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Barry Guy/Marilyn Crispell/Paul Lytton: Ithaca
ByNow, 36 years later, another piano trio, comprised of peers of the Santana group (bassist Barry Guy and drummer Paul Lytton) plus American pianist Marilyn Crispell, has released Ithaca , an album that both recalls the work of the earlier trio and rescues the format from their vicious treatment.
Judged solely on its own merit, Ithaca is another firm entry into European improvised music, replete with all its attendant qualities: superlative musicianship, a full range of textures, and a rational, cerebral approach. Guy continues to expand the vocabulary of the acoustic bass, ably matched by Paul Lytton's abstract notions of rhythm and sound. Crispell, an American musician who has been bridging the gap between the continents, comports herself well given the company, her exuberance driving the more raucous portions and her delicacy coloring the more reserved ones.
Stood side by side with Santana , Ithaca is reactionary in the way that much British improvised music always has been. While the continent thundered away, Britain, including much of the work of Messrs. Guy and Lytton, was more thoughtful, forcing listeners to peer in, rather than ward off blows. There are moments of, let us call it the German ideal, but they are cushioned by contrastingly ethereal segments. If Santana effectively murdered Bill Evans, Ithaca dug up his corpse and used Schweizer, Kowald and Favre's collective brain to create a wonderful Frankenstein's monster.
Track Listing
Fire and Ice 10:21; Void (for Doris) 6:37; First Shard 1:50; Broken Silence 6:34; Second Shard 1:12; Ithaca 8:47; Zinc 3:32; Third Shard 2:42; Unfolding 3:55; Zig Zag 10:08; Klaglied 4:47.
Personnel
Barry Guy
bassBarry Guy: Bass Marilyn Crispell: Piano Paul Lytton: Percussion
Album information
Title: Ithaca | Year Released: 2004 | Record Label: Intakt Records
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