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| Kenny Wheeler Song for Someone Psi 04.01 | Evan Parker & Stan Tracey Suspensions and Anticipations Psi 04.02 |
With each release to come out of Psi's ever-spinning turnstile, Evan Parker garners more credibility as a record producer. It was a wonder at the label's advent two years ago whether or not the label would simply serve as an outlet for temporarily shelved dates from Parker and his associates. I'm glad to report that Psi's discography is shaping up in such a way as to become a healthy organism that breathes out a worthy, unique reissue program and new releases that are far more often hit than miss.
One of Psi's latest reissues is a session that has been buried for over 30 years now, since its 1973 release on Incus. At the time of Song for Someone's recording, Kenny Wheeler was on the rise as a very capable trumpeter and composer in some of Britain's various improvised music circles. His early 70s music was at a point not yet fully reconciled with its influences, but distinctive enough for fans to know they were onto something special. Such is the case with the big band-ish Song for Someone, which, while stirring among the shadows of Bill Holman and Gil Evans arrangements, bears many of the traits of Wheeler's later near-continuous string of jaw-dropping records. "Toot Toot" swings mightily, while the balladesque "Ballad Two" straddles a line dividing melancholy and hopeful perseverance, Norma Winstone's vocalising establishing itself as a key component to bring further animation to the larger group numbers. Alan Branscombe's electric piano is welcome in the mix, aligning itself with that instrument's worthy incorporation in some of the Mel Lewis/Thad Jones groups. Perhaps most interesting is the inclusion of Derek Bailey and Evan Parker on two tracks, as part of the effort to "…get special musicians from and into different areas of jazz to play together…" to quote Wheeler's brief liner notes. Bailey's guitar and Parker's not-yet-refined soprano sound utterly rebellious in their contributions, almost as if they are along to crash the party, but Wheeler's written transition from these introspective wanderings to the structurally sound is, in a word, seamless. It's been a long wait, but once the shock of this record's timelessness has softened, it'll feel like an old friend that's been around forever.
Were Psi a reissue-only label, it might be just as well, but Evan Parker has repeatedly shown that his own new music is still as inspiring as it was when he first learned to circularly blow arpeggios into oblivion. Suspensions and Anticipations is a record designed for Parker nuts who pine for more recordings of his tenor work. Not since Chicago Solo has Parker provided us with a better demonstration of his improvising talent on the instrument than this unlikely pairing with British jazz piano vet Stan Tracey. Apart from a small handful of solos (two from Tracey, one from Parker), S & A is an exceptional series of "what-if?" duos that result in a single, "of-course!" -Tracey's piano provides a multitude of harmonic foundations, from improvised low-register rumblings to sparing swing and stride motifs, which are embellished (and often undercut) by Parker's tenor. The numbers' development is hardly predictable, though; the music is the product of two musicians from adjacent fields of activity whose techniques and ways of departure turn out to be uncannily complimentary. The disc's resolve ultimately comes from a study of the three solo numbers, whose presence lend a world of insight to the collaborative processes of the duos. It's a set of music that will frustrate and mystify, and perhaps best suited for those who believe Parker's trick bag was zipped shut back in the 90's.
~Alan Jones
Posted by al on April 15, 2004 11:23 AMThis one grows on me at every new listening.
The interplay with Tracey is the best Parker has ever had with a pianist, far superior on many level than with Tilbury or Fernandez.
Agreed!
Posted by: dan warburton at April 28, 2004 10:03 PMI haven't heard this, but I am having trouble believing the piano/sax interplay is any better than it is on either "Unity Variations" or "Nailed."
Posted by: walto at April 29, 2004 5:16 AMWalt, you might be taken by some serious surprise. Really, it's the kind of collaboration that's been overdue some time for Parker.
Posted by: al at April 29, 2004 7:18 AM"Unity Variations" is awesome.
Posted by: Michael Schaumann at April 29, 2004 8:16 AMHave reviewed the Parker / Tracey, uhhh, elsewhere... Anyway, SUSPENSIONS AND ANTICIPATIONS is probably most valuable for what it tells us about Stan Tracey. Not to mention that the pianist mitigates the almost inevitable austerity of the proceedings. I also admit I was impressed, and for the first time, at how Wayne Shorter-esque Parker's tenor conception really is. If I have one complaint about the record, it that is looses a good bit of steam near the end. I would like to have seen it sequenced differently.
Posted by: Joe Milazzo at April 29, 2004 8:32 AMDitto to what Al wrote. Walt, NAILED and UNITY VARIATIONS are a monuments, no argument. But I think this meeting is on par in its own, quite different, way.
Posted by: derek at April 29, 2004 3:17 PMWalter, when I said that's his best interplay with pianist, I was meaning in a DUO context.
In other setting, Parker, among others, had great interplay with Marilyn Crispell and, of course, with the mighty Cecil Taylor.
Sorry to haven't make this point clear from the beginning.
The fault on the difficulties I've to express myself fluently in english.
LeMo, have you heard his Unity Variations with Graewe? It's tremendous!
Posted by: walto at May 4, 2004 8:36 PMYes,Walter, I have heard the Okkadisc and it's indeed a good record.
But, like Derek says: his duet with Tracey is different but on the same level - and, as a personnal taste, I find him even better (and I like Georg Graewe!)
The very high quality of the recording is also a plus.
Of course, the best intercourse than Parker has never had with a pianist, it's with his long companionship with Alexander Von Schlippenbach.
I would love to hear both of them in duo.
I'd like, also, to hear him in a "true" duo with Paul Bley and with Taylor (The Hearth was close to that from moment to moment).
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