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Showing posts with label Sax-trumpet duo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sax-trumpet duo. Show all posts

Sunday, April 7, 2019

Ken Vandermark and Nate Wooley - Deeply Discounted/Sequences of Snow (Audiographic/Pleasures of the Text, 2018) ****½


By Paul Acquaro

As I began writing this, I took a quick look back at my post from 2015 about the Ken Vandermark (woodwinds) and Nate Wooley (trumpet) duo's first recording, East by Northwest. At the time of writing, I was still thinking about the show I had just seen of theirs. Before that experience, I had been a little skeptical about what two wind instruments could manage, but the show opened my ears. Subsequently, I was turned on the work of John Carter and Bobby Bradford - an inspiration for this pairing - and have eagerly enjoyed each new installment of the the Wooley/Vandermark journey, including their follow up All Direction's Home, and now Deeply Discounted/Sequences of Snow.

This latest recording consists of two long form compositions that were conceived of for the medium - the LP - on which I'm spinning it. It is also available as a download for those who have left the physical world behind (doesn't that sound morbid?). The pieces, true to form for the artist, carry their inspirations in their titles. "Deeply Discounted II", a piece by Wooley, was inspired by John Cage's "Cheap Imitation" (which was itself inspired by Erik Satie), and Ken Vandermark's "Sequence of Snow" is dedicated to the artist Michael Snow and inspired by some of his films. I am not sure if it's necessary to even get into the inspirations for as such, except as a doorway down another rabbit hole of art and intrigue (which I encourage you to follow, of course), as the pieces stand firmly on their own.

"Deeply Discounted" begins with a slow melody delivered in counterpoint between the clarinet and the trumpet. A snippet of a melody, acting as an anchor in the piece appears again and again, it sounds rather like a brass fanfare, classical in nature, trilling and exuberant. The two duck and weave with it, building around it, and then knocking it down. Suite-like in concept, the piece follows ideas until reaching a pause, which then serves as the start of a new idea. There are moments when I think of the Zentral Quartett as the two touch on a style that feels a bit like how that classic quartet interpolated Germanic folk themes. From the regal to the squeaky, this is an ambitious piece that showcases the duo's deep listening and clever contrapuntal choices.

"Sequences of Snow" begins with a soundwave. The trumpet and clarinet deliver long passages comprised of pulses and inspired flights. For a moment, Wooley may be holding down a repetitive sequence, while Vandermark weaves a melodic statement around it, then suddenly the roles switch. Long moments of dissonant intervals sometimes precede a tonal event on the trumpet, or are punctuated by a sharp vocalization. Polyphonic trumpet tones and violent buzzing are pierced by high pitched legato notes from the clarinet (or do they do the piercing?), underscoring the fact that the duo's concept is comprised of strong understanding and adventurous ideas. At times, simple ear pleasing melodies emerge and change the energy and direction of the piece and about 2/3 of the way through the piece we're treated to one of those Vandermark riffs that you could hear delivered with power and a deep groove, but here is handled deftly in tandem by the duo.

This third offering from Wooley and Vandermark is easy to recommend, especially to the already initiated, but there is something- from the gentler melodies to the fierce runs- to engage all eager ears.

Friday, May 20, 2016

Ken Vandermark & Nate Wooley – Islington Mill, Manchester, 17.05.16

Photo by Peter Fay
By Colin Green

As a brief coda to the week of duo reviews we have Ken Vandermark and Nate Wooley’s double-act at Islington Mill, a location rapidly affording Manchester with a regular venue for free jazz and improv.

The pair draw inspiration, and took the opening ‘And She Speaks’, from the classic duo of John Carter and Bobby Bradford. With Vandermark on clarinet, tenor and baritone saxophones and Wooley on trumpet this was whistle-stop tour of what seemed like the whole of jazz history, drawn primarily from their two albums: East by Northwest and All Directions Home. It was a bravura display, inspiring and terrific fun, executed with a sparkle and bounce mirrored in the wit of their between numbers patter – ‘Deconstructed Folks’ was dedicated to Jerry Lewis, using its bebop rhythms as a springboard for excursions into other territory. On ‘Best Coast’ they moved between nimble unisons and free flow, with smeared microtones on trumpet, and ‘Another Lecture’ gave us an earthy baritone with agile trumpet, percussive bursts set against scurrying runs. On ‘I Prefer the Company of Birds’ (Wooley’s not very convincing claim to be a sociopath) the duo careered from slapstick to mournful. ‘Such Science’ saw some dexterous counterpoint with them cuing each other in.

They concluded with a rendition of ‘I Heard it on the Radio’, written by Ornette but never recorded by him. After pretending to have left the stage (it saves a lot of hassle) they turned round and played an encore of ‘Jim the Boy’. 

The duo play in Zurich tonight and the tour ends in Stockholm tomorrow (details here) before Wooley heads back to New York and Vandermark teams up with Paal Nilssen-Love for a summer tour of Europe. Catch them if you can.

Vandermark and Wooley with Ornette’s ‘Peace’:

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Nate Wooley and Ken Vandermark - East by Northwest (Audiographic, 2014) *****

By Paul Acquaro

The Winter Jazz Festival hit NYC last weekend. It was a crazy scene - sold out shows, SRO venues - but there was a lot of great music. One show that really stood out was Nate Wooley and Ken Vandermark's duo set. Their concept was modeled after the combo of trumpeter Bobby Bradford and saxophonist and clarinetist John Carter, who were based out of LA during the early years of free jazz. 

This show was the second date on the tour for their new record East by Northwest, the title a reference to their own associations with New York and Chicago. What struck me immediately about the show was just how full and vibrant of a sound they were able to create with just the two horns. No doubt a great deal of this had to do with their compositional approach - melodies and counter melodies stretching out the musical fabric between them, creating an atmosphere as much as actual notes and tones - but then toss in the sheer virtuosity of their playing and it is quite an ear opening experience. I picked up the CD at the show and am pleased to report that what I heard from the stage is captured wonderfully on this album.

The opening track, 'And She Speaks', penned by John Carter, begins with a delicate melody, starting in tandem and then stretching outwards. Elements of extended technique are used to shade in the spaces a little - trills on the clarinet, sputtering on the trumpet, jumps in tempo and treatments, but always rooted - however abstractly - to the melody. 'Best Coast' is another example - the two horns begin a rapid scalar ascent to a surprisingly dissonant destination, then stop, and do it again and again. 'Call The Numbers (for Christian Marclay)' features a vivid solo from Wooley while Vandermatk employs the incidental sounds of his sax to generate additional momentum. A real highlight of the album for me is 'Deconstructed Folks (for Bobby Bradford and John Carter)', the duo starts out with an upbeat theme that soon splits into parallel steams that reconnect from time to time. 

I'll stop here with the track-by-track run down - why ruin the experience? This is a duo that will challenge and delight. Their playing is emotional, imaginative, and connected throughout. 

Check out below video of Wooley and Vandermark playing in Philadelphia and maybe you can still catch them on tour. Plus, you can get the recording over at Instant Jazz, well, right away.

Enjoy some videos from the duo's performance at Fringe Arts in Philadelphia on Jan 11th:





Monday, March 31, 2014

Wind? Woods! Breath? Brass!

Two horns interlocked in mesmerising dialogues, finding a common language, a common sound, challenging each other, pushing boundaries. Nothing like a duo of similar instruments to engage in a competitive interaction, one which forces the other musician to listen to what you can do, suck him in your universe and be challenged to venture in his - not "her" in this list unfortunately - sound world. Strangely enough the trap is to be focused on each other, much more than to create something simultaneously for an audience, as you would with two completely different instruments.


Evan Parker & Joe McPhee - What If They Both Could Fly (Rune Grammofon, 2013) 


On the first one European legend Evan Parker meets American legend Joe McPhee. Both meet full of respect for a fascinating dialogue on trumpet and sax, or mostly both on sax. The playing is fully improvised and because of the sound of the tenors, also a very warm album. The mood is relatively subdued, with lots of circular breathing, yet soulful, with some moments of increased power play, although these are few and far between. Both artists think about sound, and perform something together, rather than competing. It is solemn and highly recommended to fans of either musician, and of both of course.

Available at Instantjazz.


Ken Vandermark & Mats Gustafsson - Verses (Corbett vs. Dempsey, 2013)


Another fascinating listen is this duo between the two champions of the tenor, Ken Vandermark and Mats Gustafsson, two heroes of this blog, artists who've been shaping the form of improvised music and free jazz in the past decade, saxophonists whose names stand for power, creativity and productivity, two men who are also fascinated themselves by the shoulders they stand on, whose legacy goes back to Ayler as much as to respecitvely Giuffre or Bengt Nordström. Both musicians had played together before, but always in larger ensembles, with Brötzmann's Chicago Tentet, or with Sonore, on joint meetings of their trios with DKV + Aaly.

Yet this is their first duo performance, with Vandermark on tenor, bass clarinet and b flate clarinet, and Gustafsson on tenor, alto and baritone, and they show us the myriad of possibilities of sound with these instruments, and even if they demonstrate a variety of techniques and skills, the focus is always on the music, which flows between soulful and quiet moments - as on "I Never Dreamed", to intense chatters ("Fortunate Rust") and powerful howls ("Beside Me, Images"), yet always, always subtle and full of nuance.


Listen to Ripolin
 

Available at Instantjazz.


Michel Doneda & Joris Rühl ‎– Linge (Umlaut, 2013)


The German French Joris Rühl is on clarinet, for his second album, in the company of the French soprano saxoponist Michel Doneda, who must be around his seventieth album by now. Of all the albums in this review, the overall atmosphere is the most minimalist, and one on which both musicians are focused on creating a common soundscape rather than enter into a dialogue. Indeed, both reeds create a longitudinal slow movement of sound, which quietly develops around a tonal center. This is a work of subtle finesse, of tonal refinement and precision that is totally different from the raw interaction of some of the other albums reviewed here, there is no call and response, no fierce dialogues or powerful howls, no, the mood is subdued and intense, less about expression of emotions than about the creation of a fragile beauty.


Lol Coxhill & Michel Doneda - Sitting On Your Stairs (Emanem, 2013)


On this album, we find the late Lol Coxhill in a duo with Michel Doneda, both on soprano for a really intense dialogue, so intense, that you often wonder whether they ever thought that anybody would have to listen to this, yet that being said, once you actually do listen, the result is pretty hypnotic at times, with both men doing bouts of circular breathing, or moving together in loud screams, bird-like calls, and then falling back to real fragile and tender musings, vulnerable. I am not sufficiently expert to distinguish who is who just based on their sound, which is remarkably similar, both in tone as in the timbral and musical dynamics. They are really on the same space when playing, equally technically skilled, equally free, at any time able to join the other artist on his wild flights while guiding him back if needed too.


Steve Swell & Kirk Knuffke - Feynman's Diagrams (Nacht Records, 2013)


There is a strange relationship between physics, mathematics and music. Think of references made to astronomy, particle physics, quantum mechanics and other theoretical physics references in albums by Agustí Fernández, Matthew Shipp, Rob Mazurek, and several more. Here we have Steve Swell on trombone and Kirk Knuffke on trumpet, engaged in great interactions, bouncing like particles in Feynman diagrams, some moving towards the future, some back in time. Here we are in a moment of full perplexity, again, as to what all this means. Nevertheless, Swell and Knuffke are great musicians, stellar artists, and their dialogue is interesting. They explore. They explore sounds, without any intensity, slowly, cautiously, interacting, reacting, co-creating a canvas of phrases and notes, more abstract than the mathematical equations underpinning the Feynman diagrams, and the result is great, offering a sense of wonder about individual tones, creating a sense of gentle surprise at the next thing happening. It's intimate, contained, minimal yet rich, full of small attentions and maybe also intentions, like notes offered like presents, generously, full of warmth and friendliness, in the icy cold and barren world of particle physics.


Vinny Golia & Urs Leimgruber - Empricism in the West (Relative Pitch, 2014) 


This albums offers duets of two masters of free improvisation, Vinny Golia from New York on bass flute, soprillo, sopranino, bass saxophone, Bb and contra-alto clarinets, and urs Leimgruber from Luzern, Switzerland, on soprano and tenor saxophones. And for the latter I have some regret about not having reviewed more of his albums on this blog. Again, this is an album of dialogue, yet one of ever shifting players, because of the frequent changes in instruments used, especially by Golia. Their musical universe is one of try-outs, one of spontaneous improvisation, one of experience, as its title suggests. You can theorise as much as you want, and as the title of the tracks suggests ("The Analytic And The Synthetic", "The Scientific Method, Logical Truths Are Linguistic Tautologies", "Matter Is The Permanent Possibility Of Sensation", etc.), it is not about science, it's not about organised systems with high predictability repetition of experiments, quite to the contrary, it's about the experience of the try-out itself, about organic beauty that cannot be captured by systems or logic or mechanics. You get a lot here, an open-ended creation of two highly specialised experts of their instruments, bringing lots of variety despite the limited line-up, demonstrating the experience of freedom and the demonstration of freedom that comes with experience. 

Available at Instantjazz.


Aaron Novik & Arrington De Dionyso (Bandcamp, 2013)


A totally different sound we get from two lesser known musicians, Arrington de Dionyso on voice, bass clarinet and percussion, and Aaron Novik on bass clarinet, electric bass clarinet, clarinet and percussion. On the first track they are joined by Eli Crews on electronic manipulation. Both reedists come from a more punk and rock-oriented background, iconoclasts and irreverent destructors of established patterns, with "trans-utopian world music for a world that exists in fever dreams and hallucinations" as we can read on de Dionyso's website, and we know Novik from his "Secret of Secrets" on Tzadik two years ago. 


The first track "Electric Duo" is an out of this world nightmarish vision, yet once they play their reeds acoustically, the universe changes. Don't expect sounds like the heroes in the other reviews, the approach is surprisingly a little nicer, with often some klezmer-inspired or balkan references. Yet, their music has indeed some shamanistic howls, some unusual approaches - luckily! - and it is fun, although you feel they not on their familiar ground here. Is it too nice? Check for yourselves.

Listen and download on Bandcamp.


Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Nate Wooley & Seymour Wright – About Trumpet and Saxophone (Fataka, 2013) ****½

By Tom Burris

Considering the previous output by Nate Wooley and Seymour Wright – never mind that title - you'd be right to expect a thorough exploration of every wheeze, honk, snort and clack these instruments are capable of making.  But it's the idea of collaboration between these two fearless explorers that bumps the anticipation factor up a level or four.  Wooley and Wright perform a series of duets that are completely about the trumpet and saxophone – and then some.

About Trumpet and Saxophone is about the relationship of these instruments to each other.  It's about wind going in and coming out the other end – and into the ear of the man with the other instrument, and how he interprets and reacts to it.  Without chords or even a rhythm section, the flow of the conversation shines a spotlight on the way a front-line works.  There is very much a musical structure to this interplay, which is filled with surprises – because that construction is being done on the fly.

The disc is divided into nine pieces, but these serve as mere bookmarks on a work that flows incredibly well from start to finish and should really be listened to as one complete whole.

It's a little odd – or maybe it isn't – to realize that this forward-thinking set of excursions in sound-making is completely in line with jazz tradition.  The front-line of saxophone and trumpet has been the basis of most of the great quartets since forever.  Whether these two are simulating ceremonial Tibetan horns or the trading of farts in adjacent toilet stalls, the dialog is an extension of the same conversations that happened between Bird and Diz, Ornette and Don, Miles and Trane, etc.  Some of the words have changed, of course, as language is a constantly evolving communication tool.

Therefore, About Trumpet and Saxophone is about the ability to converse in a collaborative language that hasn't been entirely written yet.  What ultimately counts to us as listeners is that the conversation is communicable as music.  And this is definitely music, as much as it is about music – especially the great jazz tradition of forward movement. 

Available at Instantjazz.com.


Monday, August 6, 2012

Michel Doneda & Nils Ostendorf - Cristallisation (Absinth, 2012) ****½

By Stef     

Feeling with your ears, is the image that comes to mind when listening to this fantastic duo of Michel Doneda on soprano and sopranino and Nils Ostendorf on trumpet.

This is music you can feel, as in physically touching, letting it glide through your fingers, for the pure enjoyment of the fine texture, the translucent weightlessness of gauze, the smoothness of silk, the rough prickliness of wool, or compare it to the warmth of sand in the sun, the gentle hardness of pebbles, or pulsating living skin ... Like touch, the endless variations in timbre and sound reach you somehow in an undefinable way. It doesn't speak: it affects. It reaches you differently, totally. As a listener, you can only experience it. Feel it. Touch the sound, with your ears, let it resonate fully in your tympanic membrane, play with it like something you have in your hands, touch it, sense it from all sides ...

In ten miniatures, Doneda and Ostendorf make the listener feel with her ears all the subtle variations of timbre, the beauty of sound as sound, the beauty of several sonic threads going in opposite directions to weave the same fabric, gentle and deliberate and cautious.

And so should you too, listener, envelop the sound with your ears, unhurriedly, listen how sound can become something precious, small and rare and valuable.

Exceptional.


© stef