Monday, 27 June 2022

BBC Concert Orchestra with Mari Samuelsen - Glass, Higdon, Taylor-West, Perivolaris (live in London, 5 May 2022)

Broadcast concert from a month ago held in the Queen Elizabeth Hall, South Bank, London.  As well as the main attractions of the programme, the Glass and Higdon concertos, two commissioned pieces were given their premiere and introduced by their composers.  First up is Liam Taylor-West's Making Space, inspired by non-repeating mathematical patterns; the bright, bustling music made me think of Steve Reich's cityscapes.  Gaelic call-and-response hymn singing and forest regrowth combine next in Electra Periovolaris' A Forest Reawakens, an intriguing four-minute introduction to another young and promising composer.

Philip Glass' Violin Concerto then takes us back to the 80s, and the beginning of his embrace of more traditional classical forms, but still with the trademark gradually-shifting repetitive strucutures and a great showcase for the featured violinist Mari Samuelsen.  The second half of the concert is taken up by Jennifer Higdon's Concerto For Orchestra (2002), getting off to a whirlwind start before passing the spotlight round the strings, the soloists and percussion.  It's a great finish to a highly complementary programme of first-class musicianship and composing.

pw: sgtg

Friday, 24 June 2022

Jacob Young - Evening Falls (2004)

It's been an ECM kind of week for me, so here we are again, this time jumping back a decade for another guitarist, in his debut with the label recorded in December 2002.  Lillehammer native Jacob Young has been working with some of the hottest names in Nordic jazz since the 90s, and here fronts a two-horn quintet that includes one of my favourite ECM trumpeters of recent years, Mathias Eick.

Rather than put his clear guitar talents front and centre, Young's sound on this set of his own material is a sumptuously arranged and well-meshed group performance of highly lyrical tunes.  The immersive melancholy makes Evening Falls a well-chosen title for just under an hour of late listening.  As well as enjoying Young's lean playing, Eick is the obvious breakout star of this session, but Vidar Johansen sounds fantastic here too, especially when he switches from sax to bass clarinet.  Lovely stuff all round.

pw: sgtg

Monday, 20 June 2022

Wolfgang Muthspiel - Driftwood (2014)

Sublime guitar trio date recorded in May 2013, led by Austrian guitarist Wolfgang Muthspiel.  Bookended by tributes to two formative influences, Joseph (Zawinul) and Bossa For Michael Brecker, all the material is Muthspiel's other than the group-composed title track.  It's a highly enjoyable and varied set of eight tracks in a trim 41 minutes, often prioritising texture and ambience.  Dazzling runs of notes share the space with plenty of breathing room, Larry Grenadier undepins it with both rock solid basslines and melancholy bowing, and Brian Blade on drums keeps structure and momentum to this great set of impressionistic pieces.

pw: sgtg

Previously posted at SGTG:

Friday, 17 June 2022

Weather Report - Black Market (1976)

Been listening to this one a lot lately, so here comes another spotlight on the ever-shifting landscape of 1970s Weather Report.  Percussion-heavy, with plenty of groove to spare, the album kicks off with the bright melodic title track, bass handled by Alphonso Johnson as is the case for most of the album.  Not so for the track that follows, though - here comes the first entry of one of the group's most auspicious arrivals, with the slippery basslines of a 24-year old Floridian who had introduced himself to Zawinul as "the greatest bass player in the world".

There's only one other Pastorious performance on this transitional (even by their standards) Weather Report album, the strutting Barbary Coast from his own pen.  Otherwise, Zawinul and Shorter turn in an increasingly slick set of funky numbers influenced by Latin and African rhythms, some more atmospheric pieces and generally set the stage for Weather Report's commercial superstardom that would follow within a year.

pw: sgtg

Previously posted at SGTG:
I Sing The Body Electric

Monday, 13 June 2022

Manchester Collective - Heavy Metal (live at the White Hotel, Salford, 11 Dec 2021)

Broadcast on BBC Radio 3 back in January, the Manchester Collective ensemble (previously featured at last year's Proms - link below) gave this concert on their home turf of music for strings, live electronics and percussion.  The programme gets off to a lively start with Bryce Dessner's Aheym (Yiddish for 'homeward'), written to suggest flight and travel.  Things then settle down momentarily for Dobrinka Tabakova's trio piece Insight (studio recording here).

The first commission of the programme follows, and is introduced by its composer Ben Nobuto.  Serenity 2.0 is intended to evoke pachinko arcades Nobuto encountered in Japan, and its blend of pre-recorded sounds with fractured strings and percussion is a highly enjoyable wild ride towards a calm conclusion.  A couple of years ago, the Proms included a piece for bassoon and distortion pedal - now, here's a cello through a distortion pedal, as the Collective's cellist Stephanie Tress performs Michael Gordon's Industry.  Then to close, we get more pre-recorded sound with live strings in the newly-minted commission Squint, composed by Sebastian Gainsborough aka Vessel.  It's a great end to an ear-bending collection of contemporary music.

pw: sgtg

Manchester Collective at SGTG:

Friday, 10 June 2022

Tangerine Dream - Alpha Centauri (1971)

Breaking out another 25 year old CD for fresh rip today - I got hold of Alpha Centauri on the same day as Electronic Meditation, and sat down at my Aiwa micro hi-fi to have my teenage mind blown.  In this album's lineup, there were now two recognisable names from my Phaedra cassette - joining Froese, Alpha Centauri inaugurated Christoph Franke's 16 year tenure with Tangerine Dream.  The personnel was about to stabilise even further, with erratic organist Steve Schroyder replaced just after the album's release by Peter Baumann.  But for these January 1971 recording sessions, the core lineup of Froese, Franke and Schroyder was augmented by Roland Paulyck, bringing the first ever synth sounds to TD, and flautist Udo Dennebourg.

The opening guitar noises on Sunrise In The Third System provide about the only continuity with their experimental rock debut - as soon as Schroyder's warm electronic organ fills out the landscape and Froese goes glissando, we're into spacier territory which will only become dramatically more so over the next half-hour plus.  The thirteen minutes of Fly And Collision Of Comas Sola progress from synth whooshes evoking the titular comet, before settling down to a guitar, flute and drums jam that increases in intensity until its sudden ending.  Taking up all of the orignal LP's second side, the vast title track reaches even farther into deep space and the gaseous formlessness of TD to come, memorably ending on an organ and spoken word finale.

pw: sgtg

Monday, 6 June 2022

George Russell - Electronic Sonata For Souls Loved By Nature (three recordings)

Electronic Sonata For Souls Loved By Nature is the signature work by jazz composer, theorist and pianist George Russell (1923-2009), presented today in no less than three different recordings.  Got hold of these in a Black Saint/Soul Note reissues box, so more Russell to come.  First up, The Essence Of George Russell, which may or may not contain the earliest recording of the Sonata: it's unfortunately the only thing lacking a recording year in the original double LP's notes.

First a drummer, George Russell's key contribution to jazz was as a music theorist championing the Lydian mode, which influenced everyone from Miles Davis and Gil Evans to the young Scandinavian musicians he'd work with on moving there in the 60s, many of whom would become ECM heavyweights.  Listening back to Terje Rypdal's Odyssey box set after hearing Russell is quite enlightening, for example, and it's Rypdal who is the guitarist on the "Essence" recording of Electronic Sonata For Souls Loved By Nature, the lineup also including Jan Garbarek, Arild Andersen and Jon Christensen (you can probably guess by now what drew me to the Russell box).  On the original "Essence" double LP there were two additional pieces making up side four - only one of these, the enjoyably wild Now And Then (recorded 1966), is included on the CD due to time restrictions.
Electronic Sonata For Souls Loved By Nature, then, is structured in 14 segued 'Events': some where propulsive basslines and funky drums drive it forward, and others where the rhythms fall away and Stockhausen-like taped sounds come to the fore, as well as African field recordings.  The writing for horns can be both tight and melodic and much freer, particularly when Garbarek takes the spotlight (Jan's credited as having a hand in composing some themes, presumably these spotlights).  Taken all together, it's a rich and rewarding immersion in early fusion, avant-garde but accessible jazz composition and judicious electronic/tape music integration.

This next recording, originally released on the Flying Dutchman label in 1971, is perhaps the best known.  Soul Note's later reissue added the "1968" to the album cover - I'm not certain why, as Russell's original liner notes state the recording was made at a concert near Oslo in April 1969.  Perhaps "1968" refers to composer revisions that year, e.g. the reduction to sextet -  the larger group of musicians is slimmed down to just the core lineup, who are the same other than Red Mitchell now playing bass rather than Andersen.  This version also ups the tempo in places compared to the "Essence" recording, the whole thing running under an hour compared to just over the hour mark on Essence. 
Russell revisited the Sonata for this 1980 version, recorded in an Italian studio in June of that year with mostly American musicians.  It's recognisably the same work, two continuous sides with seven Events apiece, so hasn't undergone any major compositional reworking.  The turn-of-the-80s studio fidelity does make the ingenuity of the writing and musicians' interplay come across clearer, so it's a worthwhile contrast to the other two recordings.
 
pw for all: sgtg

Friday, 3 June 2022

Tangerine Dream - Electronic Meditation (1970)

Will be topping & tailing my TD collection here in the coming weeks/months, as the list of previous posts below is pretty heavy on the Virgin years.  Great as those are, it's always fun to start from the beginning, and enjoy this jam-session-as-unexpected-career-launcher with its hilariously inappropriate title (the number of times I've said to people over the years - erm, yeah, it's neither electronic or meditative).  This was the first Tangerine Dream CD I bought, in 1997 - the Castle Communications remaster, which also introduced me to Julian Cope's sui generis writing from Krautrocksampler - and that very CD was freshly ripped for this post.

Pre-synths, the oddball instrumentation that makes up Electronic Meditation includes cello, violin and "Addiator" (an early calculator, somehow amplified) (all by Conrad Schnitzler), guitars, organ, piano, effects and tapes (Edgar Froese) and drums/percussion (Klaus Schulze).  That last name of course gives the sad realisation that this (in hindsight quite incredible and seminal) lineup is now entirely no longer with us, so this post can double as a tribute to Schulze.  Appended to the core trio, but unbekownst to me at time of CD purchase as they wouldn't be fully credited until years later, were organist Jimmy Jackson and flautist Thomas Keyserling.
 
After the fledgling TD jammed in a basic studio in October 1969, no intention then of making a record, Edgar and partner Monika, as the story goes, left for the UK to unsuccessfully establish themselves on these shores.  On return to Berlin, Edgar found a letter from Ohr Records, who'd got hold of the tape and wanted to release it.  With various bits of quirky editing (the backwards voice at the end is actually Froese reading his Dover-Calais ferry ticket), Electronic Meditation became the debut LP of Tangerine Dream.  Two thunderous extended jams, like Pink Floyd's Interstellar Overdrive supercharged, flow like lava at the core of the album, with shorter, more atmospheric pieces making up the runtime.  Edgar Froese would keep playing guitar on TD records for some years, but never as unhinged as this.  Along with Ash Ra Tempel's debut from the following year (with more wild drumming from Schulze), Electronic Meditation remains one of the most striking and thrilling krautrock debuts.

pw: sgtg