Made To Break is the most fertile and active outfit from Ken Vandermark in
    the last decade, and as we all know, Vandermark leads or co-leads at least
    ten more outfits simultaneously. F4 Fake is already the 9th album from Made
    to Break, recorded in November 2017 after concluding a short European tour
    at the Primitive Studios, Vienna.
The title of the album refers, obviously, to today’s troubled populist
    politics, but the three extended compositions relate to Vandermark’s common
    interests - art, cinema, fiction, songwriting and how it all
    corresponds with his musical ideas and language. Made to Break features
    Vandermark on reeds, fellow Chicagoan, drummer Tim Daisy, Austrian Christof
    Kurzmann who plays on the ppooll software and electronics, and Dutch Jasper
    Stadhouders who mostly focuses on the
    electric bass, though can be heard contributing some guitar as well.
F4 Fake begins with “Aäton”, dedicated to the great director-actor-writer
    Orson Wells, and titled after the Aäton film cameras, invented by
    Jean-Pierre Beauviala, who passed away earlier this year. Its strong funky
    vibe is disturbed by the subversive electronic sounds of Kurzmann who
    forces Vandermark, Stadhouders and Daisy to alter their rhythmic sense and
    eventually open the interplay to totally alien sounds and abstract,
    spacious dynamics. But patiently, Vandermark, Stadhouders and Daisy
    integrate Kurzmann’s electronics interventions into their funky groove.
    This kind of interplay is suddenly interrupted again by the angelic sounds of
    Kurzmann who leads the quartet towards a chamber-like coda.
The second piece, “Meccano Number 7”, dedicated to the Argentinian writer
    Julio Cortázar and titled after an expression from the counter-novel
    “Hopscotch”. The atmosphere is still
    rhythmic, but lighter than “Aäton”. Here Kurzmann employs his ppooll
    software as another reed instrument with weird, fragmented sounds that
    enriches the dialog with Vandermark and pushes him to some wild, ecstatic
    outbursts, but also, again, to delicate chamber interplay.
The third and last piece, “Agora”, now in Portugese, dedicated to Brazilian
    protest singer Zélia Barbosa, is the most political piece here. Its urgent,
    raging spirit captures best the anger and dismay over the disastrous
    politics of the current Brazilian president, Jair Bolsonaro, who like his
    American colleague and model, relies on fake news to justify his idiotic
    acts. Here, Made to Break sounds like a four-headed massive unit that is in
    a holy mission, attacking with sheer force and boundless energy the
    demonic, fake politics. Made to Break combines fiery free jazz with raw
    noises and abstract electronics, all accumulates into a possessive
    interplay, sensual and extreme in its own way, but one that highlights Made
    to Break in its best.







1 comments:
I think the album title is a reference to Orson Welles’ famous movie, “F for Fake” (1973), a supposed documentary about an art forger and dealing with the nature of authenticity. It’s one of his best.
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