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Album

Free Fall Clarinet 1962 Revisited

Label: Ezz-thetics
Released: 2021
Track listing: Motion Suspended; Propulsion; Threewe; Ornothoids; Dichotomy; Man Alone; Spasmodic; Yggdrasill; Divided Man; Primordial Call; The Five Ways.

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Article: Album Review

Rachel Eckroth: The Garden

Read "The Garden" reviewed by Jerome Wilson


Pianist and composer Rachel Eckroth travels a twisty road on this CD, creating an ever-changing mix of jazz, prog rock, and fusion which utilizes off- center beats and swarming electronic effects. Eckroth's music is a little different on each track. Sometimes it builds up from layers of piano and synthesizers. At other times it ...

Article: Live Review

Anokhi3 al Pinocchio di Firenze

Read "Anokhi3 al Pinocchio di Firenze" reviewed by Neri Pollastri


Anokhi3 Firenze Pinocchio Live Jazz 4.12.21 Giunta al Pinocchio di Firenze il giorno successivo al suo esordio assoluto, avvenuto a Monfalcone, Anokhi3—piano trio che Cristiano Calcagnile ha messo in piedi assieme a Giorgio Pacorig e Gabriele Evangelista—è una formazione pensata da tempo e il cui materiale ha richiesto una lunga elaborazione. ...

1,277

Article: Interview

Paul Motian: There's a Million Songs Out There

Read "Paul Motian: There's a Million Songs Out There" reviewed by Paul Olson


This interview was first published at All About Jazz in April 2006. Paul Motian doesn't like being interviewed. That said, the 75-year-old drummer has plenty to say, and doesn't hesitate to speak his mind. Motian first came to prominence in the late 1950s as one-third (with bassist Scott LaFaro and ...

18

Article: Album Review

Oddgeir Berg Trio: Christmas Came Early

Read "Christmas Came Early" reviewed by Dan McClenaghan


The late Paul Bley (1932-2016) once said of his ECM Records release Open, To Love (1972), that the sound he created there was his attempt to prove he was the slowest pianist in the world. He was a man with a sense of humor, and his tongue had surely wormed its way into his cheek with ...

Article: Profile

Frank Kimbrough: Un Ciclopico Omaggio

Read "Frank Kimbrough: Un Ciclopico Omaggio" reviewed by Angelo Leonardi


Kimbrough è l'ambizioso e ciclopico progetto discografico dedicato a Frank Kimbrough, il grande pianista e compositore scomparso il 30 dicembre 2020 a 64 anni. Prodotto da Elan Mehler della Newvelle Records, è stato realizzato da 67 musicisti che hanno inciso 61 composizioni di Kimbrough in differenti ensemble, dal piano solo al settetto. Molti dei protagonisti sono ...

8

Article: Interview

Christian Sands: Renaissance Man

Read "Christian Sands: Renaissance Man" reviewed by R.J. DeLuke


Christian Sands is more than a jazz pianist, though he excels at it and it is central to his art. After all he started playing at about the age of two and first performed in public at age nine. Sands is a prolific composer. He has written music for television. He wants to do ...

2

Article: Album Review

Joe Harriott: Free Form & Abstract Revisited

Read "Free Form & Abstract Revisited" reviewed by Mark Corroto


Call it partisanship or maybe musical chauvinism, but North American audiences have traditionally had little appreciation for jazz musicians from the United Kingdom or, for that matter, Europe. Rewind back to 1961, and explain why Americans were not hip to the Joe Harriott Quintet? His two releases, Free Form, released in 1961, and Abstract, in 1963, ...

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Article: Interview

Unscientific Italians: Frisellian Magic

Read "Unscientific Italians: Frisellian Magic" reviewed by Ludovico Granvassu


If Italian film director Nanni Moretti had been born in 1973 instead of 1953, he might well have set the iconic Vespa ride through the empty streets of a languid, mid-August Rome in Caro Diario against a Bill Frisell rather than a Keith Jarrett soundtrack. Because if every era is defined by a limited ...

Article: My Playlist

Manolo Cabras: gli album che sto ascoltando

Read "Manolo Cabras: gli album che sto ascoltando" reviewed by Vincenzo Roggero


1. Annette Peacock, An Acrobat's Heart (ECM, 2000) Un album incredibilmente bello di una delle figure più misteriose, sfuggenti e seducenti ai margini del jazz. 2. Bill Laswell, Baseline (Elektra Records, 1983) A volte il primo album rimane il migliore. 3. Paul Motian Trio ...


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