By Sammy Stein
Efflorescence Volume 1 is a 4CD set from Ivo Perelman and Matthew Shipp.
Already recorded for later release is Efflorescence 2. Shipp and Perelman
have been together on many albums and 7 feature just the two musicians.
Efflorescence is a term used in chemistry and means to flower out - it
happens when hidden salts gather on the surface of a material so the title
seems apt. There is both a chemistry between these musicians and a
flowering of their art and revealing of their hidden depths over the 4 CD
set which is Efflorescence 1.
CD 1, Track 1 is a conversation of 2 instruments, each travelling their own
pathways but converging in harmonic agreement at differing points. Perelman
seems to be taking his saxophone into almost melodic realms whilst Matthew
Shipp offers dissonant chords and also melodic lines which contrast
beautifully with the saxophone workings. Track 2 sees even more melody from
both players, whilst Track 3 sees a more familiar Perelman/Shipp discursive
entree with Perelman veering from altissimo to lower register and Shipp
creating crescendos of scale progressions underneath, coupled with
interludes where both q and a across the registers of both piano and sax.
Track 4 is atmospheric, gentle and spacey, Perelman's suggestive notes
providing pivots for Matthew Shipp to hang his chords on before the track
builds into a breathy altissimo sax line, under which Shipp supports with
chords predicting the sax notes. Track 5 is energetic and a simplex of
complexities swapped between the two players whilst Track 6 has a lot of
Brotsmann-esque sax talk over gentle interspersed notes and chords from the
piano. Track 7 is sax led, Track 8 piano led and in this one the sax
follows the chordal landscapes set out by Shipp. Track 9 introduces an
almost swing atmosphere, both fast and slow and then Track 10 is a piano
led rhythm-infused number with Perelman's sax picking up the leads provided
by strong and linear chord lines. Even the off-notes are perfectly placed
here, making it clear that some intuitive playing is happening. Track 11
has breathy sax lines over piano trinkles and track 12 is verging on the
melodic again as Perelman shows his gentler side over Shipp's classically
lined chords. Track 13 is gorgeous with contrapuntal rhythms played by both
instruments, whilst Shipp intersperses his with heavy, deep chords. The
final track on CD1 sees Perelman once again speaking volumes in altissimo
over contrasting well worked chord progressions from the piano, thunked out
with style.
CD 2, track 1 is a great opener and wake-up number with piano offering
chunky, heavy chords over which Perelman soars on tenor. Track 2 misleads
at the outset with harmonies aplenty before each instrument diverges,
Perelman treading his own redolent pathway over the steady classic lines of
the piano. The ending has a madrigal atmosphere at one point which works
well before a controlled descent to the end. Track 3 sets off at a jazzy
swing with Perelman using a repeated riff, unusual for him, over Shipp's
well placed chords and lines - that is before the sax leads up and away and
Shipp changes the chord lines to lower, emphasised scale descents. Track 4
is busy, with Perelman's altissimo lines in contrast with deep register
notes from the piano for the most part until the sax solos into breathy
final notes. Track 5 and 6 are on-going conversations between the 2
instruments with track 6 being particularly verbose from the sax. Track 7
is gentler but not easier, with counter-rhythms from Shipp over which the
sax melody flows, held in check by the emergent chords which rear from the
piano. Track 8 is a maelstrom of sound initially, crashing piano and
sighing, singing sax but it settles into a quirky and dissonant
conversation, each instrument seemingly following the other, though it is
not clear which is doing what at times. Perelman's control in altissimo is
impressive here. Track 9 is more melodic from both players, whilst Track 10
and 11 see a return to the more conversational style which is familiar
between the two musicians here.
CD 3 Track 1 is a surprise because Perelman is indistinctly melodic mode-
at least at the start, before his innate creativity gets the better of him
and the sax is let loose, soaring over the strong chords from the piano.
Track 2 begins with crashing, crushing chords from the piano, over which
the timorous staccato of the altissimo lines come in before the sax line
becomes more forceful and soon the sax is talking over the piano chords -
challenging the noisy attitude with pertinent and perfectly placed cheeky
notes inserted into any gaps. A lovely track and the unspoken communication
can be felt between the musicians. Track 3 is almost a respite after that,
a much gentler affair whilst Track 4 is gentler still, more melodic and
harmonious - well, until half way through when it digresses before
returning to gentleness. Track 5 is rather beautiful but in a different way
as Shipp and Perelman take turns about setting the tempo and rhythms whilst
Track 6 is more dissonant and includes a lovely forceful ascension from
Perelman over some quite extravagant piano before Perelman counter sit with
some buzzy, fast fingered work , finishing with altissimo. Track 7 is
breathy, gentle and almost tuneful sax over equally gentle piano lines
whilst Track 8 is breathless sax over rivulets of notes from the piano,
developing into a competitive yet precise divergence with both players in
upper registers, playing faster and furious before bringing it back down
again. Track 9 is short, sweet and sees both players intuitively picking up
each other's lead whilst Track 10 follows a similar pattern but with
extended lines and heavier chords interspersed from Shipp, over which
Perelman stuts in altissimo and flows beautifully in lower register. Track
11 is set out by gapped chords, providing Perelman the perfect opportunity
to insert a melodic episode before both players have had enough of that and
chords develop into crashes, the sax soars up and down the scales with
tremolo notes at the ends and of course a bit of spoken altissimo. Sweet.
Track 12 is part melody, part counter flowing harmonies whilst Track 13 is
more of a free flowing conversation. Track 14 is gentle and harmonious
versus ebullient in turns.
CD4 Track 1 has all the essence of a funereal march before the sax sings
across the top, adding 4 note phrases to lift the dirge-like piano chords.
Piano catches on and changes to a lighter touch which is welcomed and the
sax soars, creating some emotive lines. Track 2 is heavy from piano, light
from sax which makes a great contrast for the ears, whilst Track 3 contains
some great challenging sax lines overflowing the piano chords, which are
progressive and classical. Track 4 is a lighter affair, with fast but light
fingered sax workings over piano chords which feel like they walk the
keyboard. Track 5 begins with a piano phrase over which the sax enters and
takes the lead. The piano follows, setting the chords now and the sax
follows - a case of perfect juxtaposition and turn about between the two
players. Track 6 is easy on the ears from both players with melodic, high
register sax lines and wavering notes over solid piano whilst Track 7 is
faster, trickier and has a fun element sewn in amongst the crashing chords
and tenor sax lines. Track 8 is interesting with short repeated melodic
phrasing from the sax over intuitively placed chords and lines from the
piano with a crazy but lovely section where both players playing their own
challenging lines yet each is clearly acutely aware of what the other is
playing. Track 9 is fun with piano setting up rivulets of deep notes over
which the altissimo lines soar and play. Track 10 is more melodic from the
sax, albeit with a twist - over and under which the piano gently assets its
lead. A gentle manner with which to finish.
There is intuition and sensitivity in the playing, an understanding between
the musicians yet many times, the character of each emerges.
Efflorescence has another meaning - in botany it is when a lot of flowers
appear suddenly and this too might explain why each track has an
alternative name - flower names. From Cosmos to, Rose, Amaryllis, Jasmine,
Sage, Nightshade, Forsythia and more. The plants chosen range from climbers
to thick set and sticky plants, from clinging tendrils to tiny demure
florets, which seems very appropriate because the tracks on this 4 CD set
are variable, each with their own form, their own life, differing energy
and an overall tenderness which seems to seep into many of the tracks -
possibly part of the musicians' subliminal characters perhaps? As such,
Perelman and Shipp have taken different blooms, different fragrances and
essences, some ornamental, some useful and just a few deadly. They have
combined them into a bouquet and presented them to the listener, tied
together with the ribbon which connects the musicians - improvisation,
passion , energy and joy. The bouquet is beautiful, its fragrance divine
but just be careful and watch out for the deadly nightshade. Excellent
music indeed.
2 comments:
Why does ivo perelman release so many CDs .he seems to have a compulsive need to record and release every note he plays .he has made some good music but this is overkill
Thank you very much for this excellent review.
Post a Comment
Please note that comments on posts do not appear immediately - unfortunately we must filter for spam and other idiocy.