Showing posts with label The Bad Plus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Bad Plus. Show all posts

Monday, September 16, 2013

HurdAudio Rotation: Rhinoceros is My Profession

Eric Dolphy with Booker Little: Far Cry. 1961. New Jazz.

This record takes on a particular luminescence with presence of its two tragic headliners.  Booker Little developed his sound and left us documentation like this even as he never lived to see his 24th birthday and Eric Dolphy was gone far too soon just four years after this recording date, leaving us at age 36.  And yet the creative spark they left behind on Far Cry continues to burn, leaving an important statement about jazz tradition and how there is always room for the individual to plumb its revolutionary angles.  Opening with "Mrs. Parker of K.C." and its interplay of bass clarinet and trumpet and segueing into "Ode to Charlie Parker" with the interaction between flute and trumpet this 1960 set is no historical curiosity.  It is a vibrant thing that remains fresh more than half a century later.  From there we get the classic Dolphy originals of "Far Cry" and "Miss Ann" as the hard bop/free jazz gauntlet is thrown.  The rhythm section backing up these flights accounts for much of the burn and scorch found here with this being the recording debut of the great Ron Carter on bass with Roy Haynes on drums and Jaki Byard on piano.  The deep impression left behind by this record is not diminished by its brevity.  There is much to stimulate the ears in less than three quarters of an hour, a set duration that reflects the frustratingly short period of time these players had to set the jazz world on fire.  Admiring what they did do while aching for what might have been, this record occupies the same hallowed ground as John Coltrane's A Love Supreme or Miles Davis' Kind of Blue as one of the stand out recordings of a jazz language that is far richer because of the contributions found here.

Nels Cline: New Monastery. 2006. Cryptogramophone.

The most striking thing about this particular "view into the music of Andrew Hill" is that you can cleanly plot the lines between the source of inspiration and the music found on this set.  The extreme magnification that forms the cover art for New Monastery is an apt representation of the compositional and improvised energy that makes up this recording.  Sharp details of Andrew Hill's sound are expanded upon as a sonic universe is explored within pockets of the larger landscape of Hill's music.  The degree of inspiration is entirely understandable.  Making this a recording well worth revisiting.  Hearing this ensemble's take on "Dedication" is a particular thrill as the notes of the familiar opening take shape leading into the deliciously introspective improvisation that Nels Cline adds to this durable piece.

The Bad Plus: Suspicious Activity? 2005. Columbia Records.

A jazz trio record brought to you by a generation that has internalized the best qualities of concept albums.  The sequencing of these polished gems is every bit as thrilling as the individual moments of groove heavy bliss that pour out from this recording.  Much has been written about the way The Bad Plus plays covers.  So I'll just say that this one includes the theme from Chariots of Fire and it is every bit as creative and polished as the originals found here.  Speaking of those originals, "Anthem for the Earnest" remains my fondest introduction to The Bad Plus.  Having "Prehensile Dream" leading right into it makes for a record that immediately makes the ears take notice.  This is a piano trio in the best sense.  Ethan Iverson brings a brilliant intensity to the piano.  But focus the ears on the drumming of Dave King and one finds just as much intensity and intricate detail at work.  Then there is the brilliant bass work of Reid Anderson.  There is very little here that can be called "supporting" or side-men.  This is an old friend to these ears in the rotation.

Tuesday, February 07, 2012

HurdAudio Rotation: Groove and Drone

The Bad Plus: Give. 2004. Sony Music Entertainment: CK 90771.

Reid Anderson: bass
Ethan Iverson: piano
David King: drums

The Bad Plus brings a healthy dose of prog rock to the jazz piano trio.  They do it without spectacle or glamour or back up vocalists.  They do it with a sound that is grounded in both jazz performance history and ears wise to the multitude of genres of the past several decades.  A lot of focus has been given to their approach to covering popular tunes (co-opting is more like it).  Give does close out with a particularly inspired shade of Deep Purple's "Iron Man."  But the focus on the way they twist the familiar gives short shift to the inventive turns that each member of this trio brings to this set as composers.  Particularly the balance of serious versus whimsy that David King strikes with such gems as "1979 Semi-Finalist" and "Layin' A Strip For the Higher-Self State Line."  Rhythmically, this is an incredibly tight group.  Though they do display an ability to loosen things up a bit when taking on Ornette Coleman's "Street Woman" in harmolodic style.  They manage to turn in performances that are enormously polished without being anesthetized.

Jonathan Zorn: For Rob Powers: Suite no. 2 - Additive Feedback. 2004. Set-Projects: 03.

Jonathan Zorn: electronics

The first twenty minutes or so of this suite exists at the very periphery of human perception.  A single drone that changes dramatically as the listener moves their head relative to the speakers.  Not all speakers can produce this frequency.  When this psycho acoustically rich drone does change musically it comes as a jolt.  A barely perceptible, barely audible pure tone that suddenly changes frequency, amplitude and slowly becomes less of a single sine tone.  The remainder of this suite unfolds through a series of short movements that retain the singularity of this sound.  A near monophonic study that introduces more variation and improvised bursts of sound driven by the way electrons interact as a signal.  The texture and the form of this work presents a stark austerity of sonic materials.  Opening the ears to the expansive qualities of minimal source.

Elliott Sharp/Tectonics: Errata. 1999. Knitting Factory Records: KFR-255.

Composed, performed and produced by Elliott Sharp.

Tectonics was Elliott Sharp's foray into the realm of electronica.  Studio creations that work with groove centered materials with Sharp's own sonic sensibilities attacking the form and content.  Part of what makes Elliott Sharp's music so appealing to my ears is his cerebral instinct that prevents him from mindlessly jamming out over drum loops.  He respects the physicality of the musical pulse.  This keeps him from wandering into the pulse-less, anti-body territory favored by other cerebral composers and instead mines a relentless assault upon texture as grooves are assembled and dissolved through creative processing and jump cuts.  The end result is a music that would never survive within night club dance culture (his Tectonics releases were frequently criticized as "failures" for not crossing over).  But the flip side is that this is music that ages incredibly well.  And I'll admit to being stuck on this disc for a few days as I discover nuances I had missed on an old favorite of mine.  But the real payoff in listening to this set as a whole is the final three tracks: "Goomy," "Kargyrea" and "Errataka."  Everything that comes before them feels like it builds up to where those three pieces go.  "Goomy" artfully develops a bass line and beat that skirt dangerously close to ear worm territory.  "Kargyrea" then seamlessly picks up on the timbral qualities of "Goomy" and develops it further.  Then "Errataka" comes in and bulldozes the entire sound with an aggressive, drone-heavy assault.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

HurdAudio Rotation: The Physics of Angels

Satanized: In Sickness and Hellth: The Secular Chansons of Satanized. 2007. Badmaster Records: BM010.

Andrew Gaspar: voice, turntable
Alex Nagle: guitar
Evan Lipson: bass
Pete Angevine: drums

Satanized has a sound that could convince the devil to take up residence in Philadelphia. Which would be a local move given its proximity to New Jersey. In Sickness and Hellth is a twenty minute burst of face ripping tracks complete with screaming, distortion and screaming distortion. All of it entirely therapeutic and sonically necessary as a counterbalance for all that is calculated to be "nice." And in the case of "Purple Pickle" it even flirts with clever hookiness. Put this on to cleanse the mind of those unhellthy thoughts.

LinkThe Bad Plus: Prog. 2007. Do the Math Records/Heads Up International: HUCD 3125.

Reid Anderson: bass
Ethan Iverson: piano
David King: drums

The Bad Plus bring a lot of polish to their arrangements, their performances and especially to their choice of pieces and sequencing. Each aspect of The Bad Plus is a near flawless gem that manages to maintain an immediacy. A piano trio that pays homage to the deep history of jazz piano trios while at the same time putting moving a long distance from any kind of stuffy, museum-like reverence for the music. Mixing in covers of music by Tears for Fears, David Bowie, Rush and Burt Bacharach, The Bad Plus draw upon a familiarity while lurching toward something deeply original. And it is the original compositions that absolutely soar as their ideas are free from the tethers of song form and familiar hooks. Reid Anderson's "Physical Cities" in particular gives an acoustic twist to the pounding rhythmic propulsion of metal. And Ethan Iverson proves again and again that it is possible to play melodic lines in octaves without inviting the "elevator music" vibe. The Bad Plus strives to be contemporary, vibrant and relevant and they succeed incredibly on every front.

Matthew Shipp Duo with Roscoe Mitchell: 2-Z. 1996. Thirsty Ear Recordings: thi 21312.2.

Matthew Shipp: piano
Roscoe Mitchell: alto saxophone, soprano saxophone

This recording captures these two improvisers at such interesting trajectories in their respective creative voices. Roscoe Mitchell is completely at the top of his game while Matthew Shipp is at an early stage in developing his distinctive voice on the piano. Ultimately, 2-Z is a study in densities from a duo that expertly mines the extremes. It is the transitions and the journey between thick and thin that gives this session longevity.

Monday, October 26, 2009

HurdAudio Rotation: Suspicious Dancing

The Bad Plus: Suspicious Activity. 2005. Sony/BMG Music Entertainment: CK 94740.

Reid Anderson: bass
Ethan Iverson: piano
David King: drums

For all the immediate appeal the Bad Plus offer with polished and nearly flawless performances on this disc there is also the deft use of form. This trio knows how to shape a musical idea with a triumphant crescendo that pours organically out of quiet development. After multiple spins through the rotation this disc grows more enjoyable. This trio is a great band.

Stefan Wolpe: Enactments: Works for Piano. 2005. Hat Hut Records: 161.

Stefan Wolpe: composer

March and Variations for Two Pianos (1933)
Joseph Christof: piano
Steffen Schleiermacher: piano

The Good Spirit of a Right Cause (1942)
Steffen Schleiermacher: piano

Enactments for Three Pianos (1953)
Josef Christof: piano
Benjamin Kobler: piano
Irmela Roelcke: piano
James Avery: conductor

The blurring of three pianos in Enactments for Three Pianos is the main attraction on this disc. The inventive and spare use of extended technique adding faint ripples of muted strings and pizzicato within the dense textures of sound masses. For these ears, it is the familiar Wolpe piece on this disc (even if this is the first CD recording. I remember wearing out a vinyl recording of this work years ago). March and Variations for Two Pianos is the surprise work here. A glimpse into an earlier Stefan Wolpe working with melodic materials through a series of variations. The density is less deliberate, yet still built upon a collage of parts. Revealing a music of meticulously crafted parts.

Ornette Coleman: Dancing In Your Head. 1973, 1975 (re-released in 2000). Verve: 314 543 519-2.

Ornette Coleman: alto saxophone
Robert Palmer: clarinet
Charles Ellerbee: guitar
Bern Nix: guitar
Jamaaladeen Tacuma: bass
Ronald Shannon Jackson: drums
Master Musicians of Jajouka: ghaita, stringed instruments, percussion

The polytonal, funk driven explosion that came just before Prime Time. The harmolodically rendered hook of "Theme From a Symphony" weaving through the two long variations built upon an improbable bed of elastic rhythms from the two guitar, bass and drums rhythm section. Then there are the two takes of "Midnight Sunrise." A mere taste of Ornette Coleman's collaboration with the Master Musicians of Jajouka. And according to Coleman, the closest he's come to realizing his creative ideal.

Saturday, August 08, 2009

HurdAudio Rotation: From Burnt to Bad

Annie Gosfield: Burnt Ivory and Loose Wires. 1998. Tzadik: TZ 7040.

Nickolaievski Soldat (1994)
Annie Gosfield: sampling keyboard
Roger Kleier: electric guitar
Jim Pugliese: percussion
Christine Bard: percussion

Freud (1996)
Annie Gosfield: sampling keyboard
Roger Kleier: electric guitar

The Manufacture of Tangled Ivory (1995)
Annie Gosfield: sampling keyboard
Roger Kleier: electric guitar
Jim Pugliese: percussion
Christine Bard: percussion

Four Roses (1997)
Annie Gosfield: sampling keyboard
Ted Mook: cello

Blue Serge (1996)
Annie Gosfield: sampling keyboard

Brawl (1998)
Rova Saxophone Quartet:
Bruce Ackley: soprano saxophone
Steve Adams: alto saxophone
Larry Ochs: tenor saxophone
Jon Raskin: baritone saxophone

Conceptually and sonically stunning compositions. There's an intuitive feel to the unfolding of these pieces as they gravitate from pulsating groove to asymmetrical gestures that fall away to reveal the sound design work embedded in the sampling keyboard parts. The creative (and never overtly systematic) use of microtones consistently move this material into a harmonic territory adapted toward the timbral impulses at work in this music. With Brawl, it is striking to hear how the ideas that are so tangled with the electronics and sampling technology in the other compositions on this disc carry over into Gosfield's writing for acoustic instruments. Restless, at times violent, music that taps into a thought filled energy.

Mark Feldman: What Exit. 2006. ECM: 1928.

Mark Feldman: violin
John Taylor: piano
Anders Jormin: double-bass
Tom Rainey: drums

Mark Feldman's illustrious career as a performing violinist includes a stint with the television evangelist Jimmy Swaggart. Though it's hard to imagine a more satisfying "hallelujah" than the swelling textures of "Arcade" that open this disc. The tide that ushers in the violin toward a plateau of the full quartet inspires an "amen" as it stretches out through righteous arrangement toward its symetrical decrescendo at the close. The shorter tracks that follow in its wake are well crafted prayers of jazz composition. Particularly "Everafter," offered up in memory of David H. Baker. And the Tom Rainey effect is in full force throughout this disc. (Tom Rainey effect = involuntary admiration of great drumming triggered by either recordings or live experiences with this amazing drummer). This one is a real favorite in the rotation.

The Bad Plus: Give. 2004. Columbia/Sony Music: CK 90771.

Reid Anderson: bass
Ethan Iverson: piano
David King: drums

An outstanding trio. And Give is an irresistible Bad Plus party that hits all the cerebral, emotional and groove-happy nodes. Each track is a polished, live and exuberant balance of play and arrangement. Unafraid to rock and unafraid to flash a smart harmonic turn or virtuosic sequence.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

HurdAudio Rotation: Spiritually Impious

Joe Henderson: Page One. 1963. Blue Note Records: CDP 7 84140 2.

Joe Henderson: tenor saxophone
Kenny Dorham: trumpet
McCoy Tyner: piano
Butch Warren: bass
Pete La Roca: drums

The jazz loving ear is enticed from several different directions from this one. Joe Henderson is a known entity of excellence in tenor saxo
phone playing from this era of Blue Note Records. But just lurking beneath that band leader draw is a dose of Kenny Dorham's trumpet and arranging chops. Add in the ivory stylings of McCoy Tyner and this one shapes up to be a straight ahead classic that does not disappoint.

Satanized: Sickness and Hellth: The Secular Chansons of ... 2007. Badmaster Records: BM010.

Andrew Gaspar: voice, turntable
Alex Nagle: guitar
Evan Lipson: bass
Pete Angevine: drums

"Purple Pickle" deserves hit status in the world of lewd-core music. Satanized is an indulgence of Philadelphia's collision of noise, rage and creativity. Alex Nagle's guitar dominates my impression of this collection of jams and screaming this time through. And of course, I came back for seconds on "Purple Pickle."

The Bad Plus: Prog. 2007. Do the Math Records/Heads Up International: HUCD 3125.

Reid Anderson: bass
Ethan Iverson: piano
David King: drums

Perhaps too much is made of choice of cover tunes featured by the Bad Plus. Perhaps a generation raised on show tunes as the body of accepted jazz "standards" has not yet comprehended the straight parallel of a piano trio interpreting Tears for Fears or David Bowie. What is apparent in this music - most of it originals composed by the members of The Bad Plus - is a polished, tightly realized music from this world. Ethan Iverson hears around the confines of didactically defined jazz and draws out a sound that grooves, pounds and finds pools of carefully placed lyricism. Making direct references to Rush or Burt Bacharach with the same rhythmic crispness of Thelonius Monk brings a refreshing respect to all music regardless of its position on the spectrum between sacred and profane.

Saturday, February 16, 2008

HurdAudio Rotation: The Suspicious Activity of Dancing

Nels Cline: New Monastery: A View Into the Music of Andrew Hill. 2006. Cryptogramophone: CG130.

Nels Cline: guitar, effects
Bobby Bradford: cornet
Ben Goldberg: clarinets
Andrea Parkins: accordion, effects
Devin Hoff: contrabass
Scott Amendola: drums, percussion
Alex Cline: percussion

Given the creative beauty found within the music of Andrew Hill there's a pleasant sensibility of "a view" that suggests just how many views into this body of music might be found as sympathetic improvisers gaze into, through and come away inspired. All through New Monastery there is the palpable sense of homage paid toward Hill out of love. This is something tangibly different from duty. The strings of Nels Cline's guitar seemingly stretching backwards and forward through time with the presence of Bobby Bradford providing substantive roots to the history of free jazz. The opening duet between Cline and Ben Goldberg setting the introspective stage that nearly explodes as the full ensemble emerges for a view into "Pumpkin." This is heady, soul-satisfying music.

The Bad Plus: Suspicious Activity? 2005. Columbia Records: 94740.

Reid Anderson: bass
Ethan Iverson: piano
David King: drums

The Bad Plus work a mean addition as this trio effort offers up a polished, dynamic sound that draw the ears toward the individual roles of these Minnesota composer/musicians. This is a piano trio that carves out some clear contours with original compositions (plus one cover) that build and often soar with a fearless approach toward pulse and harmony. Suspicious Activity? keeps the mind awake with its sly turns and bubbling individuality. The drumming is outstanding and would be a focal point all its own if not for the remarkable cohesion of this group as a whole.

Ornette Coleman: Dancing In Your Head. 1973, 1975. (Re-released in 2000). Verve Music Group: 314 543 519-2.

Ornette Coleman: alto saxophone
Robert Palmer: clarinet
Charles Ellerbee: guitar
Bern Nix: guitar
Jamaaladeen Tacuma: bass
Ronald Shannon Jackson: drums
Master Musicians of Jajouka: ghaita, stringed instruments, percussion

"Dance" is the key word for this collection as the harmolodic groove gyrates into a transcontinental frenzy. This one has a split identity, with two long versions of "Theme From a Symphony" featuring a core set of players that would later figure prominently in Coleman's Prime Time group followed by two frustratingly brief versions of "Midnight Sunrise" with the Master Musicians of Jajouka. I understand that more of these recordings from Morocco do exist and the latter part of this record is a tantalizing glimpse at sound of this collaboration.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

HurdAudio Rotation: Bad Plus 2-Z Surreal

The Bad Plus: Prog. 2007. Do the Math Records/Heads Up International: HUCD 3125.

Reid Anderson: bass
Ethan Iverson: piano
David King: drums

More band than traditional piano trio, Bad Plus isn't afraid to rock out while still bringing a steady dose of heady arrangements and compositions. Prog puts new perspective on Tears for Fears, Burt Bacharach, David Bowie and Rush while the original compositions place a sustained energy that satisfy a balance of head and heart.

Matthew Shipp Duo with Roscoe Mitchell: 2-Z. 1996. Thirsty Ear: thi 21312.2.

Matthew Shipp: piano
Roscoe Mitchell: alto saxophone, soprano saxophone

The texture and intensity between these two improvisation masters continues to grow on me. Roscoe Mitchell is simply outstanding in this session as he spins something fierce as a collaborative force. This is early Matthew Shipp and what he's learned from the likes of Mitchell manifests itself on later recordings. Here he is just keeping up and painting a great canvas while Mitchell soars.

Erik Friedlander: Maldoror. 2003. Brassland: HWY-005.

Erik Friedlander: cello

"I am filthy" delivers on its namesake with quiet, hard, brutal strokes of the bow across the string. When "Flights of Starlings" follows it's as if the weight and dirt have lifted to accommodate the sky. Friedlander's surrealist solo effort is a stable in the rotation and it gets better with each listening.

Saturday, August 18, 2007

HurdAudio Rotation: Three More Angles on Improvisation

Nels Cline: New Monastery: A view into the music of Andrew Hill. 2006. Cryptogramophone: CG130.

Nels Cline: guitar, effects
Bobby Bradford: cornet
Ben Goldberg: clarinets
Andrea Parkins: accordion, effects
Devin Hoff: contrabass
Scott Amendola: drumset, percussion
Alex Cline: percussion

One striking thing about the sound of these Andrew Hill compositions (plus a couple of Nels Cline originals in the mold of Andrew Hill's compositional sensibility) is the absence of piano. Hill's music takes so many interesting twists and turns in its arrangements and it isn't difficult to separate his ideas from the instrument he played. But with accordion as the only keyboard instrument in the mix - and Ben Goldberg's bass clarinet work having remarkable similarity to one-time Hill collaborator Eric Dolphy - this ensemble takes the music of Andrew Hill into a slightly different timbral direction and celebrates it with vigor. The effects employed by Nels Cline and Andrea Parkins never overwhelm the overall sound, but actually blend in a manner consistent with the aesthetic freedom and arranging pathos that makes this "view into" such a compelling listen.

The Bad Plus: Suspicious Activity? 2005. Columbia: CK 94740.

Reid Anderson: bass
Ethan Iverson: piano
David King: drums

Suspicious? With an emphasis on activity this piano trio has no fear of drilling into a deep rhythmic vein while allowing for surprising twists within these arrangements that leave a groove that's anything but mindless. While "Anthem for the Earnest" still has the most immediate appeal of anything I've heard over the past few years I'm starting to find interesting details that deliver considerable pleasure in "Prehensile Dream" and "Lost of Love."

Michael Zerang: Cedarhead. 2006. Al Maslakh: 06.

Michael Zerang: drums
performing duets with:
Sharif Sehnaoui: electric guitar
Mazen Kerbaj: trumpet
Raed Yassin: tapes & electronics
Christine Sehnaoui: alto saxophone
Charbel Haber: electric guitar
Jassem Hindi: electronics
Bechir Saade: nay (flute)

That the creativity of the Beirut improvised music scene should have to toil within an environment of destabilizing violence and the crushing interference and indifference of competing world powers is just one of the massive cultural tragedies that continues to unfold in this part of the world. That such a vital subculture can thrive - as evidenced by the astonishing beauty found on the Al Maslakh label - is a profound testament of the perseverance and raw survival instincts of art. Chicago-based drummer Michael Zerang writes movingly about editing these master recordings from his second trip to Beirut to play with these intense and talented players as the "July War" of 2006 was unfolding. With a personal connection he had developed to a community now again under fire the documentation of Cedarhead takes on an urgency and stark sonic beauty that reverberates throughout these seven improvisations. The religious and political differences that spark such unrest seems petty compared to the artistic expression that it imperils. With generous use of extended techniques each performance finds the timbral range of drums, electric guitar, trumpet, electronics, saxophone and flute pulled closer together for an astonishing intimacy of sound between these players. The brief improvisation between Zerang and guitarist Charbel Haber mines a particularly fascinating zone of interaction and sound.

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

HurdAudio Rotation: Fugitive Axis and Prog

Reuben Radding: Fugitive Pieces. 2006. Pine Ear Music: PEM 002.

Reuben Radding: double bass
Matt Bauder: tenor saxophone, clarinet
Andrew Drury: percussion
Nate Wooley: trumpet

There's a quiet expansiveness to the music of Fugitive Pieces as this quartet of improvisers apply extended techniques toward mining sonic textures of microscopic detail. It evokes the open, unpopulated spaces of an Ansel Adams photograph along with a similar entrancing depth and beauty. These four individuals nearly fuse into a single entity as the all acoustic instrumentation yields such a focused, other worldly sound.

Jim Black: Alasnoaxis. 2000. Winter & Winter: 910061-2.

Jim Black: drums
Hilmar Jensson: electric guitar
Chris Speed: tenor saxophone, clarinet
Skuli Sverrisson: electric bass

Brief, episodic compositions arranged in a manner that keeps me smiling. This band is fluent in any number of genres and they're stylistically omnivorous enough to convincingly switch things up without falling into the jazz "postmodern" abyss that's been getting some discussion around the blogosphere. Instead, it feels like an extension of Jim Black's unique style of drumming translated into a compositional sensibility as the mixing of disparate elements sounds less deliberate than natural. Sverrisson's work on the electric bass is a wonder to behold on this one.

The Bad Plus: Prog. 2007. Do the Math Records/Heads Up International: HUCD 3125.

Reid Anderson: bass
Ethan Iverson: piano
David King: drums

With about 100-times more energy than Tears for Fears ever had, The Bad Plus breathe intoxicating vigor into "Everybody Wants to Rule the World." And the odd choices for covers goes on with David Bowie's "Life on Mars," Rush's "Tom Sawyer" and Burt Bacharach's "This Guy's in Love with You." But it's the originals on Prog that keep the foot stomping and the brain wrinkled up with intrigue as "Physical Cities" by bassist Reid Anderson hits a real sweet spot of groove with plenty of detail and variation that appeals directly to my own sensibilities. And drummer David King's "1980 World Champion" ends this collection with some serious punch. The Bad Plus have found a jazz vitality that resonates with contemporary, real world influences that feels like the re-birth of a new cool.

Saturday, May 19, 2007

HurdAudio Rotation: Climbing Hills, Doing the Math and Bangin' on Cans

Nels Cline: New Monastery - a view into the music of Andrew Hill. 2006. Cryptogramophone: 130.

Nels Cline: guitar, effects
Bobby Bradford: cornet
Andrea Parkins: accordion, effects
Devin Hoff: contrabass
Scott Amendola: drumset, percussion
Alex Cline: percussion (on two tracks)

This one is an homage to the music of Andrew Hill played with joy and an ear for the spirit of these great compositions. Cline's arrangement of Dedication is just spot on. After spending some time recently with the original Hill recordings of many of these pieces lately it's a pleasure to hear them refracted through this piano-less ensemble. There's no question that this body of music will live on and inspire many who are part of this living tradition. This is just one view into the music of Andrew Hill.

The Bad Plus: Suspicious Activity? 2005. Columbia: CK 94740.

Reid Anderson: bass
Ethan Iverson: piano
David King: drums

"Anthem for the Earnest" has one of the hookiest of hooks ever found in the piano trio medium. I find it irresistible and deeply pleasant. The Bad Plus can groove, rock and keep the brain engaged as well. This disc is insanely cool.

Bang on a Can & Don Byron: A Ballad For Many. 2006. Cantaloupe Music: CA21036.

Don Byron: composer, clarinet
Bang on a Can All-stars:
Robert Black: bass
David Cossin: drum set, percussion
Lisa Moore: piano
Mark Stewart: guitars
Wendy Sutter: cello
Evan Ziporyn: clarinets

The Don Byron sound refracted through the aggressive-progressive lens of the Bang on a Can All-stars. The focus here is Don Byron the composer as this 6-piece chamber ensemble interprets two film scores and a handful of other pieces written by the intensely creative and wide-ranging clarinetist. To my ears, this is a rare meeting of two of the most vibrant New York music scenes. And it's not surprising that Don Byron would be a pivotal figure linking the "totalist" new music camp of Lang, Wolf, Gordon and company to the downtown improvised music scene. Nor is it surprising that Byron's musical ideas would display the same qualities as chamber works that one hears in his touring jazz ensembles.

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Current HurdAudio Rotation

Terry Riley: Atlantis Nath. I wrote about this one earlier. I'm still charmed by it - warts and all.

Peter Apfelbaum and the Hieroglyphics Ensemble: Jodoji Brightness. I love the compositions/arrangements on this one. The setting of the Dylan Thomas poem "The Hand That Signed the Paper" opens my ears to some outstanding words.

Terry Riley: The Book of Abbeyozzud. A perfect example of the "moving target" quality of Terry Riley's output. These are great arrangements for acoustic guitar and percussion that are a real sonic departure from other Riley soundscapes. This is one I keep coming back to.

Albert Ayler: Holy Ghost box set Disc 1. This is another one I've written about in this space. I keep going back to hear Ayler and Cecil Taylor playing together.


The Bad Plus: Suspicious Activity? Another one I've mentioned earlier. It keeps sounding cool.

Elliott Sharp/Orchestra Carbon: Abstract Repressionism: 1990 - 1999. This one gets plenty of rotation here at HurdAudio. Exquisitely ugly and some great thematic lines that really stick with you.

James Tenney: Postal Pieces. Rembering this inspiring composer, teacher and friend. These conceptual, post-card sized compositions are stunning examples of how much sound lurks within simple forms and ideas. These pieces really open up the ears.