CD/LP/Track Review

Peter Brötzmann: For Adolphe Sax (2002)

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By
MARK CORROTO,

Mark Corroto

Senior Contributor - Since 1999

Mark misses his large dog Louie, but endeavors daily to find and listen to new and interesting sounds.

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Published: July 4, 2002
Peter Brötzmann: For Adolphe Sax

With all the historical references to the 1967 recording For Adolphe Sax aside, this session burns with a passion for life and indefatigalbe vigor for musicmaking, as fresh as any working unit in jazz today. The systematic rediscovery and rerelease of long out-of-print free jazz by Atavistic's Unheard Music Series reassembles a roadway linking creative musicians of today with their sometimes lost roots.

Then again, saxophonist Peter Brötzmann's music has never been lost. His ceaseless enthusiasm since this self-produced recording 35 years ago has carried the music of Albert Ayler and John Coltrane through the fusion years, the retro-bop years and gulp, the smooth jazz era. Today the sixty year old is still blowing fire from his horn worldwide.

For Adolphe Sax takes us back before the his large ensemble projects of Machine Gun (1968) and Chicago Tentet (1997-present). Before his associations with drummer Han Bennink and pianist Alexander von Schlippenbach and before Last Exit with Bill Laswell, Ronald Shannon Jackson, and Sonny Sharrock.

Initally released on Brotzmann's own BRO label, this disc was later an FMP LP out-of-print some thirty years now. Brotzmann is joined by bassist Peter Kowald (Global Unity Orchestra, Schlippenbach Trio, London Jazz Composers Orchestra) and Swedish free-jazz drummer Sven Ake Johansson, both of which would play on the 1968 Machine Gun sessions. The disc also includes a unreleased track with pianist Fred Van Hove recorded at Radio Bremen.

Perhaps the music is not as scary today as it was in 1967. Brötzman's bands were working free from the constraints of time signitures and notated music. His energy driven jazz starts off the title track feeling his way onto the soundstage with a tentaive prelude. Soon he s joined by his band finding their direction, shifting thoughts and energies between the players. Thorughout,as you would expect, there are passages of dynamic power. But there are also weighty and introspective sections of ingenious music making.

Track Listing: For Adolphe Sax; Sanity; Morning Glory; Everything.

Personnel: Peter Brötzmann - Tenor Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone; Peter Kowald - Bass; Sven-Ake Johansson - Drums; Fred Van Hove - Piano (track #4 only).

Record Label: Atavistic Worldwide | Style: Modern Jazz

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