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Nail Trio - Roger Turner (dr), Alexander Frangenheim (b), Michel Doneda (ss)

September 2025, Badischer Kunstverein, Karlsruhe

Michael Greiner (d) & Jason Stein (bc)

September 25, Soweiso, Berlin, Germany

Exit (Knaar) - Amalie Dahl (as), Karl Hjalmar Nyberg (ts), Marta Warelis (p), Jonathan F. Horne (g), Olaf Moses Olsen (dr), Ingebrigt HÃ¥ker Flaten (b)

September 25, Schorndorf, Germany

The Outskirts - Dave Rempis (ts, as), Ingebrigt HÃ¥ker Flaten (b), Frank Rosaly (dr)

Schorndorf, Manufaktur, March 2025

Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Keune Serries Taylor - Closer and Beyond (A New Wave Of Jazz, 2025)

By Martin Schray

Jon Corbett once said that in the sometimes hermetic world of free improvised music, there are contrasting tendencies between fragmentation and blending. In the 1970s in particular, there was a certain ‘schism’ between jazz musicians and non-jazz musicians, which has continued to exist until today, as can be seen, for example, in Mats Gustafsson’s and Thurston Moore’s duo or Peter Brötzmann’s collaborations with Last Exit or Oxbow. However, some musicians are also drawn to like-minded colleagues who share their musical philosophy, their aesthetic goals, and their taste. And there is nothing negative about that.

Stefan Keune is one of these musicians. For example, he enjoys playing with guitarists who share his view of freely improvised music - a style more closely aligned with European free improvisation than with classical (free) jazz. In the mid 1990s, he approached John Russell because he liked his guitar sound so much. “I always thought his 1930s Epiphone guitar with steel strings and his dental acrylic pick were great,” he says, and indeed, Russell’s sound was unique and suited Keune’s delicate, irritated, disturbed tone. Then there are also recordings with his old friend Erhard Hirt, with whom he plays in Xpact and the King Übü Orchestrü , but whose approach is completely different because it’s based on electronics and the preparation of the instrument. Finally, Keune’s latest project at the Moers Festival with Damon Smith and Sandy Ewen is also different, although the guitarist also prepares her guitar with objects and uses effects devices and two amplifiers.

On Closer and Beyond, he has joined Dirk Serries. Serries (guitar) and Benedict Taylor (viola) have played with each other frequently, and since Stefan Keune has a penchant for string instruments anyway - whether bass, guitar, violin, or viola - this trio was somehow a natural fit. And of course it comes as no surprise that the three harmonize wonderfully. After a brief period of feeling each other out, quick, excited movements set in, and the musical molecules whirl around in a frenzy. Sharp contrasts - especially between Taylor’s longer, sweeping notes on the one hand and Keune’s hard riffs and Serries’ Derek-Bailey-inspired, sometimes brittle playing on the other - meet contemplative phases (right in the first piece after three minutes). But more often than not, the players dart around each other, into each other, and away from each other. The most interesting moments, however, are those of silence, when Keune escapes into barely hearable, extremely high registers or when delicate breaths meet the gentle scratching sounds of the guitar and long notes of the viola only to start again at breakneck speed (both also in the first piece). This varied play of sonic ricochets is hidden across four tracks, with Serries providing the textures, Taylor the verbosity, and Keune the hectic and breathless figures. Since no one pushes themselves into the spotlight, tension and dynamics are always guaranteed. The highlight of the studio recording is the last piece, in which the ideas and playing styles of the first three tracks culminate. Keune’s saxophone wanders wonderfully between Taylor’s bowed lines and Serries’ blurred chords. The timing is perfect, creating pure beauty in dissonance.

If you like European improvised music in the sense of sound exploration, this album is for you. A definite recommendation.

Closer and Beyond is available as a CD and as a download.

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Simon Rose - Vienna Solo (Small Forms, 2024)

By Stef Gijssels

Recorded in the Château Rouge venue in Vienna in June 2024, British baritone saxophonist Simon Rose gives his best.  

It is an incredibly strong and powerful feat. Even if the fourteen pieces are short - between one and four minutes - the playing is astonishing: energetic, deeply felt, and still offering the capacity to each to have their own unique character and story. Rose's circular breathing on the instrument is one of the main characteristics of his playing, not only because he clearly eschews moments of silence, but mostly as a technical skill to create mesmerising multiphonics. The result is staggering, the fullness of the sound, its density and intensity. 

"Dorseth Heath" is a little slower and calmer, as are "Purple Loosestrife", "Bee Rose", and "Dog Rose" also has a quieter moment. On "Lungwort", he explores timbral techniques through different embouchures and power stops. By the way, all titles refer to plants, and I am not a botanist, but I think they are all growing in the wild. 

On this album, he really goes all out. Young musicians are often taught not to just play the music, but to be the music, to give themselves completely, without inhibitions, without fear of going too far. I recommend they listen to Simon Rose. He is his music: expressive, bold, unrestrained, profound, and with a story that immediately appeals, without frills, without attempts to please the audience, but which succeeds in making that emotional connection that characterises good art. 

Rose is not a screamer; his sound is always controlled despite his exuberant expressiveness: he cries, he weeps, he cheers, he sings, he howls, he wails, he groans, he roars. But above all: he keeps surprising and captivating us with every note. You can only be blown away by his music. 

Brilliant! 

Listen and download from Bandcamp


Anaïs Tuerlinckx & Simon Rose - Parle (scatterarchives, 2025) 


Now that we're reviewing Simon Rose, I would like to add this album, a duo with my fellow compatriot Anaïs Tuerlinckx, who performs on string-box and synthesizer. Tuerlinckx, a pianist by training, moved from Brussels to Berlin in 2008, where she is a member of the avant-garde musical scene. I add a picture of Tuerlinckx performing on her string box, which she manipulates with a few dozen sticks and metal objects. As on the previous album, Rose plays exclusively on baritone.


This albums give three fully improvised pieces, recorded during two performances a little less than a year apart, but that does not diminish the coherence of the album.

Tuerlinckx is a little more 'out there' than Rose, sometimes quite unexpected in the use of her instrument, at times even disrupting her own compositional build-up. Rose is very agile in moving along and together they weave a wonderful sonic narrative with different story-lines and subplots, shifting between moments of quiet contemplation to ominous darkness. 

Listen and download from Bandcamp




Monday, October 20, 2025

Rodrigo Amado’s The Bridge - Further Beyond (Trost, 2025) *****

By Eyal Hareuveni 

Portuguese tenor sax hero Rodrigo Amado quoted recently John Coltrane on his Facebook page: “I believe that we are here to grow ourselves to the best good that we can get to, to the best good that we can be. And as we’re becoming this, this will just come out of the horn. Whatever that’s gonna be that’s what it will be. Good can only bring good”. This quote can also frame the work of Amado’s international super-group, The Bridge, and its sophomore album, Further Beyond, recorded live at the Bimhuis in Amsterdam in April 2023.

Not that any of the great, highly experienced musicians of The Bridge - German pianist Alexander von Schlippenbach, Norwegian double bass player Ingebrigt HÃ¥ker Flaten, and American drummer (and vocalist) Gerry Hemingway, need to prove anything. Each one of the musicians has played in several legendary bands and contributed to the evolution of free music in the last decades. Von Schlippenbach with the Globe Unity Orchestra and his long-running trio with Evan Parker and Paul Lovens; Hemingway with the iconic Anthony Braxton Quartet, with Marilyn Crispell and Mark Dresser, and in his own groups; HÃ¥ker Flaten with The Thing and his own new group, (Exit) Knarr; and Amado with his own quartet, This Is Our Language, with Joe McPhee, Kent Kessler, and Chris Corsano. Together, they bring to the stage nearly two hundred years of experience in creating and performing free music.

But the quartet itself is a collective platform for creating free music that has a rare, ever-expanding, and uplifting spiritual power, with a rich perspective of the past and the present, bound in tradition while breaking free of it. The debut album of The Bridge, Beyond The Margins (Trost, 2023), which was also recorded live in the quartet's debut performance at the Pardon To Tu club in Warsaw in October 2022, already established its profound, collective affinity, with its brilliant, commanding games of surprise and inevitability. The Bridge keeps expanding its free music universe. Free Jazz Collective comrade Stuart Broomer (in his Ezz-thetics column for Point of Departure), and Point of Departure editor Bill Shoemaker (in his liner notes) call this kind of free music a “spontaneous creation”, after Sam Rivers, and a refined sense of structural play. And just like Rivers, Amado, and The Bridge do not renounce melody and grooves.

Amado knows how to tie spontaneous, soulful melodies with an acute nut elegant sense of structure; He suggests open, four-way conversations that enjoy the free mastery of von Schlippenbach, including his wise references to Monk’s pieces, Hemingway’s rich, fast-shifting rhythmic patterns, and HÃ¥ker Flaten’s Alyer-ian way of anchoring the free improvisations with soul songs motifs. Amado titled the pieces with names that flirt with iconic soul songs that anticipated seismic changes in politics in society, in the same manner that jazz is an insistently social art form. The opening, 17-minute “A Change Is Gonna Come” has nothing to do with the melody of the Sam Cooke song, but reminds us about the motivating, transformative power of music. The closing, short piece, “That's How Strong Our Love Is,” uses the title of a song associated with Otis Redding, and again, focuses on its deeply moving power and the quartet’s collective, playful imagination. These pieces, alongside the 27-minute title piece, reinforce the notion that free music, and especially great, inspired music like that of The Bridge, is first and foremost about empathy and compassion, on stage, with the audience, and further beyond.

The beautiful cover artwork is by Miguel Navas, who also did the cover artwork for Beyond The Margins, titled “#10”, from the series "Uncertain Smile - Paisagens de um tempo incerto" (Landscapes of an uncertain time).

Sunday, October 19, 2025

Lina Allemano Four

It's always a pleasure to check out what trumpeter Lina Allemano has been up to - this one is a track off her most recent Lina Allemano Four recording The Diptychs called 'Positive.' The group is Allemano on trumpet, Brodie West on alto saxophone, Andrew Downing on bass and Nick Fraser on drums. Check out the album on Bandcamp.

Saturday, October 18, 2025

TO LISTEN TO FESTIVAL, TORINO (22.09 - 05.10.2025)

By Ferruccio Martinotti

Edition number 4 of “To listen to”, the festival of experimental listening, dedicated to “the exploration of the different shapes of sound”, as per the communication claim. A mesmerizing cabinet of curiosities, a sonic Borges’ library, deployed through concerts, labs, sound installations and masterclasses, drove the audience towards the real Unknown and the sheer Unexpected. Concerts took place in the grand Concert Hall of the Conservatorio (free admittance!) and the following is what we attended.

Acousmonium of Paris INA grm (saturday 27)

Eve Aboulkeir - Guilin Synthetic Daydream, 2020
Jim O’Rourke - 8 views of a secret, 2024
Sarah Davachi - Basse Brevis, 2024
Francois J.Bonnet - Banshee, 2024

The term acousmonium comes from the french “acousmatique” utilized by Jerome Peignot, Pierre Schaeffer and Francois Bayle to define every noise or sound listened without seeing the source. Key elements are the tech specs of the speakers and their setting in the space, placed on the stage according to power and audio spectrum, in order to become a real orchestra. The music is “played” by the mixing desk, tuning the linear fader to manage the sound’s dynamics. The audience watches Nothing, listening to Everything: astonishing.

La fuga di Socrate - Guido Brignone, 1923 (tuesday 30)

The legendary movie is soundtracked live by Caravaggio (Bruno Chevillion, bass, double bass, electronics; Benjamin de la Fuente, violin, mandocaster, tenor electric guitar, electronics; Eric Echampard, drums, percussions, electronics; Samuel Sighicelli, Hammond, sampler, Korg, Minimoog), a post-rock band that through the “counterpoint technique” delivers sound effects and free spatial escapism, greatly enriching the old grainy photograms.

Mauricio Kagel: Spielplan, 1970. Instrumentalmusik in Aktion, concert version for experimental sound generators (wednesday 1)

From 1967 to 1970 Mauricio Kagel wrote nine books to be freely utilized to stage his (in)famous anti-opera Staatstheater and the sixth of those (Spielplan) consists of 42 pages describing how to generate sounds from an array of prepared objects, modified instruments, recycled materials, all of them hugely amplified through several kinds of microphones. Stanislas Pili, Joao Calado and Andrea Zamengo put on (likely for very first time) all the Spielplan pages, surrounded on stage by every kind of sound generators: drippers, wind machine, hoses, a disassembled piano, nails, mechanical toys, grids and watches. The Way of the Sound is Infinite (and we are deeply grateful for that).

Anna Clementi: I sing the Body Electric (Thursday 2)

Olga Neuwirth - Nova/Minraud, 1998
Aldo Clementi - Parafrasi, 1981
Laurie Schwartz - the waves, 2025
John Cage - Aria, 1996

Born in Rome, daughter of the composer Aldo Clementi, Anna soon moved to Berlin where she attended Dieter Schebel’s courses at the Hochschule der Kunste, teaming up with him in the group Die Maulwerker. John Cage has always been her North Star and on tonight’s repertoire he casts such an influence: voice, language, dance and words are combined in a prodigious way, clearly explaining why she's a self defined “actress of word”, instead of a singer.

Stefano Scodanibbio - Oltracuidansa, 1997/2002 for amplified double bass and 8 channels fixed media

One of the Greatest of All Time on the double bass, he composed more than 50 works, mostly for strings, played all over the world. Composers like Bussotti, Frith, Donatoni, Estrada, Xenakis wrote music for him, while John Cage said: “Stefano is astonishing, I never heard someone playing double bass as he plays”. Teacher at Berkeley, Stanford, Oberlin College, Stuttgart Musikhochschule, Conservatoire de Paris, Conservatorio di Milano, he spent long and fruitful collaborations with Luigi Nono, Giacinto Scelsi and Terry Riley, creating new techniques, extending the colours and range of the double bass, heretofore considered impossible on this instrument. His most famous and tremendously challenging work is “Oltracuidansa” and the impossible task to play it live is entrusted to Dario Calderone, a top notch double bassist, former collaborator of the late Sconadibbio. The outcome is simply astonishing, leaving us speechless.

Eiko Ishibashi & Jim O’Rourke - Pareidolia (sunday 5)

The Grand Finale with the aces of contemporary music: rock, pop, jazz, noise, free improv, electroacoustic composition, soundtracks, it’s really difficult to find a spot in their musical scope not yet charted. We saw them in town a couple of years ago with the embryonic project of Pareidolia, delivered tonight in its chiseled ultimate version, edited on record some months ago. The synthetic cold of laptop music is interspersed with vocal and flute, making the final result fascinating and evocative.

Friday, October 17, 2025

Robert Dick, Stephan Haluska, & James Ilgenfritz – Time Wants a Skeleton (Infrequency Seams, 2025)

By Nick Ostrum

If one can judge by releases and coverage (mainly in the DMG newsletter), Robert Dick seems to have hit a late career renaissance. My first exposure to him was 2021’s Structures of Unreason in a rare flutes-guitars-electronics duo with Nicola Hein. Then, I stumbled upon his 2024 duo with harpist Stephan Haluska, Crop Circles,which was the under-recognized gem of the year, as far as I am concerned. After those,I had to pick up this latest outing. On it, Dick (various flutes including his own Glissando Headjoint flute) and Haluska (prepared harp) are joined by bassist Jason Ilgenfritz for seven cuts of free and unconventional chamber music.

Time Wants a Skeleton is a scratchy and breathy affair. Ilgenfritz and Haluska torque and rattle their instruments while Dick cuts his way through the stringed thicket with heaves and flutters. The rattles continue, though more idiomatic sounds – pizzicato and arco – cut in and out. Stasis, however, is never attained and the music remains rough and unstable. Sunbathing with Jonah, the second track, begins sparsely with unintelligible ogre grunts scatting dances atop bass drones. This leads into the titular piece, which is also by far the longest, at over 11 minutes. Whisps of dirges entangle with deep bass tones and what sounds like an insistent mouth harp. It all unfolds so slowly, though a third in, Dick takes over with a spirited section of trills and other quivering sounds that seem to invigorate Haluska and Ilgenfritz, pushing them into a more traditional propulsive war, albeit sans rhythm. By the end, however, the musicians have caught themselves and opened even more space in the piece, and it tumbles to its conclusion, like music box slowing due to declining torque, only for someone to turn the crank a couple more times to bring the piece buzzing towards its end.

The rest of the album proceeds with similar variation. Slow Splash is heavy on the flute, and sounds like a modern etude, laying lines of drone and hum in various layers and for various durations, with a series of spare, then increasingly frequent plucks mimicking the patter of a slow drizzle. How Do You Can It To Deny relies more on moody strings for atmosphere with flute whispers atop it. The Memory You Need starts quietly, but picks up into a series of chime rattles, nervous strings, and aerophonic swoops and sirens that evoke the dark psychological tension and strangeness of a Hitchcock film. The final cut, Not Only In The Dry Of The Century But Also On Normal Days, displays a similar moodiness, but with a more central role delegated to Haluska’s than Ilgenfritz’s strings. That is, until the end when the later makes a striking appearance with a heavy and prolonged thrum that seems to drag the piece to the final bar. This track also sticks out because it is the first and maybe only to stumble upon a sustained direction (in a loose harp leitmotif and tempo about halfway through), which it follows through to the final bars.

All in all, Time Wants a Skeleton is a stellar release. It is earthy (all sounds are acoustic) and ethereal, which seems fitting given the sci-fi origins of the title and the slight weirdness of every moment. It shows phenomenal responsivity that speaks to some organic connection among the members of the trio, who seem to move together in waves rather than by cues. And, within that, it still proudly wears a close-miked grit and graininess that keeps it grounded. This sounds like I am listening to the performance in a bar – minus the distractive ambience that implies – and that raw intimacy only adds to the effect.

Time Wants a Skeleton is available as a cassette and download through Bandcamp:

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Thursday, October 16, 2025

Flowers from Charlie

Charlie Rouse - Two Is One (Strata-East, 2025) 

Charlie Rouse Band - Cinnamon Flower: The Expanded Edition (Resonance Records, 2025) 

By Lee Rice Epstein

In December of 1960, saxophonist Charlie Rouse recorded a lovely, engaging quartet session, issued the following year under the unassuming but hip title, Yeah. After a couple of blowing sessions that preceded it, Yeah is arguably the first look at Rouse as the warm-toned, ingenious artist who would emerge almost a decade later from Thelonious Monk’s quartet. The opener is Gene De Paul and Ron Raye’s classic “You Don’t Know What Love Is,” taken at a relaxed tempo. A palpable evening-at-the-nightclub vibe flows effortlessly from the speakers and carries through the rest of the album. Any listener hearing Yeah as their on-ramp to Rouse’s discography would be forgiven an expectation of a stack that sits comfortably alongside contemporaneous Wilkerson, Gordon, and Donaldson records.

And yet, shortly after, Rouse stopped recording as a leader for a decade, instead spending the bulk of the 1960s as a core member of Monk’s quartet. To say Rouse learned much from Monk both feels true and also underplays how much Rouse brought to the quartet. In the 1950s, he recorded a set of albums with Julius Watkins under the name The Jazz Modes, a rich and inventive pairing of French horn and tenor sax. Rouse’s talent for creating rich, unexpected tonal palettes paired well with Monk’s talent for composing equally unexpected harmonic clusters. Rouse (and of course Monk) understood that playing with Monk didn’t necessitate playing like Monk. In equal measure, they accentuate and lift the other, not unlike Cecil Taylor and Jimmy Lyons.

In 1974, when Two Is One was released on the independent label Strata-East, it’d be hard to say what most longtime listeners of Rouse would have thought. Thankfully, with Strata-East albums coming back in print, we have the luxury of looking back now and seeing the through-line connecting Rouse’s 1950s experiments with those of the 1970s, where electric guitars, bass, and cello dip into and out of funk, swing, and bossa rhythms with ease. Stanley Clarke’s bass is magnificent, and with Airto Moreria there’s something of a Return To Forever meets downtown soul vibe that works brilliantly. It’s as effortless a session as Yeah from ten years earlier, and just as stylistically and tonally interesting as Jazz Modes.

The band stretches out pretty well on every number, and then comes “Two Is One,” eleven minutes of soulful, driving funk. The drummer here is David Lee, who was backing Sonny Rollins at around the same time, and who has a great touch on the drums, knowing exactly how to push the song along, while leaving space for Rouse to flex on his solos. With a wave of saxophonists leaning in and overblowing at the time, Rouse emphasizes phrasing set off by brief moments of silence to pull in the listener. The result is simply fantastic, one of the finest in Strata-East’s nearly unbeatable catalog.

And then there’s Cinnamon Flower. Coming back to Rouse in a moment, one of the more fascinating aspects of the album is Bernard Purdie, whose flawless timing and feel is often compressed into only minute-long clips highlighting his eponymous shuffle. Here, however, he’s all over the set, brilliant and grooving; it tells a much fuller story of his skills than any Steely Dan Behind the Music ever could.

The set of songs on Cinnamon Flower are composed and arranged by either pianist Dom Salvador (known for his part in samba funk breaking out during the 1960s boom) or guitarist Amaury Tristão (maybe best known for championing bossa nova’s introduction to the States). Under Rouse’s leadership, the blend of samba funk rhythms with bossa nova accents is a dazzling, hypnotic groove. Wilbur Bascomb, Jr., plays electric bass on most of the album, with Ron Carter subbing in for Milton Nascimento’s incredible “Clove and Cinnamon (Cravo E Canela)” and Tristão’s “A New Dawn (Alvorada).” One of the most exciting elements of Rouse’s music is how smoothly the band mixes tempos and styles; again, while it’s not merely an extrapolation of Monk’s music, you can hear how ten years with the maestro would have opened Rouse up to even more possibilities than he’d explored previously.

And while the Two Is One reissue sounds fantastic all on its own, for Cinnamon Flower, the vaults have been raided, with the entire album presented in its original, unedited format. For anyone keen to play out a this-or-that game of comparing recordings, this is a perfect experience, where the original album remains as-is, and the additional studio versions (recorded at Sound Ideas by Resonance’s own George Klabin) play out just as beautifully. There are subtle yet striking differences in the opener, “Backwoods Echo (Sertão),” one of Salvador’s contributions and lengthier “Clove and Cinnamon (Cravo E Canela).” And of course, the best part of all is hearing more of Rouse, whose legacy seems to continue to grow as more of his records are rediscovered. Here’s hoping there are some live sessions from around the same time yet to be heard. It’s hard to believe, but even after twenty years of regular gigging, the ’70s were a high peak for Rouse, when his playing was as lush, dynamic, and imaginative as ever, and the band was eager to journey alongside him.

Wednesday, October 15, 2025

Turbulence - Objections To Realism (Evil Clown, 2025)

By Ferruccio Martinotti

In the beginning was the legendary Leap of Faith Orchestra, a long-term collaboration from 1993 to 2001, resumed in 2015, between David Peck (PEK for the posterity), on clarinets, saxes, double reeds, voice and Glynis Lomon (cello, voice) with various other regulars such as Mark McGrain (trombone), Craig Schildhauer (bass), Yuri Zbitnov (drums), James Coleman (theremin), Steve Norton (saxes, clarinets) plus many guests, as a "variable geometry unit” blueprint. Hometurf: Boston, Mass; Team: Evil Ground Records. To follow the transition orbit shifting Leap of Faith onto Turbulence and the ever changing coordinates of the latter, it’s safe to read what PEK himself has to say in the liner notes:

“I formed Turbulence in 2015 as I started to assemble players for the Orchestra and Turbulence, its extended horn sections, along with guests on other instruments, also records and performs as independent unit. As of this writing in 2025, we have recorded over 50 albums on Evil Clown with greatly varied ensembles. All the smaller Evil Clown bands are really more about a general approach, rather than a specific set of musicians, A session gets credited to Turbulence when it is mostly horn players and the only musician on all of them is me. The sessions range from an early duet with Steve Norton and me (Vortex Generation Mechanisms) to Turbulence Orchestra and Sub-Units with as many as 25 performers and four albums by the side project Turbulence Doom Choir which feature myself, multiple tubas. percussion, electronics, signal processing and many other configurations”.

But who is PEK? Born in 1964, he approached clarinet and piano at a very young age, before switching on alto and tenor sax in high school. After 10 years spent playing in rock bands and studying classical and jazz saxophone with Kurt Heisig in San Josè, CA, PEK moved to Boston in 1989 to attend Berklee where he studied tenor sax performance with George Garzone but it was through the thriving improv scene of the city that he developed his mature free language. Along with cellist Glynis Lomon, he played in the Masashi Harada Sextet between 1990 and 1992, developing a deep musical connection that continued following the MHS, first with Leaping Water Trio for a few years and then with the first version of Leap of Faith in 1994. PEK’s musical scope shows collaborations with many active improvisors of the Boston scene including Raqib Hassan, Eric Zinman, Raphe Malik, Dennis Warren, Glenn Spearman, B’Hob Rainey, Eric Rosenthal, Laurence Cook, Matt Samolis, Martha Ritchey and, from 2015 on, he has accumulated a huge “Arsenal of Equipment” with a grand purpose: “to address a primary aesthetic problem of pure improvisation by using the large pool of instruments to make long-form broad palate works. This very broad palate enables the long improvisation to evolve with very different movements and pronounced development over their length”.

The ammunition deployed in this record are as follows and we kindly invite you not to skip it because such a list says (almost) all. PEK: clarinet, basset horn, contralto and contrabass clarinets, alto and tenor sax, English horn, bass flute, sheng, melodica, accordion, gravichord, daxophone, nagoya, spiny norman, ifo violin. ifo percolator, soma pipe, moog subsequent, novation peak, linnstrument controllers, syntrx, ms-20, nord stage 3, 17-string bass, (d)ronin, spring and chime rod boxes, noise tower, gongs, plate gong, chimes, englephone, brontosaurus bell, cow bells, crotales, glockenspiel, orchestral chimes and anvils, Tibetan chimes and bells, electric chimes, array mbira, xylophone, balafon, log drums, wood and temple blocks, danmo, ratchet, seed pod rattles, clown hammer, rubber chicken. John Fugarino: trumpet, flugelhorn, French horn, trombone, melodica, penny whistle, ocarina, prophet, orchestral castanets. Tom Swafford: violin. Scott Samenfeld: upright electric bass, electric recorder. Should you be aware of someone else playing brontosaurus bell, next round will be on us, promise.

Objection to Realismis the third Evil Clown session in a row to be credited to Turbulence in around three weeks. The previous session (Golden Ratio) sees the band as a sextet with four horns, bass and drums; the second (Nested Phenomena) is the common Turbulence configuration, a three-horn quintet, bass and a different drummer. According to PEK “it is interesting to compare the improvisations of three Turbulence Units recorded in a three week period. Of course, there are many common elements but the difference in the ensembles, combined with the broad palette available at Evil Clown Headquarters produced albums each with their own character”.

Here is PEK’s mission statement: “An advantage of improvisation over more conventional music is that it does not rely on fixed instrumentation or material which needs to be learned in advance. Accomplished improvisors, like the group assembled here, can make interesting music regardless of any last second changes to the lineup, so the last second change to a different unit was in no way a destruction for this performance. The aesthetic problem addressed to the ensemble is to make interesting music with the players and the resources at hand, a change in ensemble changes the problem without in any way preventing an interesting solution”. And this Livestream to YouTube (two songs for more than one hour of music), recorded in January 2025, is the crystal epitome of it: improv chamber music as an exhilarating ode to freedom from schemes, paradigms and constraints, with a sort of piece of mind mood that keeps in control the galloping of such a crazy array of instruments, without pulling the reins of sheer, untamed, anarchic sounds. Difficult to imagine a more effective antidote for these poisoned times, let’s give PEK what he really deserves.

Tuesday, October 14, 2025

SoSaLa - 1983 - Live at Montreux Jazz Festival and Rathausplatz Bern (DooBeeDoo Records, 2025)

By Hrayr Attarian

Saxophonist Sohrab Saadat Ladjevardi, stage name SoSaLa, is a composer, a musician’s rights advocate, and label owner. He is also somewhat of a world citizen as he was born in Switzerland to Iranian parents, spent several years in the late 20th century working in Japan, and is currently based in the United States.

In 2024, he released a captivating live album from his archives, 1994-Live at CBGB (DooBeeDoo Records, 2024). Less than a year later, he released an earlier recording from two Swiss dates from July 1983. The provocative 1983 - Live at Montreux Jazz Festival and Rathausplatz Bern features the SADATO GROUP that includes, in addition to the leader (known in Japan as Sadato), guitarist and bassist Mutsuhiko Izumi and pianist and drummer Hitoshi Usami.

The heavily improvised music is a seamless fusion of energetic No Wave and Free Jazz. This is not a simple pastiche of genres but an exploration of the spontaneity and delightful dissonance common to both styles. “Confusing World”, for instance, starts off with an electronic drone that creates an otherworldly ambience. Simmering keyboard phrases, bent guitar notes, and angular piano chords mix, creating an absorbing mood. The track dovetails seamlessly into “MJF's When I'm Crazy, I'm Normal” with Sadato’s whimsical repartee with the audience alternating with his fiery saxophone solos that Usami’s thunderous drumming and Izumi’s muscular refrains support.

The interaction with the audience is not only in spoken words, which Sadato does in both English and German. It is also in the musical form. The way the trio involves the attendees in their creative process is both elegant and effortless. On “Paul Klee’s Musical Colors” from the Bern date, Izumi’s reverberating strings echo against Usami’s rapid-fire beats, creating a thrillingly riotous rhythmic framework. Izumi deftly coaxes out of his instrument energetic, almost voice-like phrases that Usami punctuates with his polyrhythms. At the climax of this riotous performance, the leader enters with his wailing sax. Thus, the musicians blur the lines between verbal and instrumental addresses to the audience.

This becomes even clearer on the following “Zehn Vor Vier in Bern”. Sadato goes from blowing his horn with abandon, delivering a monologue in German, and playing atonal phrases on a harmonica. The concertgoers can be heard responding and clapping enthusiastically. Izumi and Usami lay down a percussive, tempestuous groove that hints at rock-ish backbeats with a swinging sense. Sadato concludes with a melancholic chorus before bidding everyone farewell.

In addition to the superb music it contains, 1983 - Live at Montreux Jazz Festival and Rathausplatz Bern is an intriguing historical document. It highlights the extemporized experimentations in which artists like the SADATO GROUP were engaged. Hopefully, more will be available from SoSaLa’s “vault” for modern listeners to enjoy 

1983 - Live at Montreux Jazz Festival and Rathausplatz Bern can be purchased here

Sunday, October 12, 2025

Christian Lillinger & Elias Stemeseder: NF I (FEDERND)

Listen to the beats ... so precise, so quantized, so clean. Listen to the melodic snippets as they seemingly fall off the piano's keyboard. There is nothing quite like the duo of Elias Stemeseder (piano, spinet, synthesizers, electronics) and Christian Lillinger (drums, percussion, synthesizers, electronics). Their latest, Penumbra II, is out on Plaist Music. Here the track 'NF I (FEDERND)' filmed by Johannes Brugger: