By Paul Acquaro
By Paul Acquaro
By Paul Acquaro
By Don Phipps
What makes Ches Smith special? Is it his musicality – the trap set as symphony? Is it his incredible multi-instrumental talent (on The Self he plays drums, vibraphone, timpani, glockenspiel, chimes, tam-tam, and small percussion)? Or is it his ability to use these instruments to craft free form music that conveys complex feelings and thoughts?
The Self highlights Smith’s abilities to bring it. There’s the ac/dc approach on vibraphone on “The Problem,” which alternates between dreaminess and energy. There’s the funk of “Stems From,” where Smith uses the glockenspiel to create a rotating motif wrapped by syncopated snare and bass drum. Or for those who prefer flashy drumming, there’s the wonderful “In Two” and “Light Spirits,” with cascading snare rolls and cymbals juxtaposed against bass drum pedal syncopation, or the beautiful tom tom beats on “Freely Stated,” where the strokes are hard and fast but the sound produced flows and rolls. And his free form brush work on “Subtly” is not to be missed.
Or check out his use of the vibraphone and chimes on “Vertiginous Question,” which turns ethereal and blends with what almost sounds like electronics at play. Or the fascinating use of the glockenspiel to suggest a clear night of twinkling stars on “Constellation View.” Perhaps the masterpiece of the album is “Empty Individual.” Not only does this composition demonstrate Smith’s endearing musical all over drumming, replete with bass drum pedal work that startles and impresses, but to this he adds the glockenspiel for just a couple of precise notes in the middle of his drumming escapades! The music continues to roll about in a fine rage, with some sudden explosions and incredible cymbal and gong play, elements that slip in an out of the tune like changing lanes on a speedy highway.
The important thing with The Self is that Smith makes it happen – from trampoline bounces to adventurous safari rhythms (“Get Out There And See”). Finally, one would be remiss not to comment on his use of the bells (or chimes as he refers to it). “Menm Bagay La” illustrates this perfectly, where he recreates the sound of chimes blowing in the breeze.
Smith, who in 2025 has participated on Myra Melford’s excellent Splash, Clone Row where reviewer Aloysius Ventham wrote “I suspect it will be my album of the year”, and John Zorn’s Impromptus, is covering the bases. The Self shows that he continues to develop and expand and it’s exciting to hear his expanding artistry. Enjoy!
Ogun Records has just released to YouTube a restored version of a short film called "The Real McGregor" from 1967, documenting Chris McGregor's Blue Notes. Filmed at the height of London’s 1960s jazz scene, the group was newly arrived from Apartheid South Africa and sparking a wave of adventurous music. This rare film captures their only known visual record from that era, set within Ronnie Scott’s legendary Old Place at 39 Gerrard Street. Originally the first Ronnie Scott’s club and later run by John Jack, the basement venue became a round‑the‑clock hub for young British jazz musicians to rehearse, perform, and experiment.
Experimental trio Taupe comprises saxophonist, composer, and arranger Jamie Stockbridge (Agbeko, Martha Reeves and The Vandellas, John Pope Quartet and more), drummer, composer, and improviser Alex Palmer (Logan‘s Close, Blue Giant Orkestar, Pippa Blundell, SMIRK, and more), and guitarist and electronic musician Mike Parr-Burman (Glasgow Improvisers Orchestra and a variety of projects including Dome Riders and more).
Taupe has performed at jazz festivals, punk clubs, and venues in the UK and Europe. They have opened for Deerhoof, Melt Banana, and Richard Dawson, and have been featured at the 12 Points! Jazz Festival and selected for Jazz North’s Northern Line. In 2023, they received the PRS International Showcase Fund Award to perform at the Sharpe showcase festival in Slovakia.
Lemonade Tycoon is announced by two sets of repeated blasted phrases, before the rhythm kicks in, and it is this slightly offset beat that pervades the single, creating a slightly off-kilter dynamic that works well at engaging the mind.
The title , Lemonade Tycoon, is a nod to the classic business simulation game of the same name, where players run a lemonade stand and try to make profits, but really, the sound has nothing to do with a game. It is intense and unique, enhanced by a live drum improvisation in the final sequence, captured via a saxophone clip-on mic and routed through saxophonist Jamie Stockbridge’s intricate effects pedal chain, creating a spectral echo. It is here where the lemonade reference makes sense, as it is sparkling and chaotic like shaken lemonade, simultaneously precise and unruly.
If ever a track screamed skronk, it is this one. Beautifully balanced, Taupe work together to create music that encompasses free jazz with punchy, repeated phrasing that works it way into the mind, like a relentless drill. The switches from precise, intricate phrases to turbulent, chaotic lines are seamless.
They describe their music as having ‘wonky charm‘ and that is perfect to describe this joyfully noisesome, beautiful music that gets into your psyche. There is a crazy section where sax and guitar cross swords in rhythmic interpretation that makes for a bonkers conversation, including pulled back timings that add to the sense of controlled chaos of the track. It is a track that starts as one thing and by the end is something different but equally, turbulently glorious.
This single is fun, free, dynamic, and completely beautiful.
Lemonade Tycoon is the single release ahead of Taupe’s third album, waxing | waning, which will be released in March 2026 by the Czech label Minority Records.
In 2024, I interviewed saxophonist Ivo Perelman for Free Jazz Collective. He told me he was coming to the UK in October 2025 to record with John Butcher. Perelman described Butcher as ‘a multi-faceted musician with an original, elegant, yet powerful sax voice.’ Butcher has played with John Edwards, the late, great John Russell, Phil Minton, Pat Thomas, Mark Sanders, and a host of other musicians. He has great versatility and in-the-moment skills that can turn the atmosphere of a performance. When Perelman commented on collaborating with Butcher, I mused at the time that this would make for an interesting recording, and it has materialised in ‘Duologues 4’. Perelman is on tenor sax, and Butcher on soprano and tenor.
Duologues 4 proves yet again that Perelman makes some inspired choices in collaborators. Teamed with butcher, Perelman is more conversational on this recording – and no wonder. Butcher is one of the most creative saxophone players the UK scene has produced in a long time, and perhaps one who deserves more acclaim. The album is infused with Butcher’s intuitive responses and quiet, solid playing. The opening track is akin to a respectful argument, with both players alternating phrase development and interpreting the other’s take with harmonic dialogue. Perelman and Butcher are one of those combinations that you might hope would happen, and when it did, there was no disappointment. Perelman’s register-flitting and rapidity are exemplary on this track, but Butcher has that ability to slot just the right tone and note into any gaps left by Perelman’s multiple register coverage.
Track two is busy, the speed frenetic, and both players create breathy, singular melodies and develop intricate harmonies as the track evolves, weaving melodies in and out, across and over each other, while making full use of stops and gaps. Butcher shows he is gifted in spontaneity and placement of phrases.
The entire album is a continuum of this conversation that carries on between Butcher and Perelman. It is an album of equality where Perelman often suggests the theme, or introduces an idea, but Butcher responds with creative development or apposite music thoughts that Perelman instinctively follows. At times, Butcher is like a stalking wolf, picking up the trails Perelman sets and ng them before diverging off onto tracks of his own invention. The changes are interesting throughout because they happen with subtlety, almost before you realise it and the thinking of the two masters is also intriguing, such as on track 3 where there is individual melodic phrasing, but by the time four minutes and around twenty second have elapsed, the pair are in delightful, elevated harmony with an intense energy that flows from the music.
There is a calmness to some of the music also, such as the gentler start of track 4, where the musicians are clearly listening to each other, the intensity palpable in the responses, and both, led by Perelman, visit the upper reaches of altissimo.
There is diversity too, such as on track 5, where Perelman introduces a subtle long take on a swung beat, and the slap tongue sections on track 6, coupled with exploration of as many forms as it is possible to fit in a track less than four minutes long. The longest track is track 7, and here both players get the chance – and take it- to be melodic, harmonious and, naturally, introduce some spontaneity (a lot). Butcher is at his best here in the lower register of the tenor and in this track lurks a bit of swing, a touch of classical and a good dose of free playing – wrapped in a colourful coat of intensity. The final track is a glorious, popping escapade, enjoyable for the listener and probably for the players too.
Perelman is familiar to many people as one of the great, inspirational players of our time and he describes Butcher as ‘amazing and responsive’. This is true.
Perelman and Butcher, Butcher and Perelman. Either way, it is a terrific combination.
https://music.amazon.com/artists/B000QJT49I/ivo-perelman
By Nick Ostrum
See You in the Pastis a meeting of generations. On the one side are Kyle Hutchins on saxophones, Seth Andrew Davis on guitar and electronics, and Kevin Cheli on percussion and vibraphone, all three young(er) and associated with various Midwestern scenes. On the other side is Douglas R. Ewart, here on saxophones, flutes, and George Floyd Bunt Staff . Ewart, of course, was an early AACM member and has since become multi-reedist+ legend even after departing Chicago for Minneapolis. This grouping succeeds not only in blending scenes and rough cohorts, but in layering the old (or ancestral or atavistic) and the new (or electronic futurism) convincingly. One need not take such a polarity too literally, of course. Electronics is hardly new to Ewart’s circles. However, here it sounds not like Sun Ra’s Moog or even George Lewis’ experiments, but like a more contemporary – astral prog crossed with ambient and particularist noise making – iteration.
Together, Ewart, Hutchins, Davis, and Cheli harness a large sound, which, even in the quiet moments, occupies considerable space. Ewart’s spirituality and earthiness is a clear thread, but it sounds different in the context of the electronics and long stretches of wall-of-sound production. Most often, Ewart or Hutchins fight through the downpour that Davis and Cheli (and I think Hutchins and Ewart, when on his George Floyd Bunt Staff) conjure. Actually, it is tough to decipher when Ewart or Hutchins steps up and the others scape and scrape the sound from behind. Many passages veer even further from the free jazz stylings one might expect into noise rock and the most abstract moments of the Grateful Dead’s Space/Drums jams. Indeed, See You in the Past is more interested in suspended and extended moments, rather than progressive development. There are exceptions. Future Ghosts, at 7:43 the shortest of the three tracks, is a scorcher. It is a free for all from the beginning and the energy does not ebb until the final moments. Still, the other selections, Echoes of Tomorrow and Sound Seekers, subdue the quartet’s most eruptive impulses. It is in these longer stretches that this group shows what they can really achieve, as they not only find their sound, but probe it, stretch it, and turn it inside out to utterly mesmerizing effect.
See You in the Past is available on Bandcamp as a CD and download:
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By Nick Ostrum
The first time I heard Steve Tintweiss was in college. I got my first album by Albert Ayler, Nuits de la Fondation Maeght, which captured one of his last performances, and was floored. Then I began flipping through the booklet and found the bassist. I did some quick Google searching and did not find much on him at the time. (This was a couple decades ago, after all.) So, apart from that recording, he would remain just a mysterious part of Ayler’s late band for me until quite recently. As it turns out, Tintweiss performed with everyone from Marzette Watts and Frank Writght to Burton Greene and Byard Lancaster. He just released sparingly.
Live in Tompkins Square Park 1967 captures Tintweiss and one iteration of his Purple Why (Jacques Coursi on trumpet, James DuBoise on trumpet, Perry Robinson on clarinet, Joel Peskin on saxophone, Randy Kaye on drums and piano, and Lawrence Cook on drums) performing the bassist’s compositions in the fabled (but also very real) Tompkins Square Park in 1967.
Live in Tompkins Square Park is very much of its time and in that late Ayler vein, though without the insistent melodicism. Rather, Tintweiss and company are exploring abstraction and dynamic range. Listen to the music box string duo five minutes into News Up/Down for one of softer moments. Then follow the piece through to the full-blast realization of the leitmotif. Or check out the modal lyricism of Space Rocks, a piece that starts with a slow folk march before opening into a collective but mostly contained funerary wail. Or the smokey jazz club romance of To Angel With Love, which is absolutely beautiful. As was common for the 1960s downtown scene, most of these pieces are bookended by short grooves and ditties that decompose into freer interactions that embrace the moment of creation and the probing quest to find the right rhythm or combination of looping horns or textures. Through all the sparring that reeds and winds do, the propulsion comes from the relentless drive of Kaye and Cook paired on percussion, and Tintweiss, himself.
Now to the recording. It is somewhat raw but it works. It works because the tapes are a half-century old and capture the band live and outdoors. For that it sounds great. It also works because the background hums, the imperfections in balance and other infidelities catch the live experience better than a crisp studio production would have. And this music is about that in-person excitement, which one hears in the chatter and genuine participation (singing, cheering, impromptu percussion, applause) of the audience.
Tintweiss will likely always be best known for his brief stint with Ayler. But recordings like this show he had sensibilities and vision that stand on their own.
Live in Tompkins Square Park is a limited release and can be purchased through Tintweiss’s own Inky Dot Media.
By Gary Chapin
Gregg Belisle-Chi has been at this long enough that I should stop being surprised. His first album of Tim-Berne-on-Acoustic (2021’sKoi) was an unexpected gift that provided a late in the game expansion of the contexts within which Berne’s compositions could be expressed. If you accept that the strength of a composer reflects how well their compositions can be adapted to different contexts (and maybe you don’t), then Koi served as a proof-of-concept. Four years later a recording such as this doesn’t depend on the novelty of the concept—we’ve got it! this works!—but Slow Crawl nevertheless lands as a revelation.
The question this recording answers is, “What can Tim Berne’s compositions do if you don’t lean into the spectacle? The loud? The electric? The skronk?” Belisle-Chi brings forward the beautiful and (dare I say it) exquisite nature of the melodies and harmonies. It’s a different, aromantic expression of Berne. Belisle-Chi isn’t whipping us into a frenzy (as he did on Yikes Too) but inviting us into the baroque-ish—fascinating, thinky, knotty, satisfying—tunes. Performances of Berne’s music generally have so much more than pitch going on, but what if, for a little while, the pitch was the thing? Thus, we’re presented with very complex, introverted, emergent experiences. Of necessity, this is quiet stuff, but quiet can be amazing, and that’s what it is, here. 5 stars.
There have been a bunch of from-the-vault style releases from Screwgun since 2020—if there can be said to be a bright side to the plague, that was it—and 2025 saw the release of these two gems. Snakeoil was (is?) an extraordinarily strong group featuring Berne, Oscar Noriega, Ches Smith, and Matt Mitchell. Of Berne’s groups I find Snakeoil to be the most intriguing, complex, knotty, and, almost, esoteric. It’s as thinky as a grad student and as primal as a rockfall, but bigger than either. These two releases come from what Tim calls “the early period” but which seems more like “mid-season form.” So often the music makes you stop and awe. Noriega, Berne’s only clarinet playing partner (afaik), weaves with spikes, jumps, and gaps—scrapes, squeals, and deep blue. Smith never stops—what a wealth of outre drummers there are!—and Tim leads from the front, a never faltering well of improvisation. The chthonic force on these discs (and it’s true of all Snakeoil recordings) is Matt Mitchell, shifting the Earth on the piano. What a joy this is!
In this improvised set of pieces, Tim Berne and Masayo Koketsu bring their altos together, sprawling on the jagged carpet of Nava Dunkelman ‘s percussion. The seven pieces are innocuously titled (“page 1,” “page 2” …) as if they don’t want to give any secrets away or draw untoward associations. Dunkelman’s percussion is cinematic hereon, as in the opening piece, presenting us with a driving free rhythm, whipping us all into a frenzy, but just as often inserting “little instrument” characters that add color to a landscape that the altos can’t avoid interacting with. Honestly, I’m not even sure what she’s playing. Is the deep thooma tympani? What is it that sounds like the lowest of arco bass lines? The notes tell us that Berne acts as the melodic foundation with Koketsu hanging out more with the extended registers, and I can see that. Berne is so strong in the mid-range, but there are plenty of moments where both of these altos are playing stratispherically, and some, even, when the two are genuinely delicate.
By Paul Acquaro
So, here we have the trio's sophomore recording, Our Time, and it more than picks up where the last one ended. There is more cohesion to the compositions, but they are also more complex and with a bit more nuance and contrast. It likely reflects the confidence they have gained after the fifty some-odd gigs that they've played since the first release, as well as something new in dos Reis' compositions. "I think this one is more open and adventurous in some way," explains the guitarist. "The repertoire from the first record grew up so much live after the recording, and when I started composing for this second one, I decided to open the music up more than on the first record."
Let us investigate, starting with the perfectly appointed opening track "Irreversible Light." The track loses no time announcing its intentions on seering its energy into your ears. Each step of the song, from the double stop theme over the urgent bass and drums to the sudden melodic twist introducing the solos, it is an exciting piece of hard rocking jazz that fits perfectly together.
Free = liberated from social, historical, psychological and musical constraints
Jazz = improvised music for heart, body and mind