Extended show due to other DJs being out for Thanksgiving. I do relish the chance for extended time on the air. Any time I compile a to-do list of things to play, it ends up a mile long. Sometimes I think I could fill six hours every week if I had to, especially when you consider all the great rock/pop stuff queueing through rotation that I never get to.
I inadvertently participated in Buy Nothing Day today. Don't get me wrong; I love the concept. But I give myself a mulligan here because I'm not that consumer-y in the first place, and because on a day off work, when I've got my radio show coming in the afternoon, I can't resist stopping by a coffee house for a long, relaxing espresso break. Couldn't make it today due to family commitments, so I'm "in" with the Adbusters guys this time. Huzzah!
Of note this week:
Format:
ARTIST -- "TRACK TITLE" -- ALBUM TITLE (LABEL, YEAR)
Horizontal lines denote microphone breaks.
* Charlie Hunter Trio -- "'Speakers Built In'" -- Mistico (Fantasy, 2007)
This is a concept album, a full-length suite commissioned by the Next Wave Festival at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. Not every track has this mystical kind of title; there's also "Little Richard's New Wave." The project has a slashingly artsy air. It's active and bouncy, with a clean kind of sound that would seem grant-friendly. Side two starts with a morose 13-minute strings piece, dark and moody, nice risky stuff.
But about Splatter. Myles Boisen (guitar) and Gino Robair (drums) have stuck around to do some amazing work on the local scene, but saxophonist Dave Barrett split to Mexico some years ago. He vists every now and again, apparently, and over the course of 12 years, Splatter Trio and various friends recorded all these studio tracks, which they've strung together to form this albu.
Splatter Trio was all about crazy avant-garde instrumentals but with definite themes. They'd done the John Zorn genre-jumping thing within songs, for instance. This set tosses in a lot of funk and reggae elements and world-music percussion for a downright catchy mix. And then they've got the occasional guitar blasts or noise electronics to show they aren't going soft on you. It's a great effort, both the playing and the studio magic (which I'm assuming is Boisen's touch). Lots of variety, too -- there's one track that's a loud blurry attack, another that's a madcap jumble, and of course some slow stuff. A great listen, all around.
More background on the trio here ... and a nice review from All About Jazz here.
* Joachim Kuhn, Majid Bekkas, Ramon Lopez -- "Hamdouchi" -- Kalimba (ACT Music, 2007)
* Manhattan New Music Project -- "Passaglia"/"Night Flight" -- Jazz Cycles: MNMP Performs Paul Nash (MNMP, 2007)
The music comes across as straight-jazz stuff, performed by a large
and classically-oriented band, a very polite sound. Considering Nash
was a rather mainstream composer, that's not surprising. It might
not be my cup of tea but it's a fitting way to honor Nash's memory,
and these tracks -- the opening movements of the CD -- present a
lively mood.
Paul Nash
was a jazz composer with some ties to the Bay Area.
Before he passed away, in 2005, he managed to organize some (possibly
all?) of his compositions -- his life's work -- into what he considered
definitive editions. This is the first of two planned CDs from MNMP that
would present those works.
*! Madlib -- "Raw Tranquility, Pt. 3" -- Beat Konductra, Vols. 3-4: India (Stones Throw, 2007)
Zeena Parkins -- "T-Square" -- V/A: Real Estate: New Music from New York (Ear Rational, 1990)
The upcoming talk seemed a good excuse for an all-Zeena set. This is
a classic-era downtown NYC improv with Chris Corsano (guitar) and
Ikue Mori (turntables), among others.
Zeena Parkins is speaking as part of the
Improv:21 series
next week. The series involves interviews with musicians about their
craft, the composing process, the work that goes behind performances,
and so on. The talks are fascinating, speaking from the POV of
someone who's really into the music, and they include short performances
by the artists. When Ben Goldberg did one of these, he also brought
a couple of CDs, to point out certain pieces or ideas, kind of "showing"
the audience what he was talking about.
Zeena Parkins -- "Visible/Invisible" -- Necklace (Tzadik, 2006)
* Sam Newsome -- "Skippy" -- Monk Abstractions (self-released, 2007)
By the way -- Newsome isn't an idiot; he acknowledges Lacy's work in the liner notes and even cites it as the inspiration for doing this, Newsome's first solo album.
* David Torn -- "Neck Deep in the Harrow..." -- Prezens (ECM, 2007)
Matthew Goodheart -- "Conference" -- Interludes of Breath and Substance (Cadence Jazz, 1998)
? Wu Fei -- "Diao Chan" -- A Distant Youth (Forrest Hill, 2007)
Another find from my New
York trip. Downtown
Music Gallery had a box of these on the shelf, very recently
received, obviously. Wu Fei plays the
guzheng,
a stringed instrument similar to the Japanese
koto. What caught my eye was that she's got
Carla Kihlstedt and
Fred Frith
as guests on some tracks. The disc turns out to be a collection of improvisations,
many of them colored with traditional Chinese sounds, and one or two
pretty compositions that stick to old-world themes. A lot of this album
is pretty and delicate, but a couple of tracks -- like this one, with both
Frith and Kihlstedt -- dig into full-bore European style improv.
* Bill McHenry -- "African Song" -- Roses (Sunnyside, 2007)
Suzuki apparently goes from town to town now, arranging gigs with local musicians to do completely improvised shows. This CD might represent one such -- it's got that definite rock-jam feel, although there seems to be some pre-planned structure in there. While I haven't heard his stuff lately, I'd assume it's along the lines of this CD: Lengthy rock jams, heavy on one-chord psych-outs and blues-inflected riffs, with Suzuki chopping out the lyrics with sweaty intensity. It sounded too close to classic rock for me to take more than a four-minute excerpt (this song is the first part of a 26-minute jam), but it was a nice break from the ordinary.
* Bill Brovold and Larval -- "One Step Forward, Two Steps Back" -- Surviving Death/Alive Why? (Cuneiform, 2007)
The Harper Brothers -- "Pentagram" -- The Harper Brothers (Verve, 1988)
From these forces sprang a type of commerical jazz that combined
the sappy atmosphere of new wave; the now-dated clunking of string synths
doing choppy, wannabe rockin' fills; and a general attempt to amp up the music
with a more jazz-rock attitude. It was a dead end. Think Chick Corea
Elektric Band. I grabbed a David Liebman album from the vinyl library today,
figuring it would make great filler -- but no. Even David, whose recent music
I've admired, got pushed into this '80s-jazz corner.
So, while I love pulling from our vinyl collection, I've got to be careful.
You can tell which albums are '80s'ed-up. The design -- Miami Vice
clothes, random pink or blue lines -- is as dated as the music.
Of course, the story gets worse: This stuff would eventually morph into
smooth jazz, which became a legitimate radio format.
That said, there's some comfort to be found in our '80s stacks, too.
The Harper Brothers
produced a safe straightahead set in 1988 that served well for this part
of the show. I was giving away
tickets to a Stanford
Lively Arts classical show and wanted to set the mood with something
"normal."
The band is a quartet led by Winand Harper on drums -- I've played his stuff
on-air
recently -- and his brother Philip on trumpet. Justin
Robinson on sax was the name that grabbed my attention first; he'd done
a nice straightahead album called The Challenge that I remembered
from my early days at KZSU and played again
back in June. The album is
mostly covers; I picked this track for being an original.
Here's the problem I have with late '80s jazz. Synthesizers had come
to the fore, and the advent of Windham Hill had made new age music reasonably
popular. At the same time, jazz itself was continuing the decline that
started during the fusion years.
* Tony Monaco -- "Rudy and the Fox" -- East to West (Chicken Coup, 2007)
I was happy to play this as a favor to Byrd, who's had Monaco as a guest on his show multiple times, apparently. But it's so '50s-sounding -- not sure I'd go back to it.
Toychestra and Fred Frith -- "Grover Rides a Happy Honker"/"3 Elephants and a Cow" -- What Leave Behind (SK)
* Kioku -- "Pinari" -- Both
Far and Near (Quiet Design, 2007)
Previously noted here.
Toychestra is doing a rare show next week, always a good occasion to
give them some air time.
Toychestra -- "Going Places" -- Sassy Pony (SK)
A simple and eerie little song, like nursery rhymes with
a subtext of Camille
Rose Garcia. This is more typical of Toychestra's work, as opposed to
the more clamorous concerto with Frith (noted above).
Previously noted here.
* Al Margolis/If, Bwana -- "," -- An Innocent, Abroad (Pogus Productions, 2007)
The suite layers multiple tracks of voice (Lisa Barnard) and flutes (Jacqueline Martelle and Jane Rigler) into a neat new-music jam. Apparently it was done up for German radio, but the programers decided it was too "new music" and passed, in favor of a different Barnard project.
Barnard improvised the original vocal tracks which include some wordless singing and an artsy recitation of random alphabet letters. These tracks were handed to Martelle and Rigler in segments, and they improvsed five flute tracks to go with them. Margolis' role was apparently to put all this together; not sure why his name gets to be on the spine by itself.
Achim Kaufmann, Michael Moore, Dylan van der Schyff -- "Kopfspinnennetz" -- Kamosc (Red Toucan, 2006)
Kaufman and Gratkowski, along with bassist Wilbert De Joode, are performing at Mills College next week, apparently part of a small West Coast tour that takes them through Edmonton and Vancouver. Gratkowski spends quite a lot of time out here; I've seen him once, about eight years ago, and should check him out again.
UPDATE 12/9: Now I understand... Gratkowski, Kaufman, and De Joode were promoting a new CD on Leo Records that's culled from previous live performances.
Joseph Jarman -- "As If It Were the Seasons" [excerpt] -- As If It Were the Seasons (Delmark, 2007; orig. released 1968)
The first half of "Seasons," the track, consists of small sounds, an improvisation made of tiny bell rings, percussion, small notes. Quiet. As the vocalist kicks in, things rev up, and that's where the piece starts to lose me. Her (improvised?) lyrics follow that "floating with the universe" track that doesn't seem to meld with the band, and as things heat up, everyone gets screechy, including the singer. I have to say, I prefer the first half.
Barabino is apparently from Argentina. This track is typical of the album: 46 seconds of one of them (I'm guessing Siratori) saying something unintelligible -- I can't even tell if it's in Japanese -- and an acoustic guitar (Barabino?) pecking out small, uncertain notes. There are like 17 tracks going like that, and then longer tracks bookending things. Weird. Comes across sounding almost like a DJ mistake.
* Amir ElSaffar -- "Menba' (Maqam Bayat)/Jourjina" -- Two Rivers (Pi Recordings, 2007)
UPDATE 12/9: Hey -- the awesome Avant Music News has a free "podcast" of one of the album's jazzier tracks. Good stuff -- go give it a listen.
* = Item in KZSU rotation
! = Pop anomaly
? = Item not in KZSU library
-- Go back to Memory Select playlists.
-- Bay Area free/improv music calendar: http://www.bayimproviser.com.