We all owe a great debt to the great archival project of French sound
engineer-producer-Fou Records label owner (and an explorer of vintage
synthesizers) Jean-Marc Foussat's excellent recordings. Thanks to his
one-of-a kind archive of live recordings we already enjoyed such milestone
gems of free jazz and free improvisation released by Fou Records as Derek
Bailey / Joëlle Léandre / George Lewis / Evan Parker - 28 rue Dunois
juillet 82 (2014); the Willem Breuker Kollektief - Angoulème 18 mai 1980
(2015) and Daunik Lazro / Joëlle Léandre / Georges Lewis - Enfances à
Dunois le 8 janvier 1984 (2016).
Now, Foussat and Fou Records offer Topographie Parisienne Dunois April 3d
1981, a live perspective on one of the defining and most sought-after
album of European free-improvisation: The Topography of
the Lungs (Incus, 1970), captured during a June 1970 studio session and featuring young British tenor and
soprano sax player Evan Parker, guitarist Derek Bailey and Dutch drummer
Han Bennink. The seminal album also helped launch the legendary Incus label, co-founded by Bailey,
Parker and drummer Tony Oxley. This album’s mystique was enhanced by decades
of scarcity (and a famous rift between Bailey and Parker), until
reissued on Parker’s Psi label in 2006, a year after the passing of Bailey
and in memory of Bailey.
Bill Shoemaker mentions in his insightful liner notes for Topographie
Parisienne that Bailey, Bennink and Parker did not perform together as a
trio after the recording The Topography of the Lungs and did not record a
follow-up album (though, played as a trio in the 1977 Company week, and a
five minute clip was captured on Company 6 (Incus 1978)). The three
improvisers had only collaborated before and shortly after on recordings by
larger ensembles as Manfred Schoof’s European Echoes (FMP, 1969) or
Alexander von Schlippenbach’s Globe Unity 1970 (reissued as Globe Unity 67
& 70 (Atavistic, 2001)).
Bailey, Bennink and Parker met again in April 1981 at Théâtre Dunois, while they were all pursuing different directions. Bailey denounced fixed groups,
while Parker and Bailey worked with regular collaborators. But the nine
pieces here, spanning three and a half hours and packed in a 4-disc box, mark an
evolution and further development of the improvisations strategies and
ideas explored on The Topography of the Lungs. Shoemaker mentions the
employment of well-timed and laser-accurate disruption as a preventative
against style, to which each improviser can answer according to his
resourcefulness, push back or stand firm as the shockwaves recede. These
subversive means liberated these free, non-idiomatic sessions from the
legacy of free jazz.
Topographie Parisienne begins with the three musicians playing an extended,
42-minutes improvisation. It is an urgent and explosive piece that sounds
fresh even today, highlighting Bailey’s abstract guitar lines and exotic
sonorities, Parker’s focus on uncompromising exploration of circular
breathing techniques and juggling with tones and overtones, and Bennink
totally intuitive pulse and dadaist, muscular drumming, with many sudden
and ironic and strangely enough, playful disruptions. The interplay is naturally egalitarian, but Bennink always sounds like he is injecting more and
more energy and ready to embrace chaos, even when he briefly plays the
piano. Bailey keeps introducing more delicate and eccentric ideas while
Parker attempts to bridge between these strong characters. This piece
concludes with the trio own abstraction of a free jazz interplay - intense,
thorny and rhythmic. The first disc ends with a short conversational,
intimate duet of Bailey and Parker, much more sparse than the previous
piece and beautifully poetic.
Bailey, Bennink and Parker reunite again for their second and last trio set
this evening (and ever), a 46-minutes piece that begins with Parker
alternating between fiery, free jazz blows and overtone-throat chants, but
soon the trio interplay rolls into a series fast-shifting, intense rhythmic
patterns. Bailey often acts here as the subversive agent who injects sharp
comments and disrupts the tight rhythmic flow of Parker and Bennink.
Later, Parker takes the lead with a fantastic solo comprised of bird calls
with circular breathing techniques, wisely abstracted by Bailey and Bennink
into another dense rhythmic duet, before all conclude in a chaotic
eruption. Parker, who sounds like he has the stamina of a Viking, ends the second
disc with a powerful solo sax improvisation, totally possessed in a fast,
polyphonic process of spiraling tones and overtones, blows and calls.
The third and fourth discs offer more duets and solo piece from Parker. The
second duet of Bailey and Parker is completely different from the first
one, tense and confrontational as if both were playing to themselves. Parker
second solo improvisation suggests a layered texture of fast, brief and
intense calls that patiently surrender to its own inner rational. The third
disc ends with an engaging and even funny duet of Bennink - first on
clarinet and later on drums - and Parker is quite engaging, even funny.
Bennink begins with a brave attempt to mirror Parker’s phrasing and even
his circular breathing techniques, forcing Parker to outmaneuver and
surprise Bennink all the time. Later Bennink pushes Parker to more playful
interplay with imaginative performance on the drums and even blowing a
trombone.
The last, fourth disc opens with an extended duet of Bailey and Bennink
Bailey is not impressed by the antiques of Bennink, but, obviously, nothing
can stop Bennink when he is on a roll. Bailey keeps intervening with more
subtle, elusive and enigmatic ideas, but Bennink - on drums, harmonica,
piano and trombone, is all about crashing the party, in the most noble
sense of this idiom. Bennink - on clarinet and drums - and Parker end this
magnificent evening with humorous and eccentric powerful duet. This time
Parker outsmarts Bennink tricks and games and eventually succeeds to
discipline this wild, dadaist fountain of endless energy into surprising
lyrical and emotional coda.
Merci Beaucoup Jean-Marc Foussat!
6 comments:
Très joli blog merci !
I snagged this immediately when I heard about it but didn't have enough time before going on vacation to listen to it. I'm flying home now to enjoy it.
Incredible recording
Unfortunately i wasn't able to keep up with Eyal's review pace so, probably, it is too late to post a review by now, but i totally agree with his remarks...Most probably the archival recording of 2019, one of those that always make you say "i wish i was there".
What an important trio in the history of improvised music.
I just listened to disc 2. Dear God what a performance by the trio for the last time. First of all, when I heard of this collection and ordered it I conditioned myself for its arrival by reacquainting myself with Topography of the Lungs. I don't know if my musical sensitivities were previously unable to fully appreciate it or the nature of this type of music is to continually unveil new facets but I was floored by what I was hearing seemingly for the first time. But this performance takes things to a different level.
One thing these older recordings accentuate is how Bennink was so much more than "just a drummer". I'd previously enjoyed Han squaring off with Brötzman on clarinet but his interplay on the woodwind with EP's soprano is at an incredibly high level of playing. And even though Parker's solo piece is at a more mature stylistic level than his earlier explorations, he's still brimming with ideas not all of which were subsequently incorporated in his later work.
Forget archival recordings, this belongs on everyone's best of lists of contemporary recordings for 2019.
"The antiques of Bennink"? Surely the 'antics'? Although the former admittedly sounds better!!
This sounds like a fantastic addition to the discography.
Post a Comment
Please note that comments on posts do not appear immediately - unfortunately we must filter for spam and other idiocy.