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The Outskirts - Dave Rempis (ts, as), Ingebrigt Håker Flaten (b), Frank Rosaly (dr)

Schorndorf, Manufaktur, March 2025

Jörg Hochapfel (p), John Hughes (b), Björn Lücker (d) - Play MONK

Faktor! Hamburg. January, 2025

Sifter: Jeremy Viner (s), Kate Gentile (d), Marc Ducret (g)

KM28. Berlin. January, 2025

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

The Young Mothers - Better If You Let It (Sonic Transmission Records, 2025)

By  Martin Schray

Loyal readers of this blog may know about my ambiguous relationship with jazz-rock and fusion. In the early 1980s I was fascinated by musicians like Al DiMeola, Stanley Clarke (and their project Return to Forever), the United Jazz & Rock Ensemble or Jean-Luc Ponty because I was impressed by their virtuosity. However, I quickly got bored of it since it often seemed to be about showing off that virtuosity and less about authenticity, creativity, subtle ideas and sound. It wasn’t until a few years ago that I learned to appreciate some of my old albums again (e.g. John McLaughlin’s Inner Mounting Flame, Weather Report’s first album or Tony Williams’s Million Dollar Legs). Another reason were newer jazz-rock formations that I also found exciting, such as The Nels Cline Singers, Bushman’s Revenge or The Young Mothers. The latter, founded by the Norwegian bassist Ingebrigt Håker Flaten during his time in Austin/Texas, where he lived from 2009 to 2021, actually had the goal of combining as much cross-genre music as possible. Therefore, they first played live extensively for several years before their first album, A Mothers Work Is Ever Done, was released in 2014. Morose followed in 2018. Finally, Håker Flaten moved back to Norway in 2021 and it took until 2024 before the band managed to record a new album - quite a long time in the free jazz scene.

If you already liked the group from their previous albums, you can sit back and relax, because the open, various approach is still the band’s main characteristic and the line-up has also remained the same: Jawwaad Taylor (trumpet, rhymes, electronics and programming), Jason Jackson (tenor and baritone sax), Stefan Gonzalez (vibraphone, drums, percussion and voice), Jonathan F. Horne (guitar), Ingebrigt Håker Flaten (acoustic and electric bass) and Frank Rosaly (drums, electronics and programming). According to the label, the songwriting for the new album was more collective than on its predecessors, which is reflected in an even greater stylistic range. The Young Mothers once again present an energetic mixture of jazz, prog-rock, hiphop, electronics and free improvisation, whereby prefabricated ideas are juxtaposed with free improvisation. Complexity and directness are no contradiction. However, the question with such music is whether the result is inconsistent or whether it has a clear line despite all the diversity. Here the answer is definitely the latter. Despite the often surprising twists and turns within the pieces, the music seems well thought out and organic.

The beginning of the last and longest track on the album, “Scarlet Woman Lodge“, is reminiscent of Miles Davis’s Get Up With It phase, before a shouter sneaks into the piece and the guitar and drums push the track in the direction of heavy metal. The title track and “Ljim” are relaxed but quite intricate jazz-hip-hop pieces, and you can’t deny echoes of Alfa Mist. “Hymn” develops away from composed passages into classic, hard free jazz, while “Song for a Poet“ has delicate ambient qualities.

Better If You Let It is great fun, hopefully Håker Flaten will manage to keep the band together. The more projects of this quality there are, the less chance I have of losing my love for jazz-rock again.

Better If You Let It is available on vinyl, as a CD and as a download.

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Give the Composer Some

By Paul Acquaro

In the most recent of El Intruso's Encuesta 2024 – Periodistas Internacionales poll, in which participating music writers are asked a series of questions asking about the best of in many categories, drummer Devin Gray and bassist Max Johnson made it into my choices under best composer, even though these two are probably considered more frequently under the best drummer and bassist category. Although no one has asked me, I thought it would be interesting to share what prompted my decision. While I cannot claim to have a scientifically valid selection method, both Gray's Melt all the Guns II and Johnson's I'll See you Again really stuck out to me as great examples of disciplined trios featuring compositions that allowed the individual players to express themselves freely.

Devin Gray - Melt All the Guns II (Rataplan, 2024)



Last we heard from drummer Devin Gray was the solo recording Most Definitely that mixed electronics with percussion for an expressive outing, which itself had followed in the a duo recording with fellow drummer and electronics experimenter Gerald Cleaver, 27 Lick, a few years earlier. Orienting here back to more melodic terrains, Gray reconnects with his compelling trumpet, piano and drums trio with a lively set of tunes.
 
The trio on Melt All the Guns II is a continuation of Gray's trio with trumpeter Ralph Alessi and pianist Angelica Sanchez with whom he released a self-titled EP in 2021. Now, on this full-length recording, we meet French pianist Myslaure Augustin, a convert from the classical piano world who studied with trumpeter Ralph Alessi in Switzerland. Augustin does a commendable job bringing energy to the compositions, starting from the jaunty grooves of the opener 'East Berlin 2024' to the fractured solo in the swooning 'Administration Rulez' and the sparsely beautiful arpeggios on the ruminative opening of "No More Walls.'
 
Alessi's trumpet is sharp and precise, imbuing the clear melodic statements both a lithe laser focus and an emotional gravity. Again the opener, 'East Berlin 2024,' after the drums and piano introduce the underlying groove, the trumpet goes from highlighting the contours to delivering a forceful melodic statement. On the other side, Alessi's work on '77 Posaunen' is probing, seemingly in a questioning mode with the piano. On the closer, 'Broom Lyfe,' Alessi adopts a muted tone, employed to a melancholic end. The track provides a contemplative ending to an energetic recording.
 
I haven't singled out Grey's singular contributions here, but it is his compositions that really make their mark here. It is safe to say, however, that he is everywhere, his expressive playing supporting, guiding and shaping each track of this excellent album. 
 
 

Max Johnson - I'll See You Again (Adhyâropa Records, 2024)


One thing that both of these recordings have in common is introducing newer names on the scene. Not that Johnson is an old name himself, only in his mid-30s, Johnson has a mind-boggling discography and feet in New Music, bluegrass, modern and free-jazz (no, he's not a quadruped, it's just a saying). Currently a doctoral candidate and an active educator, Johnson still finds time to make some very impressive music. Though I'm not sure if I'll See You Again still qualifies as his latest, it certainly is a hell of a trio recording, that in addition to featuring his own playing, introduces some newer faces on the scene, namely Neta Ranaan on tenor saxophone and Eliza Salem on drums. 
 
From the moment that the feisty opener, 'Barberous Jape,' explodes from the speakers, Ranaan is ready. She burns through the head, a vigorous post-bop melody played over a syncopated rhythm and takes the first solo as Johnson and Salem drive the piece forward. After a slowly building solo, the way is cleared for Johnson's hearty bass solo, which segues seamlessly into a nuanced drum solo from Salem. The group comes back together, reprising the head - a classic compositional form and a high class performance. The next track, 'Chestnut Squid,' is a more contemplative tune, Ranaan begins with a legato melody and soon lets Johnson take over laying the songs foundations. 'Tiny Beautiful' is a ballad but with some bite, while 'Scribbles' cooks along at mid-tempo, allowing the melodic nature improvisational approach to boil at an unhurried pace. The closer 'Farewell to Old Friends' showcases the most heartfelt piece of the album. Starting with melody that is likely encoded somewhere in our cultural DNA - a bit of Old Lang Syne, a bit of an old American folk-song that you maybe sung in music class in your New Jersey elementary school, and every bit as evocative as it should be. Ranaan treats the melody achingly, lending it a feeling of loss and resilience that sticks around after the music fades. 
 
A solid piece of work from this working trio that is both a great example of Johnson's compelling compositional work and a perfect introduction to Ranaan and Salem's playing, if you don't know them already. 
 

Monday, March 31, 2025

Skin of A Drum – Alexithymia (Aosmosis, 2024)

By Nick Ostrum

Emerging out of a canceled-gig-turned-studio-session, Skin of a Drum is the quartet of Pavel Aleshin, Serena Pagani, Sascha Stadlmeier, and William Rossi. (Disclaimer: Rossi is a fellow contributor to FJB.) Pagani, Stadlmeier and Rossi play guitars, Aleshin electronics, and all four contribute various other effects, loops, objects, and processing and to which Pagani also adds her voice. Alexithymiais their first release and apart from a quick warm-up session, the first meeting of these four musicians.

Alexithymia is a psychological trait wherein a person has difficulty comprehending and expressing emotions. Given the fluid and ambiguous nature of Alexithymia the album, it is a perfect title. The paints a picture finely hued, but also enigmatic. First, the sounds are often indeterminate. One hears drone, glitches, whispers, gurgles, bubbles, fragments of guitar, heavy distorted chords, howls, synthesized (?) natural sounds, space sounds. This is soundscaping, but with an emphasis on collaboration – real time and in the production stages – and live, in-the-moment improvisation, the more human elements of that oft-sterile practice. That humanity is also embodied in Pagani’s vocals, which range from the almost unrecognizable to crisp near-operatics (about two-thirds in) and the array of guitar sounds that periodically pop out of and intermingle with the less placeable elements.

The overall effect is that of a storm and, given the title, an internal storm of inarticulable and maybe inexact feelings. In that ambiguity lies the pull of this release. It is not a perfect expression of love or anger or contentment. Rather, it is, by design, a confused excavation of some emotion(s), not quite identifiable, but clearly impactful and, in its inexact state, disruptive and unnerving. But then, near the end, a series of strums, then an all-out chordal melody, over which Pagani sings, breaks out, briefly evoking Fushitsusha’s blackened prom ballads (especially the stunning track 8 on3/4). The winds still gust until the end, offering a much welcome passage of reconciliation that confirms just how well-crafted and thought-out all this cacophony is.

Alexithymiais available as a download and CD from Bandcamp: 

Sunday, March 30, 2025

Chuck Roth @ DMG

Chuck Roth is a guitarist living and working in New York City. Here, he is playing a solo set at the venerable Downtown Music Gallery, exploring the sounds of the electric guitar, following his muse where it seems to take the textured, atonal melody. Roth has a debut recording, Document 1, out on Relative Pitch Records.  

Saturday, March 29, 2025

Tom Weeks - Paranoid II (Wolfsblood, 2025) *****

By Don Phipps

Alto saxophonist Tom Weeks creates an amazing tour de force of muscular, musical intensity on his album Paranoid II, an outing he dedicates to the great Art Ensemble of Chicago founder and AACM member Roscoe Mitchell (now 84 years young). Weeks, who composed all the numbers, is joined by James Paul Nadien on drums and Shogo Yamagishi on bass. Together, the trio rip, roar, and soar – creating soundscapes of heated beauty.

The opening “I Hate You With a Passion (for Andre Nickatina)” begins with a slow sax lament, but as it progresses, it develops into a sweeping wave of hard blowing before returning to the lament. On “Dummy Data,” there’s explosive honky tonk, pushed by Nadien’s race across the trap set – no drum or cymbal untouched - and Yamagishi’s wonderful speed walk plucks. Weeks squeals in fury, a dynamism that reminds one of Mitchell at his most penetrating. And Nadien’s solo, a robust coastal storm replete with fury, demonstrates his vigor.

Heavy syncopated action is the hallmark of “Kulture Krusaders.” The rhythm section kicks up a virtuosic outburst – the listener propelled like a jet across the sky. One hears Mitchell in Weeks’ tone and prowess – his boiling romp backed by Nadien’s everywhere-at-once drumming. Weeks also shows off his circular breathing, playing a note without pausing for a breath as the bass and drums roil about - a washing machine gone haywire. Then everything comes to a sudden stop, followed by a wild and stuttered pulse in edge-of-your-seat unison.

“A New American Promise” insists on a clownish Beethoven 5th motif. Is Weeks’ wisecracking tone mocking the “promise?” Say it’s not so – LOL. Nadien fascinates with his two-hand unity cycle, and Yamagishi rifles up and down the bass neck – but always with a sense of control, while Weeks’ sax develops soulful arcs that shoot to the sky. Another wild ride, “Eleven Rings (for Phil Jackson)” lets Weeks again demonstrate circular breathing [Editor Note: I first heard this technique at a stunning solo Roscoe Mitchell concert on February 4, 1979, at Boston’s Lulu White’s Jazz Supper Club, in a tour celebrating the release of Mitchell’s 1978 highly recommended release of L-R-G / The Maze / S II Examples(Nessa Records – N-14/15). It was so innovative I have never forgotten the experience].

Weeks’ circular series begins with a long trill that evolves into controlled runs atop Yamagishi’s bowing and Nadien’s emergent drumming fireworks. Weeks continues his series, becoming more frenetic, and no matter how fluid the sax and drum, Yamagishi uses the bow to propel the music forward. As the piece ends, the bottom drops out and Weeks repeats his trilling opening. Simply beautiful!

On “A Fire Upon The Deep,” Yamagishi performs solo, his bass lines fluttering about like a fish out of water – his attack precise and willful. Weeks exhorts with powerful legato passages – and later plays in unison with Yamagishi. He also exhibits machine gun style tonguing skills and adds slurring runs to the mix. Nadien jumps in with sonic arcs - his sticks hit the drums with slick rolls and rollicking splashes. All hell breaks loose – the music’s raw energy bursts like a sun shooting out flares in multiple directions. The cut concludes with a slow Sisyphus exertion - pushing a boulder of hard notes up a steep mountainside.

Weeks concludes with the bopish Gaye Sex. Yamagishi shines, his bouncy bass complex and explosive. Then he lays down a line as Weeks joins him – a funky strut, a summer stroll along a pier, the red sun setting in the distance. This number is pure fun – Yamagishi’s bass generates head-nodding funk and Nadien plops and strikes the trap set as Weeks celebrates with a sax jubilee.

Paranoid II is special. Really. Special. It has ENERGY. It has inflamed power. And it consists of a ferocious yet controlled performance. A five-star review for a five-star album. Damn the torpedoes – full steam ahead! And, to borrow from David Lynch, “damn good coffee.”

Archived 1979 Interview: Roscoe Mitchell Hits New Level of Musical Existence

Roscoe Mitchell, circa 1978. Photographer unknown.

By Don Phipps

Roscoe Mitchell sat down with me on February 4, 1979 before he gave a solo recital on alto saxophone in front of a full house at the now defunct Lulu White’s Supper Club in Boston, Massachusetts. This interview, published in its entirety in the September 10, 1979, edition of The Daily Free Press, where I was the Art Editor and a staff writer from 1978-1980 while a student at Boston University, has since been buried, available only on microfiche at the university library. It has never been published on the Web. To me, this interview is significant enough to warrant re-publication here. Mitchell today is 84 but when I interviewed him, he was just 38 – a good portion of his life and artistic output yet to come

Mitchell and his great jazz group, The Art Ensemble of Chicago (consisting of Mitchell, trumpeter Lester Bowie, fellow saxophonist Joseph Jarman, and a rhythm section of Malachi Favors Maghostut and Famoudou Don Moye), had returned the previous year from a decade long expatriation from the USA. This return was ebulliently celebrated with a raucous North American debut and performance of their entire seminal Nice Guys album (ECM 1126) at Jonathan Swift’s Pub in Cambridge, MA, on October 23, 1978. At the time of this concert, I had no idea who the Art Ensemble of Chicago even was! All I knew was that Anthony Braxton was opening the concert with a series of solo alto saxophone improvisations, and that I did not want to miss the event. Imagine then seeing the Art Ensemble play without any bias, pro or con, without knowing who they were, or having any idea just how important they were in the history of free jazz.

The solo concert Mitchell performed after this interview was just as special. It came on the heels of his 1978 release of L-R-G / The Maze / S II Examples (Nessa n-14/15). I noted in my coverage of that concert that a woman in the audience remarked loudly that Roscoe could “make that thing (his alto saxophone) say everything.” I would argue that truer words were never spoken.

My introduction to the interview began with the following:

“Mitchell, 38, is a founding member of the Chicago-based Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM) and the mastermind behind what many consider to be the greatest jazz combo of the decade, the Art Ensemble of Chicago. He also plays almost every wind instrument imaginable, from the flute to the contrabass saxophone. But even above these achievements, Roscoe aspires to the principle of the artist uncompromised, seeking to extend the boundaries of musical ideas. In a number of audible ways, he and his followers are changing the concept of what we think of as music. When I talked to him, he was both attentive and conscientious. His thoughtful answers about jazz and music as a whole revealed a man who possesses a confidence in manner as well as music. Above all, he was friendly. The following are excerpts from that interview:]

After years of working with The Art Ensemble, why have you begun to record on your own again?

Mitchell: I had started to do things on my own, so my name had started to go out again. For instance… as time went on the more push and sacrifice people had to do in the music, we formed (in 1969) the Art Ensemble has a collective. I had devoted a lot of my energy to the Art Ensemble. In the mid-70s the first things that started to come out on my own was, I think, the Sackville recordings, solo things, and the quartet and that, and I think that interest was starting to build up in me again. Then when Nonaah (Nessa 9/10) came out, it got such a good critic response, it was the natural order of things.

Your new album (Roscoe Mitchell, Nessa 14/15) contains compositions unlike anything I’ve ever heard. Can you tell our readers something about the pieces on the album and explain what you are trying to accomplish?

Mitchell: The album contains a piece (“The Maze”) for eight percussionists on one side, and on the other whole side is a solo piece for soprano saxophone (“S II Examples”). On the other whole record, it’s a double album set, is a trio (“LRG”) with myself, (Wadada) Leo Smith, and George Lewis. The trio is a thing where we take the complete reed spectrum and surround it with the complete brass spectrum and then you have all of these interactions of sound going on. It’s a form of meditative music. What I really like about it is that you can be listening to it and you can go away from it, and wherever you come back to it, you can go right back to listening to it at that spot.

The soprano sax piece, “S II Examples,” is fascinating. What are you attempting musically?

Mitchell: “S II Examples” is a one to five projected piece for soprano saxophone. The Examples section is where I take all the fingerings of the saxophone, turn it all around, play it in a lot of different ways and produce different sound patterns. I then take these sound patterns, say I take one range of sound patterns, play them on tape, listen to them, then maybe take these sound patterns and start to move sound patterns around instead of notes. These are just examples of sound patterns. I’ll probably release a tape to go with the book that catalogues the various sounds. “S II Examples, tape example 1” for instance: “Delayed side B-flat key.” Play that example. You could have sound movement, Example 1 with the delayed side B-flat fingering to Example 2, a low B trill. If I have these particular fingerings happening, then I’m going to have new sounds. It can allow you to move in music in ways that can trick you. You might even think that it’s going a certain way and it goes another way.

You say you set up this recent series of concerts to do improvisational music. What does improvisation mean to you?

Mitchell: Improvisation is in a really growing stage. What happened was in the early sixties, when people started experimenting with freer forms of music, there were a lot of choices to choose from… because there were so many things that had not been dealt with. Everything felt new and fresh. Now we’ve established certain things that can happen within certain kinds of musical situations… It’s a constant thing, like being able to improvise, being able to study improvisation, to be able to take the idea of improvisation to the next level, improvise on that level, study improvisation, and go on from there. You build up all this information, and then release that information, experiment with it, and it keeps opening up all the time. What I’m doing now… is investigating the alto as much as I can in a solo context so that I can have some control over that medium. I figure that playing by yourself is the other end of playing with a lot of people.

Do you have any musical influences?

Mitchell: I just get the whole thing on people. I’ll go through a day and I’ll listen to Duke Ellington, or go through another day and listen to Bird (Charlie Parker), or go another day and listen to Bach. Whatever is appealing to me at the time. Currently I’m in a real study period in music. I’ll listen to some double record sets of Duke Ellington, and I’ll notice how much music was on these double-record sets. After you listen to the whole record, you couldn’t even remember what you heard on the first side because so many things had gone down in the music.

Who did you listen to as you were growing up?

Mitchell:When I was growing up there wasn’t such a divide between my parents and myself and what we were actually listening to musically. My parents could go out on the street and listen to Bird, Lester Young, or whatever, or go up to the club in Chicago, and everybody was coming through there, Count Basie, Duke Ellington, everybody. These are the kind of records we had at home. Now everything is so much more separated. The parents don’t really listen to what the kids are listening to.

I have the same problem with my parents.

Mitchell: Yeah, I even had that problem with my family. My father grew up in music as a singer. But when my music started to change, he said, “Oh Man, what is that?” At that time Jack DeJohnette and I were playing together a lot and Jack was playing drums and I was playing saxophone and that really took it out because there wasn’t any piano and bass or nothing. Just this thing happening.

That’s pretty wild. Anthony Braxton has recently released a new album with the Oberlin Conservatory Orchestra titled For 4 Orchestra (Arista A3L 8900). Are you doing anything in the way of orchestra composition?

Mitchell: Later this month, I’m doing a thing in Austria with a quartet, a solo piece, and large ensemble. What I’m doing with the large ensemble is trying out different ochestrational techniques that I want to apply to an orchestra piece I’m going to do later this year. Eventually it will be recorded.

You mentioned techniques for orchestra. What do you mean?

Mitchell: I’m working with certain types of queuing techniques where you can shift the music all around and different kinds of things and have spaces happen differently each time depending upon the people that are playing and the way their body tempo is going that day, and how they are feeling; and checkpoints for each person in the composition, so that if you are starting to go out of it, I can slow down the pace if I want to, or speed it up; or like trying to have a lot of natural considerations in the music so that the music can flow along naturally like the way we are breathing.

Does it bother you to see yourself compared with Anthony Braxton so much?

Mitchell: No. We all came up together in Chicago. We have known each other and played together for getting close to twenty years. People are definitely going to refer to us when they talk about the music. I think the thing that is unique about the Chicago musicians (AACM) is that Anthony and Joseph (Jarman), (Henry) Threadgill and myself, to mention some of the reed men that came out of that era in music, although we all came up together, everybody has still developed their own type of style and then own type of approach to music. Then that’s even gone past that now, because people are defying styles. You have people that can give an illusion of having no style at all. It’s gone past like “he plays alto saxophone, and he plays this or that.” People are beginning to represent themselves in a lot of different lights now. Ten years or so ago, people had to go out and function as strong people inside strong individual small groups and make strong representations of themselves as soloists. Now things are beginning to open up and people are being able to do even larger projects

, so we are beginning to see another side of it.

The question of style interests me. Do you have a style you could call your own?

Mitchell: My style is just the way I go about doing things. I might play the same piece that you do. My tone will be different from yours and the way I approach a particular thing rhythmically and the type of accents I may use would make the difference. Once you make a style for yourself in music, then you can keep your style, and everything else that you can add to your vocabulary is just resynthesized in your own style. This is both an advantage and a disadvantage. I want to have music where it doesn’t sound like me, but is me. That has got to be the ultimate in pure music.

Where do you think you are now musically?

Mitchell: I’m trying to develop into a state where I can be more meditative in the music, and play with longer concentration spans, and have the music going on for longer spaces of time. I do want to get into big pieces now. I think people ought to go out and hear these big extravaganzas every now and then. The musicians are ready to do it now; it’s just a matter of being able to finance these projects.

Besides wanting to do large pieces, do you have any personal direction?

Mitchell: I’m reaching for another level of my musical existence. When I started to play all the different instruments, my embouchure shattered, and I couldn’t play anything for a while. But now all these instruments are beginning to come, they are beginning to come. It’s not like if you pick up one instrument and go on to another it’s the end anymore. A lot of things… motivate me. Such as the experience of being able to go and get people that I’ve functioned with for almost twenty years now and being able to have specialized pieces of music if I want to. There are other opportunities that are opening up. We are getting fusion, not only in the jazz rock thing, but now we’re getting fusion from classical music into improvisation so that opens up so many more avenues.

You mentioned jazz rock. Jazz in the public’s eye is represented by the fusion sounds of Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, and Chuck Mangione, rather than Roscoe Mitchell and the Art Ensemble of Chicago. Why?

Mitchell: It’s a matter of nervous systems and how fast people’s nervous systems can adjust to these other sounds before they can start to take them in and listen to them. Now all of a sudden, “Wow man, we can have the same rhythm with a whole lot of other chords!” That started to open people up. When people hear other music now it’s not such a far place for them to go, straight from rock to the more freer forms of music. Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, and Chuck Mangione are really big draws, comparable to the rock stars, and I think that’s good, because it is making the transition and it’s coming out that we’re getting more and more people.

But there has been an acoustic whiplash in jazz. Some musicians such as Keith Jarrett and Cecil Taylor have openly criticized the very basis of electronic (fusion-based) music. You feel no antipathy?

Mitchell: You have to remain open. There is something that can be done with all different types of sounds in musical situations. What happens when you close yourself down is that you have died. No one else. Everything else is still going on. We are now faced with the possibility of the computer…. It’s a challenge to me to be able to sound like a machine if I want to. I can learn a lot from that. It’s a challenge to deal with a machine. It’s hard work just like anything else. You got people who can go in there and get songs out of the computer but that is not really that interesting. We want to try to strive for things that are on a much higher level. It’s interesting to take yourself out of the context of a melodic flow and move through sound structure in a different kind of way. The “S II Examples” I’ve been telling you about comes close to being able to match these sounds.

Music is founded upon a compositional process. With the advent of the 12-tone system and mathematical atonality, many people would say that music is cold and unexpressive. In fact, insincere. What are your thoughts on the matter?

Mitchell: If we look at it with an open mind and one considers that sound is sound and we can use it the way that we want to display a certain picture, and if you go about your work in a sincere manner, then the results will be like that. No matter what medium you’re using, it should turn out with the same sincerity.

How would a person guard against insincerity in music?

Mitchell: It has to do with longevity. People will come up and sound good for a year, but how will they sound in twenty years? This is the thing you have to look at. The thing about playing an instrument is that in the final end, you have got to face the instrument and play it. When a piece is done well and then it can be broken into a mathematical equation, especially if you’re dealing with the 12-tone system or any other system for that matter. People who do music, many times they don’t take that into consideration the type of mathematical equation they are dealing with. And sometimes they do. If we look at the music of Charlie Parker, it is a clearly defined mathematical system that he uses to play his music. However, when he was doing it he probably thought, “Well, I want to play music differently from Lester Young,” because Lester Young inspired him. Then he started to use the tops of the chords and developed a whole thing from that. It is no different.

Your music has suffered economic repression, whether it has been the lack of playing engagement or the inability to record. Does the repression continue today?

Mitchell: Sure. People play all sorts of games. The period that the Art Ensemble did not record was a result of these games. But the music is coming around so strong that it is beginning to come out. If you take something and try to press it into a wall, and it keeps trying to come out, it is going to come out. The music was able to push through… and still be alive at the end of it.

Are you bitter?

Mitchell: I’m not bitter. I’ve always managed to make it in a good way. The music has been good to me. I have tried to be loyal to what I am doing and the rewards come with that. I was able to survive.

You’ve done much more than just survive. A personal question, Roscoe. Do you feel that your influence will be discussed 30 years from now?

Mitchell: I should certainly hope so. I consider myself one of the prime innovators of this music. Whoever is a historian and wanted to check the music out, the way you would have to do it is to go back to the earlier recordings. You would be able to see what my contributions have been to the music. If you really listen to the music, you can hear something that might sound new and go back and listen to something that I did in the sixties where I covered the area already. I think it is very important for guys that are doing the work have it documented very well, so that when people go back and study these people, they can actually see their musical development as it went along and relate it to the time it happened.

Do you intend to continue experimenting with music?

Mitchell: Yes. The thing is if you don’t do it, you’re going to fall behind because there are guys out there that are doing it. My thing is that I’m not going to spend this much time in the music and not share in the rewards that are coming up now. I can’t see that at all.

It’s a shame you’ve not been able to record more frequently.

Mitchell: That happened because I put a lot of time into a group situation, and now the whole thing is turning over again. I’m finding now that most of my musical ideas are really extended kind of things, meditative. You can have one idea on a record. One whole record! And I think it’s just a matter of time and more and more things will be happening.

[Author's note: In the Daily Free Press of February 14, 1979, I published a review of the performance Mitchell gave following this interview. Some excerpts from my review:]

“Roscoe, playing on the E-flat alto sax, created what he fondly calls sound collages – a spare minimal broach of mathematical reasoning and fiery spirit…. In concert, he moved with confidence along cold floating melodies, eerie… with patience and assurance. His breathing and pacing were masterfully controlled, sparse, dry, raspy, and witty. His piercing saxophone slotted inverse textures that courted perfection….

“The fourth piece of his first set had the presence of a Bach fugue. On an audible stream of air, Roscoe transformed large bursts and running notes into the sweet space of atonal modulation. Mitchell’s instrument belched, boomed, and squeaked, sounding like Morse code. The motif were exciting exposes with unparalleled use of dynamics and pointillistic impressions….

“Roscoe’s inner sense of ecstasy found joyful expression…. Full hand trill runs, devoted concentration all flowered into beautiful lyricism. As notes filled holes while other spaces opened up, the music hung balanced between sound and silence…. His music contained elements of tribal rhythms and the native south, of swing hop and cool jazz, of the cerebral and the gut level of feeling….

“Roscoe’s many-faceted improvisation was set aglow in a radiant light. His extraordinary genius found itself in inspired proportions; the sax crumbled, decimated, disappeared – replaced by sound, pure sound on a musical plane which transcended beyond itself….

“Outside of the small group of critics who have already paid homage to Roscoe Mitchell, history awaits. His genius is sure to be recognized in the future.”

Thursday, March 27, 2025

Jeff Parker ETA IVtet - The Way Out of Easy (International Anthem, 2024)


By Stuart Broomer

The Way Out of Easyis the second two-LP set to appear by Jeff Parker’s ETA quartet, and like its predecessor, Mondays at the Enfield Tennis Academy (Eremite, 2022), it consists of live recordings from the quartet of

Parker on guitars, electronics and sampler, Josh Johnson on alto saxophone and electronics, Anna Butterss on bass and Jay Bellerose on drums. The band maintained that Monday night spot from 2016 until 2023, when the club closed

There are immediate similarities. Each is a two-LP set. While the 2022 Eremite release consisted of substantial chunks from different performances recorded between 2019 and 2021, The Way Out of Easy represents four shaped pieces from a single night, January 2, 2023. The band was still named for the club it played in and recorded, the name of a principal setting in David Foster Wallace’s vast novel Infinite Jest.

As Eremite producer Michael Ehlers pointed out in a press sheet for the first release, it is “largely a free improv group —just not in the genre meaning of the term.” As with the earlier set, the band here largely improvises freely, so freely that the works here will include much that free improvisation leaves out: modes, melodies, key centres and regular (though often multiple) rhythms; in effect, the musicians are free to include the conventionally excluded.

In that spirit, The Way Out of Easy’s first side is devoted to an extended treatment of Parker’s 2013 composition “Freakdelic”, the sole composed element on the band’s two releases. The loose spirit of it already demonstrates the band’s special ease, its essentially conversational spirit, the loose way that Butterss and Bellerose maintain structures and the way the 23-minute jam gently wanders into strangely burbling, electronic territory in Parker and Johnson’s extended improvisations.

There’s some contrast between The Way Out of Easy and the earlier set, if only in the fact that these are complete performances rather than excerpts, but the band’s calm liberation is such that It isn’t a major shift. If The Way Out of Easy seems more refined, more assured, more interactive, those are all the things that arise and expand among convivial musicians who are collectively free to interact musically on a regular basis for years, who also choose to create elemental structures and patterns, sometimes retaining them, at other times gently abandoning them. The group is free to compound polyrhythms and include the repeating, unaccompanied, diatonic melody played by Josh Johnson at the outset of the closing “Chrome Dome”, gradually joined by Parker with a recurring tonal center before Butterss and Bellerose join in. Eventually Parker will assume responsibility for a slightly different melody and Johnson will improvise a counter melody. It’s the kind of thing that comes inevitably from a long-shared musical association, often creating a dream-like ambience suspended between an elemental tunefulness and gentle abstraction.

As with the earlier Eremite release, this record triggers a collection of positive associations. There’s something about the music’s distinctive playfulness, a slightly off-kilter, weird conviviality that might suggest The Scope, the electronic music bar in Thomas Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49 , as well as Wallace’s ETA.

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Zlatko Kaučič @ 70 - Inkling (Fundacja Słuchaj, 2024)


 
By Eyal Hareuveni

Slovenian master drummer-percussionist and seminal free improviser Zlatko Kaučič celebrated his 70th anniversary two years ago, but it is never too late to enjoy this occasion with a box set of four live performances with a few of his favorite improvisers, and with personal dedications from like-minded comrades like Joëlle Léandre, Elisabeth Harnik. 

The first album, VENČKO (wreath in Slovenian) documents the first-ever recorded duo with Norwegian tenor and soprano sax player Torben Snekkestad (a close collaborator of double bass master Barry Guy), recorded at the BCMF Festival in Šmartno-Brda, Slovenia, in September 2019, and dedicated to Venceslav Pajntar-Venčko. This 40-minute set stresses Kaučič qualities as a deep listener with sharp and fast instincts, but also as a powerful, commanding improviser who can ignite intimate dynamics with a few blows on the drum set. The level of communication and synergy between Kaučič and Snekkestad is so profound, varied and imaginative, moving seamlessly between contemplative conversations that reference contemporary music, delicate and poetic timbral explorations and free jazz-tingerd energetic fireworks, that organically gravitate into instant compositions and a cohesive narrative, as if they have been playing as a duo for many years.

The second album was recorded at the same festival, four years later, and features Kaučič with fellow Slovenian and long-time collaborator, double bass player Tomaž Grom, and German experimental trumpeter Axel Dörner, in a 36-minute piece “Tiha misel zablestela/a silent thought sined-suit”. This is an uncompromising and unpredictable, radical sound-oriented improvisation that explores an array of extended breathing, bowing and percussive techniques and investigates how the unorthodox sounds of these resourceful improvisers resonate with each other and create a raw, often noisy but always enigmatic sonic entity.

The third album documents the first-ever duo recording of Kaučič with Portuguese tenor sax master Rodrigo Amado, at the 2020 edition of the same festival., titled “Free Fall” (and no connection to Jimmy Guiffre Trio’s seminal album by the same name). Amado says that Kaučič has created “a profoundly unique sound cosmos that inspires me again and again”. This inspired performance is rooted in the free jazz legacy and alternates between a muscular, fast muscular improvisation, relying on short melodic themes and fast-shifting grooves that push both Kaučič and Amado to the most extreme territories, but with an immediate, deep, and almost telepathic interplay, and poetic, contemplative, and soulful conversations. Eventually, as expected, this energetic duo unleashes its volcanic energy and spirals into dense, cathartic, and stratospheric skies. Hopefully, this set marks the beginning of a long relationship.

The fourth and last album documents a performance of Kaučič with soul mates - or inklings, as the five improvised pieces are titled - Catalan master pianist Agustí Fernández (for his 70th birthday, FSR dedicated another box set of seven performances, Aesthetic of Prisms, 2024)and British double bass master Barry Guy (who is 78 years old and plays a 5-string double bass), at the 64. Jazz Festival Ljubljana in Slovenia in July 2023, five months after Kaučič’s 70th birthday. Fernández composed two more pieces. Guy describes Kaučič as one of the warmest, kindest musicians he has ever met, with whom he has “a beautiful friendship based on who he is, both as a person and as a musician”. This is a masterful demonstration of the art of the moment by a few of the most gifted, restless, and imaginative sound poets-painters, who keep enriching their poetic yet intense and stormy sonic palettes with deeper, mysterious nuances. Fernández’ two most beautiful ballads highlight the trio's profound, lyrical side.



Watch: https://365.rtvslo.si/arhiv/dokumentarni-portret/174942547 (in Slovenian)


Kaučič / Furlan - Father, Son & Holy Sound (Klopotec, 2024)

Kaučič’s drums and percussion duo with fellow, young Slovenian Gal Furlan (b. 1990) was recorded live on Kaučič's 70th birthday at Klub Štala in Lokavec, Slovenia, in February 2023. The album's title references Albert Ayler’s claim that “Trane was the Father, Pharoah was the Son, I am the Holy Ghost”. Kaučič and Forlan do not have any messianic ambitions but they have a holy sound. A highly immersive sound, at the beginning delicate and mezditative but later propulsive and hypnotic. The 40-minute, free improvised piece can be experienced as an irreverent, purifying ritual comprised of delicate, caressing and resonant sounds that suggest the colorful and suggestive sonic spectrum of these resourceful improvisers.



Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Juno 3 - Proxemics (Buster and Friends, 2025)

By Sammy Stein

Han Earl Park, Pat Thomas, and Lara Jones need little introduction to fans of alluring, free music but for those not familiar with them, Park is an improvising musician who specializes in guitar and percussive music. He is a shapeshifter of a musician, a chameleon who transfers easily from beautiful passages to discordant ruminations. His music is joyful, energetic, and packed with rhythm patterns as changeable as they are engaging. He has performed with Lol Coxhill, Wadado Leao Smith, Mark Sanders, Evan Parker, and more.

Lara Jones is an experimental producer, DJ, saxophonist, keyboardist, and lyricist, who creates high-energy music and has worked with fellow artists in various ensembles and formats. Her music transcends genres, and Jones refuses to be boxed in by genres or gender definitions.

Pat Thomas began playing classical piano as a child but switched to jazz in his teenage years. Renowned for his intense, amorphic music, Thomas is an inspiration for improvising musicians. He was integral to the Black Top Project with Orphy Robinson and has performed with Hamid Drake, William Parker, John Butcher, and many others.

Park, Jones, and Thomas are Juno 3, and on Proxemics they demonstrate the achievements of a trio in live performance with intrinsic skills in listening, playing, and collaborating. The album was recorded live during the trio’s performance at London’s Cafe OTO for the EFG London Jazz Festival in November 2023.

The music is in two parts, ‘Derealization’ and ‘Proxemis’ respectively representing two sets performed at Oto. Each track, let alone six-track set, feels like an exploration into different ways guitar, sax, piano, and electronics can be melded in an improvised performance.

From the screeching eeriness created in ‘Derealization I’ where vaguely connected electronic harmonic runs give way on occasion to melodic, then non-so melodic interjections from the sax, there are themes, counter-themes and an exchange of ideas, often thrown down by Thomas for the others to reflect – albeit changed. This pattern is further explored in ‘Derealization II’, III, IV, with added melodic lines from the guitar in V and VI. Spot the opening of a melody from an old sixties track (Popcorn) in Realization II that sits alongside current, visceral electronic sounds for the briefest moment and then relish the simple melodies that interact with complex, guttural squawks, whistles, engine noises and vaguely harmonically linked lines from sax and guitar.

The ’Proxemics’ set is more intense and power-driven than the ‘Derealization’ set. ‘Proxemics I’ sees the energy building as quartets of chords chase across the background, while gentle guitar notes weave their way into and out of the sound. There is a set rhythm pattern for most of the track, under and over which the improvisers weave different, yet connected sounds. Proxemics II develops the exploration further, and Proxemics III introduces another dimension – rivulets of sound that fall from the keys, keynotes held by the sax, and the guitar deftly filling the gaps, like splashes from the pool. The quietude of the second third is dispelled as the instruments crash in to take the sounds up and loud.

The music is challenging in places–visceral with confronting rhythms and keys that merge – almost–before veering off in different directions, creating a sense of clashing ideas, yet a willingness also to (eventually) end up on the same musical path.

It is music for the open-minded and at times, the tonality is so jarring that it takes the listener somewhere else, only to be brought back to the present by a snippet of melody or harmonic progressions before another clash of sounds impacts the brain and the mist descends again.

These three musicians know what they are doing – the sound is integrated, yet audacious, swashbuckling yet provocative. This is improved music as it should be live and played well.

Park says of the recording, “During the mix, I came to realize this unapologetically unrefined music was probably unreleasable, but I also came to love it more for being delicate as a slab of granite.”

I think Park missed something, for hidden amongst the power, energy, and intensity, there is a delicate beauty that exists in all truly improvised music.

Monday, March 24, 2025

Rupp–Rößler–Hall - self-titled (audiosemantics, 2025)

By Martin Schray

Rupp-Rößler-Hall is a purely acoustic project with musicians from the Berlin Echtzeitscene, consisting of a veteran of the free improvisation community, guitarist Olaf Rupp, Australian drummer and percussionist Samuel Hall and double bassist Isabel Rößler. The most important characteristic of the project’s music is not to differentiate between backing band (drums and bass) and solo instrument (in this case the guitar); the individual voices should be equal and on an equal footing. Rupp plays acoustic guitar here, but his technique is strongly based on his playing on electric guitar. This means that there are many of his typical harmonics, flamenco-like chords and Phrygian cadences, which he likes to merge into a seemingly atonal chaos. All three musicians tug at their strings, extended playing techniques are used and the instruments are plowed in all possible ways. The whole thing gurgles, grinds, echoes and threatens to fall apart again and again - but this never happens. In this way, sound textures and structures are created and fanned out, as the flow of the music is very purposefully controlled. Samuel Hall’s contribution is reminiscent of Tony Oxley’s playing and that of Paul Lovens on their recordings with Cecil Taylor. Ultra-fast and high-pitched, yet very precise. Isabel Rößler’s bass is very powerful and massive, she can be very loud and knows how to hold her own against her partners in crime. Joëlle Léandre and Barry Guy shine through here again and again in a very pleasant way.

Especially in the first piece, “Die schlichte Freuden der Armen”, it becomes clear how well coordinated the tonal surfaces are; the whole thing never becomes too pleasant, but is always roughened and bulky. Obviously the music also serves as a commentary on our difficult times, because the titles of the pieces (translated they mean “The simple joys of the poor“, “All the heavy sand here is language, deposited by wind and tide“ and “Darkness is in our souls, don't you think?“) point to a gloomy atmosphere.

All in all, a nice collection of three fragments, hopefully there will be more to hear from this trio soon.

Rupp-Rößler-Hallis available on vinyl (as a 7-inch) and as a download.

You can listen to the music and here: