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BARRY
GUY NEW ORCHESTRA
Inscape - Tableaux
Intakt
CD 066
Just as the
European Union (EU) and the Euro have begun to win over Continental rivalries
and local currencies, so composer, orchestra director and bass master
Barry Guy has decided to put together a new international aggregation
that's showcased on this exceptional disc.
After 28 years leading the mostly British, usually 18-piece, London Jazz
Composers Orchestra (LCJO), the now Ireland-based Guy has organized an
all-star tentet to perform this multi-faceted composition which took two
years to perfect. As multinational as the EU, the Barry Guy New Orchestra
(BGNO) features only two other Englishmen, as well three Swedes, two Americans,
a German and a Swiss national.
Most have worked with the bassist before -- some extensively like Evan
Parker and Paul Lytton. All are at the top of their form. It would be
stupid to say that the colors brought forward by the LJCO's additional
eight to 10 players can be equaled by BGNO's fewer musicians. But together
these improvisers are so proficient on so many instruments and so cognizant
of so many techniques that what they produce easily has the resonance
of a larger band. Though scored, Guy's "Inscape - Tableaux"
leaves plenty of space to take advantage of each individual's talents.
Especially noteworthy is pianist Marilyn Crispell, who as well as being
integrated into the ensemble, is featured in three keyboard-centered interludes
between the larger orchestral sections. Sometimes pastoral, as in the
beginning of "IV"-- practically a duet for her and Guy's flying
fingers -- sometimes powerful, Crispell seems to bring her classical chops
to the fore here. Distinctively unique, her playing no more resembles
that of Cecil Taylor --as some lazy commentators have suggested -- than
Jesse Helms' politics resemble those of Jesse Jackson's.
Trombonist Johannes Bauer's showcase comes on "V," an exploding
comet of cacophony, which harkens back to the earliest days of large ensemble
free jazz. Here and elsewhere his vocalized, guttural cries simultaneously
suggest New Orleans tailgate and outer space. "V" also features
some of Herb Robertson's best Maynard-Ferguson-meets-Cootie-Williams explosions.
With only three valves, the American trumpeter is able to produce the
sort of multiphonics saxophonists need many keys to generate.
Speaking
of saxophonists, how can a band go wrong with a section made up of Parker's
circular breathing, Mats Gustafsson's lung bursting blowouts, and on "VI,"
Hans Koch's top-to-bottom bass clarinet forays?
Still, this Ellington band-like aggregation of stylists shouldn't obscure
that the BGNO is very much a composer's vehicle, with echoes of European
New music and on "II" Charles Mingus' scores for mid-sized ensembles.
Listen again to an interlude in "V" and observe the perfect
clarity of Per Åke Holmlander's tuba making its way like a hippo
across the Veldt as the untamed wild birds that are the horns vocally
leap and frolic overhead. Like Ellington and Mingus, Guy writes with the
idiosyncrasies of his players firmly in mind and the score sounds that
much the better for it.
One could go on and on appending extended examples of sophisticated and
eventful writing and outstanding solos, but how many more superlatives
can be heaped on this groundbreaking disc of modern music? Suffice it
to say that Inscape - Tableaux deserves to be heard by anyone at all interested
in modern composition and the state of 21st century orchestral sound.
We can also hope, that sometime in the future, this Valhalla of improvising
giants will tour in this formation
Ken Waxman
Track Listing:
Inscape
- Tableaux Part 1; Part II; Part III; Part IV; Part V; Part VI; Part VII
Personnel:
Herb Robertson, trumpet; Johannes Bauer,
trombone; Per Åke Holmlander, tuba; Evan Parker, tenor and soprano
saxophones; Mats Gustafsson, tenor and baritone saxophones; Hans Koch,
tenor saxophone, clarinet and bass clarinet; Marilyn Crispell, piano;
Barry Guy, bass; Paul Lytton, Raymond Strid, percussion
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