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Showing posts with label Sax-bass Duo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sax-bass Duo. Show all posts

Friday, May 7, 2021

Two Tim Berne Duets

Matt Mitchell / Tim Berne - 1 (Screwgun, 2020) ****

By Stephen Griffith

In the May 2018 issue, Downbeat conducted a blindfold test for Tim Berne. When discussing a Zorn composition he stated, paraphrasing from memory, that John goes into the studio with specific ideas on how he wants each participant to sound in a composition unlike Berne’s approach in wanting the musicians to develop the role with their identities. I thought of that often regarding his relationship with Matt Mitchell, whether in Snakeoil and previously released duets, but particularly in this collection of solo piano interpretations of Berne’s compositions, a spellbinding reworking that still contains the stamp of the composer but gently nudges the listener to examine the lyricism in a different way.

The genesis of this recording began when Berne first encountered Mitchell in the summer of 2008 when both taught at the Brooklyn School of Improvised Music’s workshop and performed in the faculty concert. Discovering they were musically sympatico led to increasing concert interactions: a seven piece Adobe Probe concert at the Stone in January 2009, an early version of Snakeoil called Los Totopos in September 2009, and in December 2009 at the Art Alliance in Philadelphia Matt played an opening solo piano set of Tim’s songs before joining Adobe Probe for the second set, the latter of which was released by Screwgun in June 2020, the same release date for 1 which was recorded at Ibeam on June 30, 2010. This wasn't the first time they recorded as a duo but it's the earliest performance to be released. Snakeoil was Berne’s first new band after a prolonged period of one off performances and it gave him an opportunity to revisit older unrecorded compositions and expose them to younger musicians anxious to apply their imprints. One of Berne’s strengths as a composer is in balancing freedom and form and in Mitchell he found a counterpoint to his insistently probing alto lines with ambidextrous melodicism capable of generating complimentary rhythmic propulsion. In the informative liners Matt gives background info for each composition as well as unlisted pieces that they segued into. For example the second piece, “Scanners” which was eventually recorded on the first Snakeoil album in January 2011, they start so strongly and familiarly that you don't miss the clarinet of Oscar Noriega nor Ches Smith’s drums in the swirling alto and piano lines. When things wind down they transition into an earlier composition of Matt’s before ending on a Berne song which never made it to record. I find these early versions of Snakeoil compositions fascinating because they're too fully formed to call them works in progress while still subject to the pushes and pulls of further performances, not to mention differing instrumentation, to morph into something different through time. And as Berne pointed out in an interview shortly after the release of Snakeoil, different studio takes of the same songs sounded wildly different.

Two other pieces here, “Duck” and “All Socket”, ended up on this followup Snakeoil recording as “Cornered (Duck)” and “Socket” recorded in January 2013 and greatly altered with the passage of time but still recognizable in the melody. At the conclusion of “All Socket” Mitchell plays a wigged out stride-ish figure that was a strikingly unique way to close it. One other piece, “Traction” from Berne’s book of work was previously appended to “Jalapeño Democracy” on a live Science Friction recording.

Although Snakeoil was the relatively concurrent destination of these pieces perhaps it's just as useful to consider this performance as an early version of the Berne and Mitchell duo entity realized in three subsequent recordings and ongoing still. Whichever context you place it in, it's a very coherent and adventurous performance providing rewarding listening through repeated exposure.


Tim Berne / Mark Helias - Blood From a Stone (Helias Self Release, 2020) ***(*)


After the frenzied assertiveness of two musicians still in the learning curve of becoming familiar, this recording represents the opposite musical dynamic: two bandmates from the early 80s making music as an incidental part of a small social gathering over a weekend last September. They carved out two blocks of time in the studio to record these five joint compositions. Initially it sounds like Helias, a wonderfully melodic bassist, sets a rhythmic motif which Berne follows and embellishes in a somewhat uncharacteristically placidly reactive manner, although as the first track, “Throw Me A Bone” progresses the roles reverse and further trade offs occur for the duration. If the track order reflects when they were recorded, the third cut, “Physical Responsibility”, is where Tim’s playing becomes more assertive with subdued fireworks and continues accordingly through the rest of the session. It's a very relaxing musical reunion of two longtime friends.

In the Bandcamp notes, Mark credits Tim for having urged him at the beginning of his career to overcome his reticence in putting his music in front of the public by recording it prior to the usual commitment from a label and then, years later, encouraging him to make a solo bass recording; all successfully executed and received. Maybe the nature of their long musical relationship is borne out by these songs.

Friday, January 8, 2021

Keir Neuringer & Rafal Mazur - The Continuum (Fundacja Słuchaj, 2020) ****

By Stef Gijssels

Both altoist Keir Neuringer and acoustic bass wizard Rafał Mazur have a unique voice on their instrument,  and their combined sound is even more unique: intense, warm, relentless and technically brilliant. 

Their first reported album dates from 2010, "Improwizje" soon followed by "Unison Lines" in the same year. They released two more duo albums: "The Krakow Letters" (2014) and "Diachronic Paths" (2016). 

This album brings us a live performance at a concert in Krakow in 2018. The first track "The Distant Path", is a breath-taking 26 minutes long high energy powerhouse. Mazur alternates between arco and pizzi and Neuringer's circular breathing and repetitive phrases around a tonal center result in a mesmerising performance. The timbral quality of both instruments, their relentless forward-moving physicality and the deep emotional power of their delivery leads to something unique. The second track "The near past", is even more uptempo and full of frenetic agitation, and their nervous interaction continues on "The Present". 

The initial dynamics of "The Near Future" are more hesitant and interrupted, with a more questioning attitude of the instruments, and little pockets of quiet even. "The Distant Future" is more welcoming and even gentle, with even moments with joyous phrases and interaction. 

Rafal Mazur explains the philosophy behind the music and the title of the album and its tracks in the long liner notes: "When you abandon the conventional limitations on thought and cognition and look at the world with a systemic approach to life, beginnings and ends begin to blur, lose their focus, lose their previous meaning, and ultimately cease to be clear." I can only encourage interested listeners to read the whole text. 

A real treat. 

Listen and download from Bandcamp.

Wednesday, November 7, 2018

Cold Voodoo - AB+ (Wide Ear, 2018) ***½

By Stef Gijssels

Last year, we reviewed "Orion" by Im Wald, a dark and somber album by a quintet of young musicians. We find Tobias Meier, the band's altoist, back in this wonderfully intimate duet with Silvan Jeger on bass.

The Swiss duo creates a warm, intimate dialogue on the "A+" side, that becomes intense and agitated as it progresses, but without ever raising the voice of the instruments, which remain within a narrow tonal mid-range, like a conversation among friends that intensifies and slows down again yet never stops, without breaks or pauses: both instruments play constantly.

The "B+" side is much harsher, with Jeger using his bow, and Meier screeching in a higher register, but again with the same intensity, but now with more power and energy, relentlessly. The sound is more one of indignation than anger, more one of surprise than determination, leaving the interplay evolve in a clear and focused way, gradually toning down to a sense of calm resignation, recreating the warm atmosphere of the first track, with whispering sax and plucked bass.

The band's name is reflected in the musical approach on the two sides of the audio cassette. The musicians themselves describe it as a tension between "the physical presence of exhaustion on the one hand and of an external perspective and serenity on the other". And it works. Voodoo or not, the effect is enchanting.

Listen and download from Bandcamp.



Thursday, October 12, 2017

Heath Watts & Blue Armstrong - Bright yellow with bass” (Leo Records, 2017) **** 1/2


By Fotis Nikolakopoulos

It’s always interesting, as it is puzzling, encountering an artist with no prior knowledge of him or her. I first listened to Heath Watts’ duo with Dan Pell, on the always wonderful Leo Records, a few years back. I’ve listened to nothing from him before or after that. It feels like the pre-internet times, when almost all the info you could absorb came from the recordings themselves. Recordings just like a message in a bottle coming out of nowhere from someone you have never met. Quite exhilarating.

So, Breathe If You Can, the aforementioned duo recording, kind of worked as a guideline for me. While perhaps not being a masterpiece, it definitely made me love the soprano saxophone of Watts. His playing stood somewhere between the impressionistic view of the color of sound and an abstract image of a sound world. In both cases you had to give time, space, and a small distance, so you could enjoy its fruits. His breathing was like lush and big brushstrokes that leave a deep impression. This duality is a also mentioned and highlighted on the Leo Records’ website for the liner notes of Bright Yellow With Bass.

The recording itself is a gentle proposition. There are no special outbursts or blow-outs. Following their amazing interplay (having they been playing together a lot?) the music flows from one composition to the next uninterrupted. It’s like you hear one long track. They play in unison.

I pretty much like and enjoy the percussion qualities of the double bass. Those are quite fitting with the timbre of Watts soprano saxophone. As it happens with numerous combinations of reeds and percussion, this is a duo that cut its teeth –at least for this recording – by using the same fluidity of the aforementioned interaction.

Blue Armstrong’s bass isn’t limited only to accompany the saxophone. He is, through the instrument, an equal player, a strong participant and maker of the recording. This is what we get because of the long and fruitful tradition that’s comes out from free improvisation: equality in all aspects.

Melody and notes do not discriminate from each other. Even though Watts’ playing isn’t based on melody but rather in notes, this is a melodic recording and not, as I already mentioned, a rough blow out. Listening, I often found myself focusing often on the double bass. The plinks and the plonks, the notes and the tonalities of Armstrong’s bass constitute one of the best proposals for this instrument in 2017.

One more hard fact as this review is coming to an end: the more I listened to this cd, the more I came to appreciate it. Do yourself a favor by doing the same.


@koultouranafigo

Monday, November 14, 2016

John Butcher & Michael Duch - Fjordgata (Confront, 2015) ****

By Stef

Backlog 4.

Last year, at the Jazzfest in Trondheim, Norway, British saxophonist John Butcher and Norwegian bassist Michael Francis Duch recorded this unusual performance. Unusual because to my knowledge Butcher has recorded only one duo album with double-bass before (with John Edwards), and also Duch has - in his more limited discography - a predilection for playing with other string instruments (harp, violin, other basses, guitar), and often with musicians with whom Butcher has played.

On the other hand, it is not so unusual to find them together because of this connection with the British minimalist scene emanating from the AMM, Prévost, Tilbury and Cornelius Cardew legacy. And what they play here is founded on that heritage, but adding to it. Duch is also strongly influenced by Pauline Oliveros "Deep Listening" approach.

The sound of this performance is quiet at times, cautious, as if every note is something precious that needs to develop and show its different shades when coming to live and disappearing again, yet less quiet and less sustained than with the real minimalists, because the calm precision is at times shattered by bursts of energy and sonic power.

Sometimes only one musician plays. Sometimes the other. They give each other lots of space. They give themselves lots of space to listen, to create, to deliver, building up anticipation and tension, and the result is at best when circular breathing and bowed bass create intense and often dark atmospheres, or uncanny listening experiences.

I do not know whether they had ever performed together before, at least not to my knowledge, and definitely they had not recorded together before, yet the interplay for a first meeting is strong. They are likeminded spirits, both with a gold-diggers approach to sound, and with success because out of this vibrating meditative darkness a panoply of shining nuggets are brought to light. 


Friday, May 20, 2016

And many more ...

By Paul Acquaro

We conclude this week of duos with four recordings featuring the saxophone and a stringed instrument - in this case cello, bass, bass guitar and guitar, and then close out with two classic sax and drum duos. The problem is, it's hard to stop here. Just in the time of the creation of this week of reviews, a new recording from OutNow called Esoteric Duos hit the shelves, as did a Clean Feed release of Evan Parker and Alexander Hawkins ... and so many others. What to do. What to do.

Leila Bordreuil and Michael Foster - The Caustic Ballads (Relative Pitch, 2016) ****


Michael Foster (sax) and Leila Bordreuil (cello) are two young musicians from Brooklyn, whose musical partnership extends back to their meeting while studying music at Bard College.

On Caustic Ballads, the duo starts on the outside - way outside - and that old loaded term extended technique is the perfect descriptor to be applied here. This track, 'Born of its own Asphyxiation' sports a creepy title and is an engaging introduction to what has already been presented, by the cover art, as a somewhat sadomasochistic outing. Foster begins with air and fizzy dissonance while Bordreuil exploits the upper harmonics of the cello.as the track proceeds, all sorts of unusual sounds are used. The extra-instrumental materials and techniques are varied, especially on a track like 'Pleasure and Cruelty', which seems to incorporate the sounds of jackhammers and chain links.

There is an unusual intensity that builds during the first two tracks, and by the time 'Intimate Shrinkage of My Body and the Castration of My Life' comes together, the music reaches a climatic skronk. Fast forward a bit and track seven, "Wherever the Orgasm Discharges Its Internal Rottenness," is another peek of energy and sound. 

The energy on Caustic Ballads is focused and intense, and the vision is complete, as these two musicians already display a great amount of control over their instruments in creating otherworldly soundscapes. Like another recent release, Premature Burial's The Conjuring, and I'm sure many other, there seems to be a style emerging from the depths of Gowanus that is challenging, provocative and a bit disturbing!

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Keir Neuringer & Rafel Mazur - Diachronic Paths (Relative Pitch, 2016) ****



Another recording of a long standing duo, Philadelphia-based saxophonist Keir Neuringer and Kraków-based bassist Rafal Mazur deliver an extraordinary album with Diachronic Paths.

The recording is split into six tracks. Taking the album title literally, each a 'path' would seem to suggest a study, or a variation, of how language changes through time. Over the years that this duo has made music together, they have developed a kinetic approach that is as personal as it is inspiring. With the peeling sounds of circular breathing and the occasional honk of the alto saxophone along with the 16th note runs and choice chord voicing on the bass guitar, the sheer amount of musical ideas that pours forth is vital and fresh from the initial to the final path.

For example, the 'Third Path': the track begins with Neuringer playing an extended tone, it's imperfect in that it wavers and trills come and go, but all the while, Mazur is darting about, playing above and below the line set by Neuringer's single-minded note. This type of energetic matching of energy and ideas is a constant, they respond to each other, egg each other on, and make daring music together.

Diachronic Paths is an album that rewards repeated and attentive listening, and it a valuable documentation of a duo deep into a 17-year-old conversation. 

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Adam Pieronczyk & Miroslav Vitous - Wings (ForTune, 2015) ****


Adam Pieronczyk (tenor & soprano sax, zoucra) is a Kraków-based player with an impressive discography, and Miroslav Vitous (bass) hardly needs an introduction and is of course well known for his work with early Weather Report and more recent titles on ECM. Together, they create gentle, yet insistent improvisations on Wings.

The opening track, 'Enzo and the Blue Mermaid' starts with a bebop line as if written by Raymond Carver - there are hints of the blues, and suggestions of syncopation, but only just what is necessary. Vitous brings an undercurrent of tension to his melodic lines that Pieroncyzk reflects back and soars over. 

'Bach at Night' is a lively piece. Its framework falls away quickly as the duo participates in a trading of phrases. 'I'm Flying! I'm Flying' is introduced with a melodic hook that provides a reference point for the improvisation that follows. The restraint in which they start with gives a fiery track like 'Hanly' - which appears midway through the album - that much more power. Pieroncyzk switches to the zoucra for this one which from what I can tell sounds like a double reed instrument, and its unusual tonality is a nice change.

I know I'm coming to this recording a bit late, as it was released in December, however, Wings is a wonderful album that requires patient and dedicated listening. It doesn't jump out at first, rather it suggests a story that fills in over time.


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Tobias Brügge Matthew Grigg Duo - Vocabularies (Unknown Tongue, 2016) ****


Adopting the practice of dedicating songs - or tracks - to their inspirations, Tobias Brügge (saxophone) and Mathew Grigg (guitar/amplifier) deliver a wide-range of ideas on this release from Unknown Tongues. The improvisations styles range from lowercase passages to explosive forays. The flow of brittle intersections of sax and guitar to powerful scorched earth moments is both organic and born from a certain extrasensory perception.

Vocabularies begins with 'Peace & Fire (for Mats Gustafson)'. There is an interesting contrast between Brügge who uses short phrases to connect with Griggs' textural approach as the track begins. After a moment of quiet, they launch into an exploration of 'small' sounds, like the pops and clicks of the sax's mouthpiece and the pluck of strings on the other side of the guitar's bridge. They then slowly re-build momentum into longer, denser passages. 'Arch Duo (for Derek and Evan)' begins with much drama - Brügge's sax leaping from the speaker and Griggs' guitar particularly snarling, capturing perhaps the well know energies in the partnership of Evan Parker and Derek Bailey.

In distilling the creative spark of their influences, the duo of Brügge and Grigg develop their own challenging and rewarding music.



Matthew Grigg has been a contributor to the blog, check out some of his reviews here.


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John Butcher / Paal Nilssen-Love - Concentric (Clean Feed, 2016) ****



Clean Feed's re-release of Concentric is an unexpected and welcome re-addition to its catalog! First released in 2006, the sax and drum duo of John Butcher and Paal Nilssen-Love is an expansive collaborative exploration of music and sound that needs to be heard.

Butcher is a master of the saxophone - both musically and technically. His unfettered idiosyncratic approach mixes short rhythmic attacks, otherworldly sounds, and unusually constructed melodic passages into cohesive and often evocative statements. Love - an extraordinary percussionist and band leader - compliments the saxophonist with inventive and responsive percussion, matching and contrasting moods, tempos, and textures. Concentric is also a nice companion to Love's well-documented duo work with both Ken Vandermark and Joe McPhee, as it showcases yet another unique and virtuosic approach to the duo.

Definitely worth discovering or rediscovering, Concentric is replete with fascinating sounds and textures - a riveting set of duos!

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Paul Dunmall & Tony Bianco – Autumn (FMR, 2014) ****½



So, to wrap up this series of reviews, I wanted to pick up on an excellent recording that has been eluding my 'pen' for a bit too long.

Paul Dunmall (sax) and Tony Bianco (drums) are another long-standing duo that operates more in the 'fire-music' mode of free jazz. Their partnership has produced several tributes to John Coltrane, modeled after the seminal drum and sax pairing of Rashied Ali and Coltrane.

Dunmall's playing is absolutely captivating, he has an intensity of sound that rises like a high tide, and as its waves break over you, its undertow will sweep you out into the rising ocean. Recorded at Delbury Hall, in Shropshire, England in November 2014, the first two tracks of Autumn are teasers, brimming with life, their condensed arcs set expectations for the half hour "Autumn", which again features Dunmall's effortless flow of ideas and notes, the absolutely air-tight connection between himself and Bianco.

If you haven't heard this one yet, do yourself a favor ...



Sunday, June 21, 2015

Oliver Lake & William Parker - To Roy (Intakt Records, 2015) *****

By Stefan Wood

In January 2014 the innovative jazz trumpeter Roy Campbell died from cardiovascular disease.  "To Roy," is a spirited and powerful tribute to him, by two of his peers:  Oliver Lake and William Parker.  While both have an extensive discography, this is the first pairing of the two on record.  

And while the duets of alto saxophone and bass is nothing new, this short, intense free form effort is magnificent in its originality and creativity.  For one thing, Oliver Lake is at the top of his game here.  Occupying mostly at a high register, he draws from way back to the sound of Albert Ayler and Frank Wright, aggressive and acerbic, yet never too abrasive, with clean notes.   At times his sound is like an electronic instrument, percussive notes that dart in and out, trading off against Parker's equally percussive bass.  Parker is in fine form as well, whether stringing or plucking, his sound does not take a back seat to the strong alto sound.  In fact, he matches Lake's high register, complementing his sound, though at other times he counterpoints by pushing the bass' naturally lower register.  


The album feels unusually short, yet it is 50 minutes long.  That's how engaging their interplay is.  Standout tracks are:  the opening track "Variation on a Theme by Marvin Gaye," a jubilant and exciting free form play on "Inner City Blues," Parker echoing the funky bass line while Lake riffs all over it.  Flight Plan" is a muscular track, the two artists slugging out a variety of textures and sounds with almost supernatural speed.  "2 of Us," and the final track "To Roy," both feature intricately woven interactions by the pair, intertwining their sounds to almost create a third, combined voice.  


There is joy, sorrow, intelligence, rip roaring instinctive play, that all together create a spellbinding effort that is spiritually moving and creatively stimulating.  Easily one of the best albums I've heard this year, as well as containing some of the finest efforts that either artist has produced in a while.  Especially Oliver Lake; his playing is jaw dropping.  


Thursday, April 2, 2015

Benjamin Duboc & Alexandra Grimal - Le Retour D'Ulysse (Improvising Beings, 2015) ****½

 By Stef

Bassist Benjamin Duboc is one of the established names of French free improv music, and saxophonist  Alexandra Grimal is one of the rising stars, combining a broad stylistic versatility with a recognizable warm and lyrical approach. Her more recent albums with Giovanni Di Domenico were more determined by meditative composed material. On this album, all tracks are improvised, exception made of some borrowed tunes like Coltrane's "After The Rain" thrown into the mix, and this approach pleases me more, even if I like her other albums.

Why? Probably because I generally prefer improvisation over composed material, but certainly because of the beautiful authenticity of these intimate dialogues. The music is inspired by Ulysses’ travels in ancient Greece, who left Ithaca for the Trojan war and then traveled onward around the Mediterranean before rejoining his beloved Penelope after many many years. Like travel journeys, both musicians move forward encountering the music as it develops, in a very sequential way full of unforeseen happenings.

And they manage well, extremely well even. In contrast to some of her previous albums, Grimal’s sound has more body, a more solid quality of power without actually reducing her natural lyricism, which works perfectly in combination with Duboc’s equally warm physical approach. 

The nature of the music shifts the whole time, with each piece having its own character and approach, full of creativity and musical inventiveness. They don't just play tunes, they tell stories, full of atmosphere, sonic narratives and changes as the result of interaction. 

The music is great and so is the quality of the recording: it's like you're sitting next to them.

Highly recommended!


Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Torben Snekkestad & Barry Guy - Slip Slide And Collide (Maya, 2014) ****

By Stef  

Both Norwegian saxophonist Torben Snekkestad and British bassist Barry Guy have been classically educated and have performed and released classical CDs, but they are equally active in modern music and jazz. On this duo set, both musicians improvise on thirteen relatively short pieces, and what they bring us is more than worth listening to.

The album's title, "Slip, Slide and Collide", is taken from a metaphor of the movement of tectonic plates on our planet's crust, and gives an indication of what both musicians do, but then it doesn't, because it reduces their interplay to some mechanical geographic occurences, instead of intentional dialogues, which can be fierce, but also gentle, and even emotional. 'Utsira', the first track gives a good example of the latter, when Snekkestad's sax howls like a sad dog, with notes being bended to higher pitches, full of agony. In 'Ombo', the two musicians engage in a more parlando discussion, with short bursts full or surprise and antagony.

On the long 'Gurumna" we get the opposite: the bowed bass creates a foundation of long stretched notes, an invitation for the sax to join in the dark and ominous atmosphere, which is wonderfully dispelled by the almost joyous and lyrical 'Silda', on which the sax sounds warm and round, while the bass sounds like tumbling pebbles.

My favorite track is 'Cruit', a sensitive and beautiful interaction between bowed bass and high-pitched sax.

These two artists know their instruments, they sense each other well, and use the space for maximum contribution, including the occasional silence or resonance. One of the better sax and bass duets of the last years.


Saturday, March 1, 2014

Daunik Lazro & Joëlle Léandre - Hasparren (NoBusiness, 2013) *****

By Stef 

Recorded in Hasparren, in the French basque county, we find two of the country's most eloquent free improvisers in a fantastic duo album. Daunik Lazro is on baritone sax and Joëlle Léandre on bass.

Their music is a sheer delight. It is subtle, nuanced, powerful and sensitive, flowing in the most natural kind of way, together in the same direction.

The opening track starts with bowed bass, quietly and with pulse. Lazro joins and makes his notes shimmer lightly above the restrained beauty of Léandre's playing, sustaining his high notes at times, going to the lower registers when Léandre takes a more prominent role. They don't dialogue, they don't battle, they just move together, carefully, cautiously, revelling in the sonic universe they create, an improvisation which should never stop if you ask me.

The second track continues in the set mood, but tension creeps in, and with tension also volume. The two musicians stay close to one tonal center in their sustained, rhythmic phrases, almost drone-like, and while keeping the intensity, the timbre changes to more accentuated sounds, until the improvisation implodes. The continuity is replaced by a hefty dialogue of short bursts of sound from each instrument, and out of this splintered glass beauty emerges again, in long stretched tones, in the higher register, as an intro for Léandre to start a vocal incantation, and deep supporting bluesy phrases by Lazro.

The next track is more complex, with Léandre creating a kind of a weird pattern that is repetitive yet without obvious structure, alternating pizzi and arco, accompanied by sonic bursts or long phrases by Lazro, but then things calm down and both musicians find themselves in quiet and calm.

Then Lazro takes the lead. Incredibly high-pitched tones are alternated by deep ones, again full of resonance and vibration, a long solo intro of intense beauty, then Léandre joins, strumming a single chord, making it resonate too, keeping the open space that Lazro created, then the intensity increases when arco and baritone start to push each other forward, getting agitated, getting excited, arguing, screaming, growling, until the flow is found again, and Léandre demonstrates her fantastic skills on arco, full of deep emotions, almost classical in the purity of its sound, and Lazro echoes some phrases, at a distance, leaving center-stage to the bass, and then the sounds quiet down, together.

On the fifth track, Léandre plays solo, demonstrating her unique skill of free improvisation while maintaining an uncanny focus and sensitivity, demonstrating what one single bass can sound like, at moments beyond belief when pizzi and arco interchange rapidly, when various sounds escape from the instrument almost as a full band. It's only six minutes, yet it's phenomenal.

The last track is again an intense dialogue of like-minded musicians, reacting and creating as if in with one voice, giving space to each other while interacting at the same time, shifting from raw interplay to quiet meditative moments in a heartbeat, turning their duet into plaintive wailing, ....

Beautiful, beautiful ... and rich.


Can be purchased at InstantJazz.


Friday, December 21, 2012

Reeds and basses

By Stef  

A couple of months ago, I planned to make a review of the various reeds-bass duets that were produced this year, with Pedro Sousa & Harnano Faustino's "Falaise" (already reviewed) and with Sean Conly & Michael Attias "Think Shadow" (still to come). So I waited for more, and possibly this is it, just a handful of albums with a line-up that I really like. If you like the format, as I do, the following albums are not to be missed.

 Frode Gjerstad & Nick Stephens - Different Times (Loose Torque, 2012) ***½


The great thing about duos is the intimacy of the interaction, two musicians focused on each other's movements, thoughts and concepts, catching and anticipating, just to integrate, develop and then amplify. One of the critical elements is the sound quality : it is chamber music in a way and as a listener you should get the feeling that the musicians are playing in your living room.

Which is certainly the case here. What they don't do, is playing wall-paper music, or offering you the warm comfort of a burning hearth fire. They do the opposite. They are in your living room, and they offer you some burning fire, yet it's not of the comfort-offering kind.

Gjerstad's clarinet phrases are mostly short, almost like dots on a canvas, or like bird calls, full of abstract frenzy and wild commotion, yet combining this with the natural lyricism we know him from.

Nick Stephens' bass sound as it should sound, deep, warm, with every string plucked releasing notes that are  enveloped in a woolen warmth. The calm delivery, the love of timbre and single notes, the cautious touching of sounds, it is all here, as you hope to expect from a duo performance. Stephens picks up his bow at various moments, but the magic comes with the last track, when suddenly notes are lengthened, both on bass and on clarinet.


Remi Àlvarez & Ingebrigt Håker Flaten - First Duet Live (JaZt Tapes, 2012) ***


The approach of the Mexican tenor saxophonist and the Norwegian bass-player is different. First, the sound quality is not optimal, with both instruments being recorded from a distance. In contrast to Gjerstad's pointillism, Àlvarez is a lyrical player, stretching and lengthening his phrases, while at the same time not afraid to go into violent outbursts of strong expressivity. The pieces are lengthy, offering both players the time to develop and expand. Álvarez is a real emotional and soulful player, offering his heart on a plate for everybody to see and hear, despite the abstract level of the improvisations. Håker Flaten is his usual good self, used as he is to play in this kind of limited setting, as he did before with artists such as Joe McPhee, Evan Parker, Håkon Kornstadt. Håker Flaten also played with Frode Gjerstad on numerous occasions and is part of his Circulacione Totale Orchestra.

The interaction is good, so is the performance and the live aspect of the recording too, but the sound quality could have been better.


Friday, August 10, 2012

Heddy Boubaker & Hernâni Faustino – Domino Doubles (re:konstruKt, 2011) **** & Pedro Sousa & Hernâni Faustino – Falaise (Dromos Records, 2012) ****




I spend a lot of time thinking about space in music. Two recent duo recordings with Portuguese bassist Hernâni Faustino are especially evocative of musical space: Domino Doubles is full of it, Falaise makes you aware of it. Music often implies structure that goes beyond the mere arrangement of its elements. It’s easy to forget that sound is utterly immersive; you can’t turn off your hearing, and you can’t ignore the subtle information sound coveys about your surroundings. This is coding that music can tap into as well, and it can set off our synapses in all kinds of suggestive ways. The ears can create a map or image in the mind just as easily as the eyes can.

Superficially, Domino Doubles and Falaise are very similar. Close listening reveals different improvisational angles and recording approaches, however. Domino Doubles matches Faustino with musical polymath Heddy Boubaker on alto and bass sax, a pairing that places a lot of emphasis on aesthetic, compositional space (in the sense that you’re making decisions about the arrangement of sounds during improvisation). On Falaise (with Pedro Sousa on tenor), what’s evoked is actual physical space as conveyed through sound— aural architecture.

Faustino is obviously the shared link here. He’s amassed a lot of improvising credibility through his membership in RED Trio. Though they heroically attempt to overcome most limitations, Faustino is usually pitted against two instruments that are fairly inflexible in terms of pitch: piano and drums. It’s refreshing to hear him in a more fluid context, especially with two players so skilled in extending the expressive range of the saxophone. Boubaker’s technique may be a bit more subtle, esoteric even, but Sousa has an impressive command of the outer-reaches of the tenor for such a new face on the scene. Faustino is clearly inspired in both pairings, though he often defers to Boubaker on Domino Doubles.

Both are headphone albums. Domino Doubles seems to materialize from somewhere inside your head. Boubaker has a fine-spun control over his signal, bleeding overtones that feel like some kind of trippy inner-skull resonance.  There are small, breathy gestures, splintered harmonics, peals of arco sawing, bent notes. Much care is given to the placement of sounds, perhaps as much as the choice of sounds themselves. Tones linger, are allowed to settle and vanish. With so much riding on the details, both players are pristinely recorded. Falaise can seem just the opposite. Fine minutiae give way to the force of combined sound. The recording is clear, but it’s as though one microphone is placed close to Faustino, and Sousa’s long, rich tones seep in from somewhere across the room. The sense of the playing space is palpable, and the two capitalize on this natural resonance by converging on tones or crafting repetitive motifs that meld together into complex drones.

In these duos, space is made real through the fullness of reverberating sound, or thrown wide by the silences in the music. One traces the acoustics of a performance space, the physical potential of sound as it’s shaped by matter, the warm aura as lambent tones redouble and re-cross. The other drops charges into the echoless darkness inside your skull, pits sound against sound, like searing drips of color that burn brightly against a canvas of negative space. Neither should be missed.




© stef

Friday, November 4, 2011

HEMPHILL!

By Stef

In 1995, saxophonist Julius Hemphill passed away, after having given the world two decades of fantastic music, be it with his own records, or with the World Saxophone Quartet. He was a free thinker and improviser, but he liked themes and rhythm at the same time. Two major things are happening now : his brilliant debut album "Dogon AD" is re-issued, and No Business dug up old recordings and released those as a new album.

I can encourage you to read Tim Berne's interview in which he describes Hemphill as a person and as a musician. 

Julius Hemphill and Peter Kowald “Live at Kassiopeia” (No Business, 2011)****


On the first disk of this double CD, we find Hemphill playing solo on three pieces, and German bassist Peter Kowald solo bass on one long track. On the second disk, both artists perform duets. The performance was recorded on January 8, 1987 at "The Kassiopeia" in Wüppertal, Germany.

It is pretty unique to hear Hemphill play solo, mainly on alto, and it is a real treat. His playing is playful, jazzy, rhythmic, using phrases from old jazz traditionals and from the blues, and with an incredible sense of focus, he keeps close to the path he embarked on when starting his improvisation, and as a result the three tracks clock around six or seven minutes. Kowald is something else : his approach is more open and shifting with the new ideas coming, moving into different directions and developing his improvisation over more than thirty minutes. We have heard Kowald play solo before, but again his great mastership on the bass is demonstrated here, pizzi and arco, as well as his incredible musical vision of what music can express and how it can be presented.

The second CD is the real treat, starting with bowed bass and screeching alto, and I must say that Hemphill sounds a little unsure of what to do until he starts playing more rhythmic phrases, immediately picked up by Kowald for a really strong interaction. The second improvisation is the pièce-de-resistance with both artists starting to feel really comfortable with the set-up and playing up a storm, full of intensity and sensitivity, with moments of high energy alternated with calmer passages, and especially the latter are excellent. The last track is exceptionally short, and starts with an arco and some crazy and wild ideas by Hemphill, playful, with all sorts of funny phrases interspersing his normal playing. I'm not sure whether this was an encore, but it sounds like it. In any case, the audience is happy, and so are we.

Buy from Instantjazz.


Julius Hemphill - Dogon AD (International Phonograph, 1972-2011 re-issue) ******


Out now, again, and no doubt the reissue of the year, with Julius Hemphill on alto and flute, Baikida Carroll on trumpet, Abdul Wadud on cello, and Philip Wilson on drums.

The original album is thirty-eight minutes short, and actually the title track is without a doubt the piece that carries the album's legendary value. Listen how Wadud and Wilson's economic and repetitive playing leads to a trance-inducing hypnotism over which Hemphill and Carroll make their instruments express any mode and mood possible. On the re-issue "Hard Blues" was added, a track that was recorded during the same session and with Hamiett Bluiett on baritone saxophone.

A "must have".

Buy from Instantjazz.



   
© stef

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Benjamin Duboc - Primare Cantus (Ayler, 2011) ****½

By Stef

French bass-player Benjamin Duboc has been reviewed quite extensively on this blog in the past few years, and rightly so, with the quintet "Afterfall", the quartet "Nuts"the piano trio "Free Unfold", the sax trio "Les Fées Du Rhin", the trumpet-bass duo with Itaru Oki, and now, he released his first album under his own name, and what an album.

It is a box set with three CDs, the first one a solo bass improvisation of fourty-two minutes, but not of the kind you would expect. Duboc plays primarily on the tail-end of his bass, combining bowing and pizzi, resulting in a mesmerising repetitive sound, over which the loose strings are strummed. Intensity and finesse are the words that best describe the endless shifts in tone shading and coloring.

The second CD starts beautifully, with Jean-Luc Petit on baritone and tenor saxophones, playing three stupefying improvisations with shimmering nebulous sounds coming from both instruments. This exceptional power is continued in three pieces with  Didier Lasserre on snare drum and cymbal, equally minimal and intense, with percussion and bass creating and embracing sounds you will have rarely heard from this sober line-up. On the last three tracks, Duboc plays duets with tenorist Sylvain Guérineau resulting in quite different, more abstract and voiced sonic environment, in which suddenly the tension of monotony is broken.

The third CD starts with bass in duo with Pascal Battus on "guitar pickup", creating a slowly moving deep-sounding minimalist environment, full of monotal shifting intensity, and the weird electronics coming from the guitar. The second piece is solo bass - I assume - and is little more than white noise, as an interlude before the weird frenzy of the closing piano trio starts, with Sophie Agnel on piano and Christian Pruvost on trumpet, first loud and dissonant, then moving to the barely audible with the trumpet sounds nothing more than physically intense blowing with minimal release, then Agnel takes over with scratching strings gradually leaving more room for voiced keys, supported by the deep hypnotic repetitive tones of the bass, and near the end, the incredible tension builds up for a terrifying doomsday finale.

This album is fantastic for many reasons. First, it brings together some of France's most explorative and skilled musicians. Second, it shows how jazz has found its way in a more modern artistry, one that is inventive and leaves a deep emotional imprint in the listener's brain. You want to listen to some parts again and again, and you look at the album lying there in full anticipation of the next listen. Third, the quality of it all is superb. Even if it shows the new way, it is for sure among the best of it.

The album's only downside is it's aspect of being a collection of various parts, put together quite skillfully and with its own logic and listening sequence, evolving from solo to over duo to trio, from slow monotony to a paroxysm of sound at the end.

In any case, this CD box comes as highly recommended for listeners with open ears, and without a doubt it contains some of the best things I've heard this year.





Buy from Instantjazz.


© stef

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Stephan Crump & Steve Lehman - Kaleidoscope and Collage (Intakt, 2011) ****

By Stef

In some previous reviews I questioned the compositional complexity that saxophonist Steve Lehman put into his music, because in my opinion it created a kind of barrier to bring across real emotional rapport with the listener, who may be in awe for the skills and intellectual effort, yet is a little bit too baffled to still be part of it.

Nothing of the sort takes place on this fantastic album, quite to the contrary. Together with bassist Stephan Crump, they create two improvisations : "Terroir", a little over twenty minutes, and "Voyages", sixteen minutes long. The improvisation itself is not entirely free : both musicians agreed on some structure and pieces of interplay that they had developed during previous sessions. The merged these conceptually into one flow, which works sometimes, but not always, in the sense that both improvisations contain some pauses as if a new track starts.

The end result is a real treat, extremely sensitive and captivating, accessible as post-bop and creative as avant-garde music. Crump and Lehman have the same gentle and lyrical approach to their music, with a strong coherence in the development of the sound. Just listen how the light-footed first track turns dark and foreboding, with the bowed bass underpinning some despairing alto phrases.

Precision and finesse are combined with creativity and implicit groove, with instruments that are at times barely touched, resulting in whimpering or humming sounds, yet the lack of power and voice create a sweet kind of emotional intensity.

A strong performance, but very short, too short.

Buy from Instantjazz.




© stef

Monday, October 11, 2010

Sax and bass

Ha! Duets! I love them. I love the intimacy of the dialogue, the limitless possibilities unfolding, with the big danger of losing focus of the music itself, or of moving in all directions without keeping coherence. In the hands of true masters, works of art are created, leading to captivating listening experiences, requiring some concentration and effort from the listener, but that's a small price to pay to become part of this music.

Vinny Golia & Mark Dresser - Live At Lotus (Kadima, 2010) ****

Interestingly enough, Kadima released this excellent recording close to nine years after it was recorded. The artists are Vinny Golia on woodwinds and Mark Dresser on bass. On the first piece Golia sticks to flute, switching to sax on the second, and the change is apparent, both in the quality of the recording as on his presence, which sounds more dedicated and committed to what he is playing. Maybe comfort, maybe inspiration.

I recently reviewed some of Dresser's bass skills, and I have always appreciated Golia for his free lyricism, without fully  relinquishing the jazz tradition, even with blues undertones in the overall mood.

The second piece, "Can There Be Two", brings an exploration of a set theme, and explore they do, ranging from forceful blasts, to multiphonics and sensitive touches, using trills as on a flute, deep soulful moments, and even some Middle-Eastern excursions, without loosing the thread of the theme, and all this in perfect dialogue with the bass.

"Excursions" starts in the lower registers, with Dresser setting the tone, and Golia answering on bass clarinet, starting quite abstract, but gradually picking up a wayward boppish rhythm, and adding fluency to the phrasing, first while maintaining a minimum level of abstraction, then turning the piece into delightful free bop, only to reduce the speed again to more intimate conversations, ending in a bluesy one-note beat, like coming home.

"Locution", the last piece, is the album's highlight, with Dresser using his bow to play some heartrending and sometimes piercing sounds in an overall dark and ominous environment, with Golia's multiphonics increase the tension.

Two magicians conjuring up worlds in front of your ears.


Remi Álvarez & Mark Dresser - Soul to Soul (Discos Intolerantia, 2010) ****

We find Dresser back with Mexican saxophonist Remi Álvarez, a one-time student with the likes of Braxton, George Lewis and Steve Lacy, not bad references if you ask me, yet he clearly has his own voice and musical ideas.

The first piece is relatively abstract and even meditative, until Dresser seems to think it needs some deep emotional dive by elucidating some screaming bowing out of his bass, pushing the sax into wilder territories. The second piece starts uptempo with both instruments setting up a very nervous dialogue, with changing rhythms and pulse, short phrases and quite some intensity.This just to illustrate the broad range of approaches going from the lyrical extended phrases over rhythmic backbones to weird sonic interactions, but keeping the dialogue open at all times, with focus on the music as it unfolds itself almost naturally.

The seven improvisations on the album range from short statements of less than three minutes to lengthy dialogues of fifteen minutes, and they're good at both.

The great similarity between both albums is the incredibly coherent sense of adventure and technical skills that allow them to do what they do : make great free music with incredible warmth and passion.

Listen and buy from CDBaby.

© stef

Friday, September 17, 2010

Joe McPhee & Ingebrigt Håker-Flaten - Blue Chicago Blues (Not Two, 2010) ****


Joe McPhee has already released several duets with bassists, including several with Dominic Duval and Michael Bisio. He had played with bassist Ingebrigt Håker-Flaten in "The Thing". Now McPhee plays this nice album, an almost complementary album to his duet with Pal Nilssen-Love, "Tomorrow Came Today".

For the occasional reader: I am a great fan of McPhee, and hence easily enthusiastic about any of his releases, and so it is with this one. I also like duo performances. So, McPhee in a duo album has a great probability for a great appreciation.

He brings nothing new here though, nor does Håker-Flaten, but the playing itself is so good, so expressive, that it is a worthwhile listen for the fans. The cover art with its ambiguous blue flame illustrates the music quite well, it is both heart-warming music to listen to next to the fireplace, but it can only be seen as a warning sign for highly flammable and explosive stuff.

The more explorative pieces are "I Love You Too, Little Baby", "Cerulean Mood Swing" and "The Shape Of Blues To Come".

The sad and bluesy pieces are "Requiem For An Empty Heart", in which McPhee sings while playing his sax, after a long slow bass intro by Håker-Flaten, and "Legend Of The Three Blind Moose", a slow spiritual improvisation, offering a great finale for the album.

The first track, "Truth In The Abstract Blues" has a rhythmic repetitive phrase, reminiscent to the Fred Anderson, the great Chicago sax player, to whom this album is dedicated.

But the music is fun too, as the titles of the tracks already indicate, with their references to some of the great bluesy tracks of jazz history.

"This is blue Chicago blues, 
nasty, low-down, trifflin',
and,
sweet"

Enjoy!

© stef

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Rafal Mazur & Keir Neuringer - Improwizje (Insubordinations, 2010) ****

Keir Neuringer on alto saxophone and Rafal Mazur on acoustic bass guitar serve you an eighteen-minute delight of horrific music, with two instruments building a wall of sound that is hard to believe, screeching, wailing, howling: terryfying, pleading, hair-raising, hypnotic, numbing, mad, desperate ... but it is also light, sensitive, full of sonic subtlety and nuance.

Both artists create on this EP something that is quite unusual, with a very distinctive voice and character. They find a perfect symbiosis of sound, jointly creating something that goes beyond the voice of the individual instruments. Really strong. Really disorienting. Really modern. Really short.

And free.

You can download the entire album from Insubordinations.

© stef

Monday, August 16, 2010

Ab Baars & Meinrad Kneer - Windfall (Evil Rabbit, 2010) ****

For fans of free improvisation, here is another great sax-bass duo album, with Dutchman Ab Baars on reeds and German Meinrad Kneer on bass. The album brings you eleven tracks of relatively accessible jazz with each piece having its own musical dynamics, sound and development, created out of nothing more than excellent listening skills and anticipation, the result of having played together a lot.

Yet the most astonishing aspect is the emotional depth that is the exclusive of improvised music, but certainly never guaranteed. Listen to "The Pledge", which gradually evolves from slow and somewhat joyful playing of sax and arco bass into a straining, haunting repetition around a single tonal center.

Baars's influences stretch from Monk over the Art Ensemble Of Chicago to Butch Morris, with whom he played, with the additional eastern element and shakuhachi playing, as on "Bird Talk" or "Eastern Rudiment". Although born and educated in Germany, Kneer is very active in The Netherlands, and his playing is indebted to greats such as Peter Kowald (the physicality) and Barry Guy (the creative irreverence).

Together, they meander between form and abstraction, full of assent and dissent, dissonance and echoing, yet the true power lies in the almost endless variation of timbre in which the dialogue takes place, adding an almost voice-like inflection and subtlety. Despite their freedom of approach, they deal with it in a very mature way : they are beyond the deconstruction phase : there is no shouting, there is no shock element : the music almost arises organically out of spontaneous sounds, and built upon through creative interaction.

In sum, two artists who understand music, have journeyed deep and far to know what works and what doesn't, and use all the constraints and possibilities of the duo format to bring a very varied, coherent, adventurous and intense album.

A joy for the open ear.

© stef

Monday, July 26, 2010

Free free music

Especially in the newer regions of experimental music and avant-garde jazz, the internet offers great opportunities for promoting material that is difficult to get released by established labels. The self-promotion often coincides with a willingness to share the material freely, as a matter of necessity or of principle.

Here are a few "labels" from which you can download the material. The music is often minimalist, soundsculptures with electro-acoustic elements.

Zpoluras is the blog on which you can find different new bands, albums and links to the new labels and music. Several of the album are available for free download too. 

Paulo Chagas and Bruno Duplant - Complicity (self-published, 2010) ***½

This is a duo album by Paulo Chagas on woodwinds and field recordings and Bruno Duplant on double bass. The music is minimalist, with careful explorations of sound, quite respectful in the interaction, quite adventurous while being inobtrusive at the same time. The duo builds its sound around silence, and these sounds are often out of the ordinary. Chagas' wide choice of instruments leads to sufficient variation to keep the attention going for the whole fifteen tracks, ranging from flute on the first track, to the undefinable moan of the wind instrument on the last piece. Duplant's contribution is of the same high level, varying strongly between arco, pizzi and a whole array of uncommon sounds, including percussive ones that you can get out of a bass.


Rhizome Records is created by French bassist Bruno Duplant, and has released one album so far.

Astula Democratica - Illusio (Rhizome Records, 2010) ****


Astula Democratica is built around the same core musicians : Paulo Chagas on winds, reeds, violin & some electronics, José Oliveira on percussion and amplified objects, Bruno Duplant on double bass, violin, acoustic guitar with objects, and toy electronics. On some tracks the band is expanded with Fernando Simoes on trombone &amp voice, and Philippe Lenglet on prepared acoustic guitar &amp autoharp. The music is a not less intense than the duo recording, and equally unclassifiable, with some clarinet playing that sounds almost classical on the weirdest possible electronic background, full of doom and gloom. Despite the expanded line-up, the music is as minimalistic, yet it is all the richer for it. I'm not sure whether I can call it accessible avant-garde, because there are few points of recognition, but the band clearly stays away from noise or abrasive moments. They may need some help with their knowledge of Latin, but otherwise this is a fine album.

Array is a "label" founded by multi-instrumentalist Massimo Magee, with the telling mission statement "When we are no longer bound by the constraints of time, the past-present-future, the beginning and end, it is then that we must turn to concepts like arrays that allow us to consider all the endless possibilities that would be available to us simultaneously in that one endless moment outside of time".


Tim Green, Massimo Magee, John Porter - Of An Evening (Array, 2010) ***½

The trio of Tim Green on drums and mobile phone, Massimo Magee on sopranino , clarinet, piano, signal generator, laptop feedback, tape recorder with blank tape, walkie-talkies, field recordings, recordings of prior drum improvisation by Tim Green, amplifier feedback, and John Porter on soprano also works in the realms of minimalism. The two saxes enter into mad and excited dialogues, but in contrast to the two previous albums, at moments they raise the volume, creating mad interaction with the drums going full force. The second track, "Experiments In Hypnotism", moves a little beyond the level of the audible, with sudden peaks of madness. "In Which We Encounter A Groove", is - as its title suggests - the most jazzy piece. Have I sued the word "mad" three times? Well, it tells.


Zero Centigrade - I Am Not Like You (Twilight Luggage, 2010)

I am a little less thrilled by this duo recording by Tonino Taiuti on acoustic guitar and Vincenzo De Luce on trumpet. We enter the realm of sound collisions where the actual source of the sound no longer really matters. The sounds are raw and unpleasant to the ear, but that's obviously not a criterion for quality. That's what mainstream jazz fans will say about free jazz, or what classical music afficionados will say about rock music. Since it is all available on the internet, I will leave the evaluation over to you.

The challenge of breaking boundaries is that, while deconstructing the known, you have to create something new in the process, something that is worthwhile listening to - and not just fun to play.


You will need open ears for much of the material on these albums, and even if not everything works, some of the adventurous parts integrate moments of great playing - and listening - and we can only applaud the musicians for their vision and audacity in shifting boundaries, both musically and in terms of publishing their music.


© stef