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Wednesday, December 4, 2024

David Maranha & Rodrigo Amado - Wrecks (Nariz Entupido, 2024) *****

By Stef Gijssels

I'm not sure whether many duets between saxophone and organ have been performed before, but this album is an absolute must-hear, a ferocious dialogue between one of the leading saxophonists of today, Rodrigo Amado, and his fellow Portuguese David Maranha on electric organ. Amado no longer needs introduction, and we have written on Maranha twice during our long existence: he's apparently very active in elecroacoustic work and experimental music, with over twenty albums as a leader. 

The match on this album is perfect. Maranha creates an incredibly terrifying foundation for Amado's magisterial sax, for an unrelenting expressive noise and drone trip that lasts more than forty-four minutes without interruption, steady, massive, disconcering, gloomy. The organ's massive sound is scorching, grinding, searing, blazing like fire, burning like a blast furnace. It's industrial, violent without any melodies or harmonies, a never-ending stream of multiphonic noise and sonic terror. 

Above this, Amado's sax leads us to a multitude of human emotions, from tenderness, sadness and melancholy to absolute agony, misery and torment. He soothes, he sings, he laments, he howls, he screams. In contrast to the often horrifying organ, the sax contains at times contains some moments of hope, some aspirational sounds for something better than could grow out of the cesspit we find our world in. You can call this 'doom jazz' or 'dark jazz' or whatever description pleases you, the overall sound is still pretty unique. 

The albums is called "Wrecks" in reference to the text that accompanies the album about the sorry states of our world: the wars, the environment, extremist politics and inequality. 

"The wrecks of a decaying age were there to be seen either by the new gentrified glittering façades under the sunny daylight or, less cynically, under the over-glaring LEDs street lights by night".

If there's anything - even any art form - that can convey the state of our world, then it is music. It is this music: creative, impressive, relentless, deep, beautiful, impactful. It's a remarkable and unique feat by two musicians who found a very special common voice and project. 

Brilliant!

Listen and download from Bandcamp


Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Ivo Perelman, Tom Rainey - Duologues 1 Turning Point (Ibeji Music, 2024)

By Don Phipps

Stellar spontaneous compositions are a hallmark for Ivo Perelman. And his collaboration with drummer Tom Rainey on Duologues 1 Turning Point is a perfect illustration. The improvs shift mood and explore feelings of driving intensity or subtle repose. What astonishes most about Perelman is the precision he brings to his sax playing – whether it is lightning runs, sharp staccato tonguing, or slurs that slip and slide like an ocean-bound eel. But more than any of this is his tone – a tone that recalls Ben Webster – an abstract Ben Webster of course. No matter how avant garde the note series, the tone is ever present, and like Webster’s, is full throated and open with a special soulful throttle. This is especially noteworthy, given Ivo’s style of passionate playing.

Like Perelman, Tom Rainey has long been a fixture on the new music scene. His work with Tim Berne and Mark Helias is significant [check out his drumming on Berne’s excellent Science Friction album (Screwgun 2002) or his trio work with Helias and Tony Malaby on Helias’s set of Open Loose albums]. In 2022, Rainey worked with his wife, tenor saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock, and guitarist Mary Halvorson on the wonderful Combobulated. And just this year, Rainey joined Perelman and Helias on Perelman’s excellent Truth Seeker album.

Both Perelman and Rainey bring their A game to the studio. And what makes this effort significant is the way the musicians play off each other, in arcing conversations. Hear how Rainey’s colorful all over drumming – measured and tasteful, yet at times, explosive (check out the ending of Track 6) - offers a colorful background to Perelman’s superb sax lines – lines that seem to stretch the saxophone register like a rope pulled taut and then released.

Take “Track One,” which is full of shifts and turns. Like an automobile skirting around corners, slowing suddenly, then revving back up to full speed, the music probes, cajoles, and toward the end, explodes. Or “Track Two,” Perelman’s bluesy wails mesh perfectly with Rainey’s loose toms, snare, and cymbals.

Perhaps the album’s most intense tracks are “Track Six” and “Track Seven.” On “6,” Perelman opens with a beautiful flurry atop Rainey’s action across the trap set. Then he develops challenging sax explorations that run the length of the saxophone keys. Rainey responds with a heated, funky, head-nodding beat, an unusual yet precise rhythmic development, one that incorporates all the drums and the high hat/cymbals. Check too his gentle bass drum taps - just heavy enough to establish the rhythm without being overbearing. As the number progresses, Rainey’s work become more aggressive, then very free as all over drumming takes over. Perelman hits the intensity bar as well, with waterfall runs that ultimately finish with hard bites on the reed - taking the music to the stratosphere of high notes.

On “Track Seven,” Rainey shows off his brush work, and Perelman slurs along like a person might stagger down an alley after a hard night of drinking. The piece evolves, with Perelman’s high wails -almost screeches - the highlight, and Rainey leans in with his brushes on the toms and snare. Listen to Rainey’s control of the bass drum beats while channeling energy across the trap set – a crossing that includes dance taps on the cymbals, snares, and toms, all the strokes extremely delicate and precise. Perelman’s creative running motifs float like a butterfly and sting like a bee (my apologies to Muhammad Ali), and as the piece ends, he hits a supreme high note that extends outward to some unknown horizon.

Duologues 1 Turning Point is a conversation between two jazz giants – the discussion at times playful, serious, penetrating, and full of anxious energy. This musical discussion is open to all of us. Enjoy! 

 

Monday, December 2, 2024

All is quiet on the southern front: dispatches from the free Italian shores

Federico Ughi feat, Leo Genovese and Brandon Lopez - Infinite cosmos calling you you (577 Records, 2024) 

52 years, from Rome, NYC based since 2000 after some years spent roaming from London to Tangeri, Ughi engaged in a longtime and fruitful partnership with Pennsylvanian flutist Daniel Carter with whom he founded 577 Records. This record, the first under his own name in 5 years, sees Federico teaming up with the monster keyboardist Leo Genovese from Brooklyn and fellow New Yorker, upright bassist Brandon Lopez, to deliver some of the most intriguing and challenging music we had the chance to listen to throughout the year. Notes by the record company highlight the “connection between artists, music and audience” where the musicians represent “conduits for the delivery of cosmic sound, the music world, the cosmic dimension of sound and light”. Easy to quote Sun Ra among the influences and not only because the last song of the album took its title from the name of the mythological artist, but if this can’t be denied, it’s definitely less mundane trying to label and pigeonhole such doom, dissonant and dystopian sounds who often driving Scandinavian or Japanese free projects to take shape in our mind. Anyway, the perfect soundtrack for this crooked and vile time.



Roberto Ottaviano, Danilo Gallo, Ferdinando Faraò - Lacy in the sky with diamonds 

The subject matter of the cover versions and the tribute albums is so fascinating, intricate and complex to deserve a Blog’s masterclass, here we simply tell about a champion and two standout musicians who decided to pay homage to the late great Steve Lacy on the occasion of the twentieth anniversary of his death. We’re talking about Roberto Ottaviano (soprano sax) the champion of the Trio, trained by Luigi Nono, Evan Parker and Jimmy Giuffre, professor at several music academies across the globe, collaborator of Chet Baker, Enrico Rava, Han Bennink, Mal Waldron and Keith Tippet; Danilo Gallo (double bass, banjo, guitar), eclectic musician with a broad sonic perimeter encompassing jazz, avant, ethnic music, he played all over the world, teaming up with the likes of Uri Caine, Marc Ribot, Francesco Bearzatti, Gianluigi Trovesi, Anthony Coleman; Ferdinando Faraò (drums, percussion) who, after a period of time spent in the ensemble of Tiziana Ghiglioni, Claudio Fasoli e Tango Seis, had the chance to play, during their italian tours, along with Lee Konitz, Mal Waldron, Steve Grossman, Franco D’Andrea and Paul Jeffrey. The structure of the record sees seven Lacy’s songs performed by the group (Esteem, Deadline, Napping, And the sky weeps, Owl, Bound, Prospectus), “chosen by chance according to our tastes”, says Ottaviano and four originals (Bone/These foolish things, No one flew over the cuckoo’s nest, Diamond flocks accident, Hard landing), “impromptu songs generated by climate in the recording studio”. The polar star of the project is set on the map, directly quoting Lacy’s words: “Risk is at the heart of jazz, every note we play is a risk”, meaning that we won't find here a slavish and calligraphic rendition of Lacy, but rather a free expression that in his music finds the ignition to blast and then disperse in a thousand streams.



Massimo De Mattia Suonomadre - Domicide

Self-taught flutist from Pordenone (the rich and hyper contradictory north-east of Italy), with past collaborations with Gianluca Trovesi, Ares Tavolazzi, Tom Kirk, Herb Robertson, among others, De Mattia wrote Domicide as the third chapter of his own project Suonomadre. When the former “Riot” and “Ethnoshock!” have been recorded live with an electric band, this time the record saw the light in a recording studio with the musicians strictly using acoustic instruments. Accompanied by the faithful pards Zlatko Caucic (voice, drums, percussion), Giorgio Pagoric (piano) and Luigi Vitale (drums, marimba, percussion), Massimo doesn’t step back of an inch from the deep nature of his music, defined “rebel music, overtly and unconditionally”. The political tension coming from social and environmental worries is the propellant with the acoustic set-up as well, being text and subtext at same time. Musically speaking, the leader put the tracks on the ground through hyper free, oblique and extreme sounds; the drumming, enriched with objects frantically beaten, is constantly forced to pander to the rolling of the wagon, accompanied by the atonal Tayloresque piano and by the colorful percussion, a polyrhythmic added value for a beautifully working final outcome.

Sunday, December 1, 2024

Christian Lillinger - Sunday Interview

Photo by Erich Werkmann FFM

  1. What is your greatest joy in improvised music?

    For me, improvisation is a wonderful way of dealing constructively with freedom and the indeterminate. It allows me to realize anything I can imagine. Of course, it requires work on the imagination, through intensive engagement with the processes and passion for the music, otherwise it wouldn't be possible.To quote a phrase from Adorno: The question was no longer ‘how can musical meaning be organized, but how can organization be meaningful.'

  2. What quality do you most admire in the musicians you perform with?

    That they are able to create meaning and are open to all experiments. That they are open to every new question to which there is not yet a direct answer. So that they are truly free to create free music that enables connections to the future.

  3. Which historical musician/composer do you admire the most?

    I cannot limit myself here, there are countless names from all areas of history and cultures.To name a few: Xenakis, Ellington, Coltrane, Monk, Stockhausen, Webern, Berg, Shorter, Parker, Wyschnegradsky, Feldman, Taylor, MF Doom, Grisey, Berio u.v.a……….

  4. If you could resurrect a musician to perform with, who would it be?

    I can't really answer that either, because the outward impression is less and less sufficient for me to be able to imagine something that might fit. I would have loved to work with: Charlie Parker, Cecil Taylor, Mamady KaÏta, Iannis Xenakis, John Coltrane, Duke Ellington and Max Roach. From the 50s and 60s I would have liked to exchange ideas and learn from Karlheinz Stockhausen, Pierre Boulez, Iannis Xenakis, Luigi Nono.

  5. What would you still like to achieve musically in your life?

    More music and music processes from different continents and countries such as Africa, India, Japan, and South America.

  6. Are you interested in popular music and - if yes - what music/artist do you particularly like?

    Sure! There are always very refreshing productions from, for example: Tyler The Creator, Beyonce, Rihanna, Busta Rhymes, Justin Timberlake, Michael Jackson, Aphex Twin, Little Simz, MF Doom, Earl Sweatshirt u.v.a. It comes and goes to me.

  7. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

    I would have started with music and philosophy much earlier.

  8. Which of your albums are you most proud of?

    That is difficult! The greatest pride doesn't exist for me, as it has its own time. I will only name a few here:

    • DLW Grammar II (plaist)
    • Open Form for Society (plaist)
    • Open Form for Society LIVE (plaist)
    • Konus (plaist)
    • Antumbra, Penumbra (plaist)
    • Supermodern Vol.II
    • Beats I & II by DLW (plaist)
    • Second Reason of my ensemble Grund (clean feed)
    • The first Grünen album (clean feed)
    • Amok Amor (boomslang)
    • Umbra II (intakt)

  9. Once an album of yours is released, do you still listen to it? And how often?

    Very irregularly! Very often during the production process, of course, and every now and then afterwards.

  10. Which album (from any musician) have you listened to the most in your life?

    That is also very difficult! But of course there are also classics like

    • A Love Supreme, John Coltrane
    • Boulez Structures I & II (Kontarsky/Kontarsky),
    • Piano Sonata 2, Morton Feldman for Bunita Marcus,
    • The Viola in My Life I-IV (ECM), Morton Feldman
    • Mos Def & Talib Kweli Are Black Star
    •  [Live At The] Plugged Nickel and Kind of Blue,Miles Davis
    • Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), Wu-Tang Clan

  11. What are you listening to at the moment?

    Can't remember right now:)!

  12. What artist outside music inspires you?

    Also the one I just thought of, here. Let's also add writers:
    Thomas Bernhard, Sigmund Freud, Joseph Beuys, Theodor w. Adorno, Bruce Lee, Jean Tinguely, and of course many more I can't think of right now. 

Christian Lillinger on the Free Jazz Blog: