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- Newsgroups: rec.music.bluenote
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!uwm.edu!daffy!uwvax!cs.wisc.edu!hellers
- From: hellers@cs.wisc.edu (Joe Hellerstein)
- Subject: Recent listening (mini-reviews)
- Message-ID: <HELLERS.92Dec22012641@cleo.cs.wisc.edu>
- Sender: news@cs.wisc.edu (The News)
- Organization: Univ. of Wisconsin @ Madison, CS Dept.
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 07:26:41 GMT
- Lines: 108
-
-
- Just some random reactions to things I've bought or heard recently.
- Apologies in advance for flip judgements...
-
- Jack DeJohnette: ZEBRA
- Yuck! I saw this CD in a K-Mart type store for about $5, and
- bought it. It's Jack on synths and Lester Bowie on trumpet.
- Mostly Jack just sets up a rhythm pattern and Lester contributes
- typical but uninspired Lesterisms. No fire here at *all*, although
- some mildly interesting textures. It was soundtrack music for a video
- program ("Tadayuki Naito/Zebra"), and sounds like it.
-
- Duke Ellington -- HAPPY BIRTHDAY DUKE! THE BIRTHDAY SESSIONS.
- This is that LaserLight 5 CD $25 set that people were
- discussing recently. The sound quality is good, considering the era
- and that it's live; a little mix-down to cut the highs would have been
- nice, but hey, for $5 a disk I'm not going to complain too much. It's
- interesting to hear the band in a dance setting. I don't think this
- ranks as a classic set of recordings, but it's fun and there are
- fairly regular flashes of beauty. Every Paul Gonsalves solo is a gem.
- The trumpet playing was kind of disappointing to me, a lot of Cat
- Anderson grandstanding, and Ray Nance playing comfortably in his bag.
- Biggest gripe -- nowhere on the box or in the notes do they say what
- years these recordings are from!! If they didn't know, an educated
- guess would have been helpful!
-
- Herb Robertson -- CERTIFIED
- I was blown away by Herb Robertson's playing on Tim Berne's
- FRACTURED FAIRY TALES, so I picked this up. This is not as good. It
- certainly doesn't have the kinds of weird-but-funky grooves and
- melodies that FFT (no geeky pun intended) does. I probably need to
- give this a few more listenings, but I miss the messy
- Harmon-with-plunger growling that I heard on FFT. On a related note,
- any reactions to Berne's PACE YOURSELF?
-
- Fats Navarro -- NOSTALGIA
- This is a rerelease of a Savoy LP by Nippon Columbia. It was
- cheap, $9, although it's only 34 minutes long. Contains nice playing
- by Fats, and some entertaining heads that I never heard before.
- People always say that Fats was a distinct sound for his era, that he
- was working on a different thing than Dizzy. I hear a *lot* of Dizzy
- in his playing here, moreso than on the Milestone "Fats Navarro" CD I
- have with Tadd Dameron's band. Eddie Lockjaw Davis is up to his usual
- stunts; it's interesting to hear bop meet r 'n' b that way. Dexter
- Gordon plays nicely on the tracks he's on. Not an earth-shattering
- set of recordings, but quite good. These Savoy re-releases are nice
- and cheap -- I saw one of the Charlie Parker ones for $6.99 in the
- "new releases" bin! And they do a good job with the packaging --
- original artwork, and original liner notes printed nearly full size
- (the CD insert folds out to be 4x as big, and the liner notes are on
- there).
-
- David Murray -- SHAKILL'S WARRIOR
- OK, this was supposed to be *great* according to the net
- wisdom, and I found it to be OK-to-good. The first tune (Blues for
- Savannah) has the most disposable blues head I've heard in a long
- time. "Song From the Old Country" is nice, I like the introduction in
- particular. What is that rap at the beginning of "High Priest?"
- Who's doing that? It's not really happening, it's just a novelty
- thing. Not as bad as Jumpworld, but I didn't see the point.
- Generally there wasn't much stretching on this album, and the grooves
- were happening, I guess, but not really smoking. Pullen seemed
- particularly reserved. It's definitely worth picking up, but there's
- other David Murray and Don Pullen to get before this.
-
- Roscoe Mitchell -- SONGS IN THE WIND
- I dunno, this didn't get me at all. Features local
- Madison/Milwaukee drummer Vincent Davis, who I recently got a chance
- to play with. He's a terrific drummer; keep your eyes open for him.
- Anyway, this album feature Roscoe, Vincent, and instruments by some
- inventor (name escapes me) called Bullroarers and WindWands. The
- pieces are relatively short (for Roscoe), and I can't think of any
- highlights to describe, it just didn't catch me. I had to return the
- CD to its owner; I'd be willing to believer that it grows on you with
- repeated listenings.
-
- Enrico Rava -- ANIMALS
- Hmm. This is the only Rava I've heard, although I know he's
- associated with the free-era Steve Lacy. This album is a quartet of
- Rava, Augusto Mancinelli on electric and synth guitars, Furio di
- Castri on acoustic bass and 16-year-old Mauro Beggio on drums. The
- concept is tight, circular melody patterns with extremely clean
- playing. Too clean for my taste, and the synth guitars and mixdown
- add to that. Some interesting and fluid playing by Rava, but the
- texture is cold and it gets monotonous. I got this CD for $2, BTW.
-
- ---
- Well, mostly gripes I guess. Sorry about that. On a happier note, I
- finally dug into the end of the BROWNIE box set, to listen to the last
- disc or two (which I never seemed to get to in the 2 years I've had
- it). WOW!!!!!! This is incredible stuff, Clifford is *smoking* -- fast
- and comfortable and full of ideas. Sonny Rollins finally shows up to
- give the band some serious contrast. When Sonny slows down and works
- with texture and motivic development he really complements Brownie's
- more linear, flowing playing. Max Roach has mastered that
- "energy-without-volume" thing that nobody I play with seems to have :-(
- This was just one amazing, amazing band. And absolutely required
- listening for trumpet players -- time for me to do a little
- transcribing. The rehearsal takes of "Flossie Lou" include some band
- chatter, Clifford in particular, as well as some solo playing by
- Clifford when the band lays out after a take gets cut. This stuff is
- really heart-rending; Clifford sounds so damn happy when he speaks.
- Just like when he plays. Wow.
-
-
- Joe Hellerstein
-
-
-