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Graham Collier: Workpoints
Collier, who possesses a fiery, Mingus-like technique (as well as a pair of formidable mutton-chop sideburns), became the first English graduate of Boston's Berklee College of Music in 1963 and toured with the Tommy Dorsey "ghost band later that year. In 1967, he was awarded the Arts Council of Great Britain's very first jazz commission to create "Workpoints, the four-part suite that makes up most of this so-named set's first disc.
This music is largely through-composed, moving constantly through a changeable panorama of moods and frequently erupting into spells of uproarious blowing or descending into breaks by one or two players. Recorded in Southampton, England during the March 1968 debut tour of "Workpoints," disc one features the colossal Graham Collier Dozen, a unit stocked with such budding stalwarts as saxophonist John Surman and trumpeter Kenny Wheeler, future Brotherhood of Breath trumpeter Harry Beckett and two future Soft Machine members, multi-instrumentalist Karl Jenkins and drummer John Marshall. Collier's Mingus muse is out of the bag right away with the eighteen-minute opener, "Deep Dark Blue Centre, which sports a rollicking "prayer meeting bass line and dissonant section work from the brass and reeds. But, like the tile track and much else in Collier's oeuvre, the piece takes several decidedly less-Mingus turns into tuneful introspection.
Disc two comes from a 1975 Belgian concert by a sextet of Collier, Beckett, saxophonist Art Themen, guitarist Ed Speight, pianist Roger Dean and drummer John Webb. Leading off is "Little Ben, another eighteen-minute opus, but a much more open-ended one that's notable for some wild blowing by Beckett, Theman and Speight, whose mildly distorted tone hints at Mahavishnu McLaughlin's. This date includes still another four-part suite, the loosely written "Darius, from Collier's 1974 Mosaic LP of the same name (on that album the work is actually a five-piece composition; its "Part 2 is omitted here for reasons unclear). Reflective of the times is "Under the Pier, a funky blues marked by Dean's electric piano and Speight's soul-jazz wah-wah.
Covering a palette that ranges from free to modern big band sounds, Workpoints shines some much-deserved limelight on one of British jazz's most neglected figures.
Track Listing
CD1: Deep Dark Blue Centre; The Barley Mow; Workpoints Part One; Workpoints Part Two; Workpoints Part Three; Workpoints Part Four. CD2: Little Ben; Under the Pier; Darius Part one; Darius Part Three; Darius Part Four; Darius Part One Reprise; Clear Moon; Mackerel Sky.
Personnel
Graham Collier
composer / conductorCD1: Kenny Wheeler: trumpet, flugelhorn; Harry Beckett: trumpet, flugelhorn; Henry Lowther: trumpet, flugelhorn; Dave Aaron: alto sax, tenor sax, soprano sax, flute; John Surman: baritone sax, soprano sax, bass clarinet, piano; Karl Jenkins: baritone sax, soprano sax, oboe, piano; Chris Smith: trombone; Mike Gibbs: trombone; John Mumford: trombone, cowbell; Frank Ricotti: vibraphone, bongos; Graham Collier: bass; John Marshall: drums. CD2: Harry Beckett: trumpet, flugelhorn; Art Themen: tenor sax, soprano sax; Ed Speight: guitar; Roger Dean: piano, electric piano; Graham Collier: bass; John Webb: drums.
Album information
Title: Workpoints | Year Released: 2006 | Record Label: Cuneiform Records
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About Graham Collier
Instrument: Composer / conductor
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