bitrate: 320 kbit/sec
info: The ICI Ensemble Munich (International Composers & Improvisers) is a loose group of German musicians, with varying line-ups. They have developed their "Composer in Dialogue" concept to which they invite modern composers, with so far Olga Neuwirth, Barry Guy, Pierre Favre, George Lewis, Giancarlo Schiaffini und Vinko Globokar as invitees. From what I could find, only the collaborations with Neuwirth and Lewis were released on record, but I must say that - like most avant-garde music - their promotion is as amateurish as their music is good.
In 2009,
the band invited William Parker to compose for them, and the result is
absolutely staggering. Parker has of course composed for improvisational
orchestras with his own Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra, music of
incredible density and freedom.
After some
questionable side-steps in the past years, we find the New York artist back in
full glory. In fifteen relatively short compositions, Parker develops
incredibly coherent gems of sound, with the gravity and solemnity of a Bill
Dixon, all forming one single suite, and with a lightness of arrangements that
belies the size of the octet, because instruments come and go, for short bursts
of sounds, a few phrases. Parker seems to try to evoke the strong memory
imprints of his life or youth : "Bells", "Train",
"Explosion", "Tears", or the space around :
"Earth", "Moon", "Sky", but then in a deep and
meaningful way : full of emotion and sprituality : "Hope",
"Revolution", "Winter Sun Crying". The "Train"
sounds like a train, or rather the shadow of a train. "Earth" is all
angular and hard and unpredictable. "Moon" is slower and eery with
unison howls and crescendos. "Explosion" is built around incredible
tension, with weird background noises and dark rumbling drums laying the
backdrop for innocent flute playing, juxtaposing Not surprisingly, the last
piece, "Let's Change The World" is as fragile as it gets, almost
transparent music with Parker's bamboo flute adding a kind of universal song
for mankind.
Credit also
goes to the entire band, who really move as one, with a great sense of
direction creating sonic environments that are open in nature. To be clear,
this is not all improvisation : this is well thought-through and structured
music, with room for exploration and emphasis, and it makes it all the powerful
for the listener.
This is
jazz in its most modern shape and at its best : intelligent, complex,
compelling, technically superb, surprising, deep, emotional.
Not to be
missed and to me for sure one of the contender of album of the year.
The band is
:
William
Parker, double-bass, piccolo, trumpet, shakuhachi, double reeds
David
Jager, soprano & tenor saxophones
Roger
Jannotta, alto saxophone, piccolo, flute, clarinet
Markus
Heinze, baritone & tenor saxophones
Christofer
Varner, trombone, sampler
Martin
Wolfrum, piano,
Johanna
Varner, cello,
Gunnar
Geisse, laptop & laptop guitar
Georg
Janker, double-bass,
Sunk Poschi, drums
source: freejazz-stef.blogspot.com
links:
Комментариев нет:
Отправить комментарий