosive ride of Elephant9. He finds a contrapuntal melodic spot on top of the wild and super intense dynamics of Elephant9, more in the way of Rypdal’s mid-eighties power trio the Chasers than his early or later ECM albums. David Fricke, who wrote the liner notes, compares Catching Fire to the classic live albums of Mahavishnu Orchestra, ELP and King Crimson, and suggests that his interplay Storløkken evokes Pink Floyd’s Meddle crashing the oedipal climax of the Doors’ “The End”. Either way, you do not want to miss this magical gem.

Friday, October 18, 2024

Guitar Week - Closing Statements (almost)

Derek plays Eric - A Suite of Soaps and Other Assorted Sceneries (Jazzwerkstatt, 2023) 

The concept of this Berlin based trio is to find a spot somewhere in the continuum of stylistic features and approaches between Derek Bailey on one end and Eric Clapton on the other. A broad spectrum indeed. Bailey, of course, pioneered a free improvisation language on the guitar and developed a philosophy towards improvisation, while Eric Clapton is often credited as a preeminent sculptor of modern rock with the Yardbirds and Cream and has offered at times his own somewhat more suspect philosophies. Anyway, A Suite of Soaps and Other Assorted Sceneries is the second recorded outing from this trio, following their self-titled debut from 2018 and it continues their journey of musical amalgamation. 
 
The group is guitarist Andreas Willers, bassist Jan Roder and drummer Christian Marien, and the program that they've cooked up on Soaps is rich and tasty. The album opens with drummer Paul Motian's 'Tuesday ends Saturday' from 1974's Tribute and which was already a guitar laden slow burner. Here, it is rendered with some reverence but even more grit. This is followed by a Willer's penned suite, itself a steaming stew of musical influences, with a heaping of avant-garde alongside hearty chunks of well marinated jazz-rock. Later in the program, a rendering of Gateway's "May Dance" is impossible not to enjoy - a great song given a worthy re-reading. Possibly the best example of the combination of the group's namesakes can be found in their take of the Beatle's "I Want You (She's so Heavy)," in which the closing track's opening moments are a seeming nod to the deconstruction of standards Bailey performed in his final years with the fiery rock furnace blast that the tune works itself into.



Juanma Trujillo - Howl (Endectomorph Music and Falcon Gumba Records, 2024) 

 
Juanma Trujillo is a guitarist originally from Venezuela who spent ten years in New York studying and honing his voice on the instrument, and now, according to various internet sources, is living in Barcelona. Along the way, he has developed an impressive discography and a core of close musical associates. As his move to Spain may change the some of the nodes in the network, he celebrated his New York connections at least one last time (though that's never truly the case, right?) with the recording of Howl featuring tenor saxophonist Kevin Sun, bassist Andrew Schiller and drummer Matt Honor on drums. Other recordings from Trujillo have featured other NYC fixtures and up-and-comers including Sean Conly and Franciso Mela (Collage, 2022), Kenneth Jimenez and Gerald Cleaver (Contours, 2023), and violinist Leonor Falcón (Imaga Mondo, 2023). 
 
On Howl, what is most interesting is the constraint Trujillo puts on himself - he uses only nylon string guitar. On other recordings, like the ones just mentioned, you may hear him on electric extracting long atmospheric tones or crunchy high-energy solos, or even playing mandolin and cuatro. The nylon string has its own sound-world. There is a difference to how the tones form, sustain and decay, there is a softness and clarity but also a real possibility to create dense thickets of sound. Trujillo's guitar playing does all of this on Howl as his musical partners respond with an equally rich set of tonalities. Opener 'Transient' lurches to life with a jaunty two note figure over which Sun arcs melodically while Trujillo's lightly atonal solo showcases the instrument's delicate side. 'Rojo' begins with a lithe figure and features Schiller's bass and Honor's drumming in an extended, building passage. The melodies seem to sneak up in the deft arrangement and that sparse intro becomes a full band effort by the end. The title track, after a spidery intro from Trujillo and Honor, is shredded by some powerful, free flowing saxophone. The contrast of the guitar and the woodwind is invigorating. Check this one out for sure!



Jessica Ackerley - All Of the Colours Are Singing (AKP, 2024) 



If Trujillo's album is one of saying goodbye to one life before embarking on a new one, then guitarist and composer Jessica Ackerley's could be considered one of transitioning into the new one. Ackerley began working on All of the Colours Are Singing after relocating to Hawaii and beginning a doctoral program. In the liner notes, she writes about both working with new musicians in Hawaii and one in New York City. She also talks about a friend she made after moving to the islands who then passed away from cancer just after completing the album's mixing. Is it an album memorializing loss? Reflecting on change? Celebrating new beginnings? There is a good chance that the answer is simply: 'yes it is.'
 
Suffice to say, what we hear on All of the Colours is a deep, diverse and emotionally imbued sequence of songs that range from the abstract strings of the opening "Introduction" to the power-trio charged explosions that is but one of parts of the closing track "Conclusion: In Four Micro-Parts," and all of the wonderful music in between. For example, the title track begins with a simple melody that bobs and weaves behind an evocative line of distorted legato guitar tones and a sonorous melody from Concetta Abatte's viola. Aaron Edgcomb's drums and Walter Stinson's upright bass provide support for the first half of the song and then the drums take center-stage for the rest. There is also the follow up, "The Dots are the Connection" which is an upbeat avant-jazz-rock tune, Ackerly's guitar leading the way, but it very much the collective work of a guitar-bass-drums trio. Then there is 'Nature Morte: Time is Fleeting,' in which we can basically hear the guitarist, with the help of her string arrangements, contemplating mortality. Each track is layered, the pieces with the strings even more nuanced, and all of the tracks embrace unusual and provocative melodic and rhythmic ideas. It would seem that Ackerley has found inspiration amongst the volcanic outcrops and black sand beaches of her new home.



Jorge Nuno - Labirinto (Phonogram Unit, 2024)


There is a certain tactile and aural joy that can be found strumming and plucking a steel string acoustic guitar without, say, a specific musical plan. There are resonances and vibrations that when activated can be a very satisfying feeling. Portuguese guitarist Jorge Nuno, leader of the very electric group Voltaic Trio, seems quite happy to release those vibrations on his solo acoustic guitar recording Labirinto. The 46-minute album is comprised of eight very individual tracks that are full of abstract atonal melodies and very concrete rhythmic inventions. The opener, 'Sombras', begins with a detuning, a sound that guitarists are quite used to, as the pitch of strings are compared against each other as the tuning pegs are slowly turned. Then, the playing evolves into seemingly frenetic statements, but on repeat listens begin to reveal patterns based on other attributes than well-tempered melodies, for example, Nuno uses to great effect, motion, repetitive tonal clusters, and syncopation. The title track begins with non-sounding notes, in which the friction from striking muted strings with vigor create the track's textures. The closer, 'O fim', features a similar approach, at least at first, but with the sound on. One interpretation of the album's title, Labirinto (which means labyrinth) could be interpreted as a trip through the quixotic corridors of the acoustic guitars timbres and tonalities, which would make sense as Nuno is presenting the guitar at its purist. 
 


Flak, Jorge Nuno, José Lencastre, Hernâni Faustino - Break It Down (Phonogram Unit, 2024) 

Let's stick around in Lisbon for a moment - after all, it's a lovely city with its own sounds and labyrinthine streets and corridors - and check out another one featuring Nuno, and this time with his Phonogram Unit label mates, saxophonist José Lencastre and bassist Hermani Faustino, along with guitarist Flak, who was an lynchpin of the Portuguese rock scene with the group Rádio Macau. On Break it Down, the group relies on Flak's analog drum machine work as a basis for their improvisations. Throughout, Lencastre is burbling over with melodic ideas, while Nuno provides both searing and atmospheric electric guitar. Faustino's bass lines throb and thrust, rooting the group with a feel that veers between dub, rock, funk and its own unique thing. The main event is the title track, a nearly 20-minute aural treat, in which Flak's percolating electronics provide constant agitation as Lencastre and Nuno generate energetic waves, and Faustino's punchy bass delivers precise blows. The track ebbs in the middle, leaving the drum and bass to their inventive devices. The group comes together in the final moments, with swelling noise-guitar from Nuno, hand-clap rhythms from Flak and ever-twisting lines from Lencestre. Pure inventive joy. 
 


Samo Salamon with Ronan Guilfoyle & Rafal Mazur - For the Listener Who Listens (Self-Released, 2024) 


Now for something completely different: For the Listener who Listens is a set with Solvenian guitarist Samo Salamon in duo with two different bassists, Ronan Guilfoyle from Ireland and Rafal Mazur from Poland. The tracks are interspersed, Salamon and Guilfoyle on the odd numbered ones and Salamon and Mazur on the evens. Both of the bassists play the acoustic bass, not an upright double bass, but rather the one that looks like an oversized acoustic guitar, and all of duets with Guilfoyle sees Salamon playing the banjo. The sound world of these instruments together is as important as the interactions between the players. On the opening track, The opener, 'A Mind of Winter', the plink plonk of the banjo is taut, focused and cutting, and so is the bass. Each note is distinct and on equal melodic footing. The push-and-pull of the duo is on the delicate side. The following track, 'The Frost', with Mazur is different. Salamon is on his usual semi-hollow body electric, which he plays with a clean, rounded tone and Mazur's notes blend slightly together. Here, the give-and-take builds more quickly as they both exchange tonal clusters and melodic snippets. The dialog of duos continues, each track featuring a different approach from the two musicians involved, and ending with a final duo with Guilfoyle. 'The Nothing that Is" is closing remark on the spacious improvisations that do in fact reward the listener who truly listens - again, and again and again.



Frank Paul Schubert, Kazuhisa Uchihashi & Klaus Kugel - Black Holes Are Hard To Find (Nemu, 2022) 


This is Guitar Week's bonus track. Black Holes Are Hard To Find was released in December of 2022, so it has been out in the world for a bit, and it is a bit tragic that it has had to wait so long to get a well deserved mention here.
 
This international trio is made up of German saxophonist Frank Paul Schubert, Japanese guitarist Kazuhisa Uchihashi, and German drummer-percussionist Klaus Kugel. The album, Black Holes Are Hard to Find is entirely improvised and showcases an eclectic, genre-blurring style and a contagious synergy between the players. The seven tracks are rich with dynamic interplay, seamlessly shifting through multifaceted musical ideas. To pin-point Uchihashi's contributions on guitar is tricky, as it is the blend of the three that make the album stand out, but special attention could be given to apocalyptic wailing that permeates the title track, especially around minute three, then again towards the final third of 'Explosive Past', and also in the middle of 'Internal Structure.' More importantly though, each piece unfolds with its own internal logic, blending bold textures and timbres into an extremely satisfying sonic dish.

Thursday, October 17, 2024

Dirk Serries: Three Completely Different Duos

By Eyal Hareuveni

Schneider / Serries (Schneider Collaborations, 2024)

The duo album of Serries and German experimental, free-improv, avant-rock and noise drummer Jörg A. Schneider (known from the free jazz-drone-dub duo Roji with Portuguese bassist Gonçalo Almeida, a frequent collaborator of Serries) was recorded at Schneider’s home base, the Loundry Room in Hückelhoven, Germany, in June 2023. This is the most radical and varied album of these three new duos. Series plays a distortion-heavy, mean electric guitar and pushes Schneider’s manic, primitive drumming to extreme terrains on the opening piece “Muscle Steam” but on the following “Enhance The Machine”, Serries suggests a much more reserved, twisted kind of ballad, accompanied by fragmented rhythmic patterns of Schneider. “Mechanical Collapse” threatens to drown in another manic, noisy freak-out and “Complex Particle System” experiments with a dark and noisy cinematic soundscape. The album ends with the sparsely melodic “Force Regeneration”, and already calls for continuous chapters of this stimulating duo.


Christian Vasseur & Dirk Serries - Floating Simularities (Creative Sources, 2024)

French guitarist Christian Vasseur describes his music as free of any form of dogma and exploring new sound universes with such exotic instruments as archlute, mohan veena, Weissenborn-Harpa and electric 10-string lap-steel guitar. Vasseur brings to this guitar duo an 11-string classical guitar, tuned in quartet-tone, while Serries plays on archtop guitar, often with a bow and objects. Floating Simularities was recorded live at the Kapel Oude Klooster in Brecht, Belgium, and Serries was responsible for the recording, mixing and mastering. The seven intimate and almost chamber duets explore tension-filled, resonant acoustic timbres. Sometimes these duets sketch surreal textures or suggest brief stories, and at other times flirt with delicate, oriental-sounding elements, as in the most enigmatic, beautiful gamelan-like “The Traveller Surprised By His Dream”, with Vasseur adding wordless chanting.


Dirk Serries & Trösta - Magnetar (Projekt, 2024)


Magnetar takes Serries to his formative ambient era, then working under VidnaObmana and Fear Falls Burning pseudonyms, in a second duo album with fellow Belgian alto sax and electronics player-sound engineer-producer Trösta (aka Nicolas Lefèvre), following Island on the Moon (Consouling Sounds, 2022). The album was recorded live between 2021 and 2023 at Serries’ favorite Sunny Side Studios in Brussels, operated by Lefèvre. This 102-minute album offers atmospheric and peaceful yet quite melancholic, free improvised dreamscapes and drones of Serries’ expansive, effects-laden guitar lines, resonating with great reverb the subtle melodic phrases of Trösta. A highly immersive listening experience that highlights the close and powerful magnetic fields Serries and Trösta share.

Luís Lopes: Solo and Duo

 Luís Lopes - Dark Narcissus: Stereo Guitar Solo (Rotten/Fresh / Shhpuma, 2024)

Portuguese guitarist Luís Lopes describes his idiosyncratic, solo aesthetics as averse to any linearity. He refuses to subscribe to any genre, pushing himself to experiment with paradoxes, and preferring the electric guitar sounds as they are, dirty, crispy, excessive, disoriented, violent and obliterating of the senses. Dark Narcissus is the fourth solo album of Lopes and was recorded at Estúdio do Olival in Alfarim in October 2023. It takes the expressive and noisy music to surprising restrained terrains.

Lopes plays a stereo guitar connected to two separate channels/amps, and all the music was captured in real-time, with no overdubs. The opening, 20-minute “The Cry of Dark Narcissus” is an introspective and sparse piece that offers enough time and space to linger on every resonant note of the stereo guitar, patiently weaved into a surreal, thorny texture. The following “I Ascend So I Could Look At You” is a more abstract but unsettling piece, and surprisingly, even a vulnerable and melancholic one. The last piece, “Reminiscence of A Dark Night” takes an impossible task, sketching a meditative texture through a noisy trance, and most likely only Lopes can make perfect sense of such a demanding mission.


Schneider | Lopes (Schnieder Collaborations, 2024) 

The duo of Lopes with German drummer Jörg A. Schneider was recorded at Schneider’s home base, at the Loundry Room in Hückelhoven in May 2023. The album features two free improvised pieces. The first “One Armed Bandit” suggests an uncompromising, fast and furious, rhythmic interplay between two powerful and stubborn musicians, but without settling on any patterns. In the second piece “Danger Of Suffocation” Lopes takes the leading role and keeps expanding the manic patterns of Schneider with pulse-free, open-ended yet coherent, noisy and distorted ideas.

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Berne/Frisell and David Torn

By Gary Chapin

Tim Berne and Bill Frisell - Live in Someplace Nice (Screwgun, 2024) *****

I don’t often mess with “favorite album ever” talk, but when I do it almost always includes Tim Berne and Bill Frisell’s 1984 piece of magic, Theoretically. I don’t know if you would call it a masterpiece, since both were in early career mode, but there is something about that record that is so perfect, and so right—the sound, the balance, the intrigue, the suspense, the laughs—that I have never stopped loving it. AND, since it came out, I have never stopped wishing for more water from that same well. (Typical fanboi presumption!)

Live in Someplace Nice was recorded around the time they were recording Theoretically. It’s been gone over by David Torn, and has more kick-ass going for it than Theoretically did, which could be for any of three reasons. 1) Conscious choice of Tim and Bill. 2) Torn’s production. 3) Live recording, as opposed to studio. Frisell’s penchant for swells and sustain bring in a hint of ambience. Spaces to be written on and repetitive figures make the structure through which the brilliant improvisation navigates.

I’m trying to remember what it was like in 1984. A lot of us had fallen for this duo, but did anyone understand what a stunning abundance of talent existed here? Five stars in 2024.

 

David Torn - Sway the Palms (sr, 2024) *****

Torn, like Frisell, has an amazing ability to shape the envelope of the sound—through performance and production—it leaves one gasping for air. Torn offers these five tracks as part of a series, the rest of which I haven’t encountered (yet). The method in the madness, here, is that, in studio, Torn improvises the composition on guitar and real-time. In all cases, these compositions are meant to stand alone. In two cases, Torn invites a guest to “play with” the completed conversation not sweetening it, he says, but deepeningit.

Torn’s compositions feel like film soundtracks to me—the first thing of his I ever heard was the soundtrack for Lars and the Real Girl. He draws from the whole guitar template, steel acoustic to fully processed Frippery, but these are surface trappings (though interesting ones), set dressing for the scenes that unfold in my head as he evokes these stories. Tim Berne guests on the first track, and Gerald Cleaver on the third. On the title track, a 17 minute masterpiece, Torn improvises (as an overdub) a poem. The five tracks, though, come together with the coherence of a movement and hearing it all in one sitting leaves me basking, processing, and afterglowing. Also five stars.

More: https://davidmtorn.bandcamp.com/album/sway-the-palms

Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Olaf Rupp - Earth And More (scatterARCHIVE, 2024)

By Martin Schray

Nostalgia is a powerful feeling. Who doesn’t want to return to their youth or doesn’t like to think about what they have achieved back in the days. Also in music, there are bands that still exist but haven’t produced anything new for years. However, they keep on touring satisfying the audience’s desire to bring back days long gone. On the one hand, that’s absolutely okay, but on the other hand such concepts represent artistic stagnation. Of course, this idea of music hardly works in improv and especially the German guitarist Olaf Rupp certainly can’t be accused of suffering from nostalgia. "I don’t like to look back. Mostly I prefer to dream about the future," he says in the liner notes of his new album.

Nevertheless, he has now released an almost two-hour long album with music from the turn of the century. But in order to understand Earth and More one has to go back in history. At the time when the music published here was created, Rupp’s band STOL (with Stephan Mathieu on drums and Rudi Mahall on bass clarinet) had just disbanded and he began to focus more on freely improvised music. However, in order to see in which direction he wanted to go, he recorded and produced complete albums every month, sometimes pieces with the acoustic guitar, the electric guitar or electronics. Some were released, the rest became demo cdRs that were distributed all over the world. Some made it to Liam Stefani in Glasgow. The head of the Scatter label has kept them to this day. He was the one who initiated the idea to publish some of them and Rupp actually thought about his earlier music, listened to old tapes and “found a way to overcome [his] nostalgia phobia”.

On Earth And More we listen to a musician who is strongly fixated on electronics and for whom the guitar tends to take a back seat. Pieces like “Lorraine Rain“ or the title track remind me of Aphex Twin (without the drum’n’bass background), Throbbing Gristle, Test Department or This Heat! “I did not have a computer at that time, so I recorded directly onto cassette tapes and audio cdRs“, Rupp explains. “The setup was a heavily abused Behringer mixer which I modified so that I could cascade and feedback several channels. Then I had a few guitar effects: a looper, a distortion pedal and a bass guitar synth-pedal.“ Another influence on this music is techno. Whether the tracks are more ambient-like (“Makyō“) or seem to be based on computer game sounds (“Mai Outtake“), Rupp seemed to enjoy the purity of rhythm and sound.

Another surprise is the fact that he sings on two of the tracks. On “Goodlook“, with his constantly looping chorus line, which becomes increasingly alienated as the song progresses, he sounds a bit like Robert Wyatt. On “Lonely Woman” he is reminiscent of an experimental Nick Drake, who seems to have John Martyn as a second guitarist and who extends his melancholy songs to infinity with ambient sounds.

Finally, the last two tracks - all in all 35 minutes long - are pure ambient music. “Upstate 1 and 2” were created as music for an exhibition by photo artist Gabriele Worgitzki. The music is functional and very spatial, with loops that work like a beat. Both tracks are wonderful, especially “Part 1” with its echoes of music of the spheres and the sparse guitar arpeggios even gives the piece a psychedelic touch. Bands like Autechre and Boards of Canada come to mind.

The result of this journey into his artistic self was Rupp’s turn to improvised music. Life Science, his first album on FMP, was released in the summer of 1999. Nevertheless, it would have been exciting to see in which direction the electronic musician Rupp would have developed.

Although it is unusual music for our blog, for me it’s one of this year’s most interesting releases so far.

Earth And More is available as a download. You can listen to it here:

Raphael Rogiński - Plays John Coltrane and Langston Hughes (Unsound, 2015 / 2024)


By Martin Schray

Raphael Rogiński is not a guitarist like any other, and his playing style is particularly unusual for guitarists from the field of free jazz or improvised music. There are hardly any references to Sonny Sharrock, James “Blood” Ulmer or Derek Bailey and Masayuki Takayanagi. So it may seem all the more surprising that this album deals with the music of John Coltrane and the lyrics of the most famous representative of the Harlem Renaissance, Langston Hughes (the vocals on “Walkers With The Dawn“ and „Rivers“ are sung by Natalia Przybysz).

First of all, however, it must be said that Plays John Coltraneand Langston Hughes is not a new piece of work, but the expanded reissue of an album from 2015 that has not yet been released on vinyl and has long been out of print on CD. The fact that the Unsound label is now making the music available again cannot be appreciated enough, because Rogiński’s solo guitar approach to John Coltrane’s music is completely new and exciting. Although the album is full of Coltrane classics like “Blue Train”, “Naima” and “Lonnie's Lament”, you’d hardly recognize them, if you didn’t know that. Rogiński only leaves parts of the melody lines, if at all, the harmonic and rhythmic structures are virtually ignored and the tempo is sometimes radically throttled. It’s as if Coltrane had been deprived of jazz. This almost sounds like blasphemy, but what the Polish guitarist makes of it is simply spectacular. “Blue Train” and ‘Equinox’, for example, sound like Bill Frisell was jamming with Maleem Mahmoud Ghania, while the arpeggio-drunk “Mr. P.C.“ and “Seraphic Light“ are reminiscent of Spanish flamenco guitarists which are influenced by a harsh punk attitude. “Countdown” wouldn’t stand out on an album by Ryley Walker, so relaxed and shiny is the folk/country framework that Rogiński has put under the piece. Approaching Coltrane’s singular, spirited music with a perspective formed outside the jazz tradition, the music turned out to struck the guitarist as a revelation, the liner notes claim. “Suddenly these songs became full of glowing moving pictures, with a melancholy, but also with something like promise,” Rogiński says. Another characteristic of the atmosphere conveyed by this music is intimacy. A piece like “Spirituals”, in which something like a Coltrane melody line actually seems to be recognizable, is imbued with a great tenderness. One might actually believe to be sitting unrecognized in Rogiński’s living room while he plays this music just for himself.

The grail keepers of John Coltrane’s music may be horrified, but Plays John Coltrane and Langston Hughes is simply a wonderful piece of music, like fine wine it has only gotten better over the years. Anyone who has heard the guitarist’s music with Shofar or his project Yemen. Music Of The Yemenite Jews , with Perry Robinson, Wacław Zimpel and Michael Zerang, will love this music. Outstanding.

Plays John Coltrane and Langston Hughes is available as a double album on vinyl and as a download. You can listen to it and order it here: