Posts mit dem Label The Guardian werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label The Guardian werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

Montag, 15. August 2016

John Fordham / The Guardian: Pierre Favre DrumSight Review

Pierre Favre DrumSight (INTAKT Records) Review

 THE GUARDIAN, John Fordham

Antonio Sanchez’ acclaimed drum score for last year’s Birdman movie has alerted a wider audience up to how expressive all-percussion music can be. This album features a dozen pieces composed by the 79-year-old Swiss percussion marvel Pierre Favre for his DrumSights quartet. Favre made an ECM album called Singing Drums in 1984, and he still leads groups that layer multiple rhythms with a warmth and vocal-toned naturalness that hides their astonishing complexity. Brushes-dominated pieces are ruthlessly badgered by bass-drum booms and woody tappings; deep fusions of conga and tom-tom rhythms ring and chime with metallic upper sounds; rubbery, racing-heart rhythms are pursued by thundering hooves; and there are byzantine conversations on taxing meters like the 5-6-5-5 pattern of the brittle, chattery Pow Wow. Every track has character, but the almost 10-minute Games (originally written for the African djembe), a mix of soft and hard sounds, martial, sensuous, relaxed or breakneck grooves, could be a sampler for the whole remarkable venture.

Donnerstag, 4. August 2016

JAZZ: Sylvie Courvoisier, Mark Feldman, Evan Parker, Ikue Mori - Miller’s Tale / 4 Star review John Fordham THE GUARDIAN




Sylvie Courvoisier, Mark Feldman, Evan Parker, Ikue Mori: Miller’s Tale review – mesmerising free improv

The partnership of Swiss pianist Sylvie Courvoisier and American violinistMark Feldman has spanned most variations of sharp-end jazz over the years, but the quartet on this all-improv session is one of their loosest, featuring British sax innovator Evan Parker and Japanese electronics artist and percussionist Ikue Mori. There are four group pieces, and five for various duets. The opening Death of a Salesman’s creaking-door sounds mixed with straight-violin delicacies and agitated free-percussion takes no prisoners, but the flighty dances of Parker’s soprano sax with Feldman’s spinning falsetto lines and the thriller-movie poundings of the finale are lyrical and dramatic. Quiet piano-string pluckings shadow rapturous slow-bowed tones; piano improv hurtles over whooshing, rustling percussion; dreamy violin arias are swept into free-sax meditations. Feldman’s duet with Mori’s twinkly electronic tones, Parker’s jazzy tenor-sax dialogue with Courvoisier and the latter’s delicate finale with Mori are duet highlights of a set that shows just how sonically mesmerising and musical free-improv can be. JOHN FORDHAM


Freitag, 7. August 2015

4 Star Review: Schlippenbach Trio - Features (John Fordham / The Guardian)

The Guardian / John Fordham
Schlippenbach Trio: Features (Intakt)


Improvised by master craftsmen

4 / 5 stars



The trio of Alex von Schlippenbach, saxophonist Evan Parker and drummer Paul Lovens are nowadays that enemy of free-improv purity: an institution (the three have played together for 45 years). But if they can almost unerringly read each other’s minds, their methods have never hardened into habit, and their work over the decades has immense variety. There are 15 numbered Features here, and they are tautly concise, and often defined by improvised openings by one or other participant that shape their developing character. Feature 1 begins very melodically, developing with logical rigour and ends on a haunting multiphonic sustained tone. Some pieces weave Parker’s nimble mid-range tenor sax lines through percussive backdrops of banging chords and Lovens’ light, scuttling patterns; some are soft and ballad-like. Feature 6 highlights Schlippenbach as a brusque romantic; Feature 8 sounds like jazzy call-and-response; Feature 11 is a tone poem for Parker’s remarkable textural palette. It’s unpremeditated music executed by master craftsmen.

Freitag, 26. Juni 2015

4 star review: MARILYN CRISPELL / GERRY HEMINGWAY in THE GUARDIAN


Marilyn Crispell/Gerry Hemingway: Table of Changes review – an uncannily attuned jazz duo

4/5stars
(Intakt)


Marilyn Crispell and Gerry Hemmingway
 Strength, decisiveness and energy … Marilyn Crispell and Gerry Hemingway

With Affinities in 2011, the partnership of former Anthony Braxton players Marilyn Crispell (piano) and Gerry Hemingway (drums) produced improv-duo music of power, precision and lyricism. Table of Changes is another live album, drawn from four dates on their 2013 European tour. The tracks are all originals, highlighting the players’ emotional as well as technical range, with the only cover being Ev’ry Time We Say Goodbye – interpreted in solemn, spacey chords and percussion tapestries until the melody coalesces at the end. Crispell’s strength, decisiveness and energy often surface in the turbulent chordwork that rolls and rings against Hemingway’s needling cymbal sounds and pummelling drums, but she’s as likely to float glistening treble tones over the drummer’s vibraphone glow or the pings of finger-cymbals. The dreamy and then darkening Night Passing focuses on Crispell’s use of space and harmonic sophistication; Hemingway’s rubbed-metal sounds and ghostly nasal singing emphasise the title implications of Windy City while Crispell rhapsodises classically. It’s an uncannily attuned partnership.