SOFA
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TONY OXLEY
Triangular Screen
SOFA
501
Resident of Germany for many years, vanguard British percussionist Tony
Oxley has long been the link between more robust continental and American
improvisers and the rarefied sounds he and others pioneered in London
in the late 1960s.
Modest,
he never pulls rank when it comes to working with other musicians and
dealing with their ideas. And the title of this live CD proves it. Metaphorically,
63-year-old Oxley, who has numbered such free jazz heavyweights as pianist
Cecil Taylor, trumpeter Bill Dixon and pianist Paul Bley as playing partners,
sees himself here on equal footing with two young Norwegian improvisers.
He's one-third of a triangle.
Take
"Second Scan," for instance. Recorded in a club, two months
after the jazz festival performance that makes up the first track, the
three musicians are already interacting as trio members, not as an improviser
elder statesman with two subservient acolytes.
The
unwavering tones produced from Oxley's trademark oversized cowbell, treated
cymbals and wood block concretely link to the quiet zigzagging of Ivar
Grydeland's guitar and Tommy Kluften's steady, unvarying bass pulse. Usually
working in the area defined by Oxley's old partner Derek Bailey on one
hand and roots fascinated Bill Frisell on the other, at times the guitarist
soon ratchets up the volume and velocity. Instantaneously accepting the
detour, the drummer, who has piloted a few howling, big band sized free
jazz ensembles in his day, allows his sound to turn harder, faster and
louder. The bassist ends up as the only casualty, since he's nearly inaudible
until he introduces tough arco shrieks.
Kluften
gets his own back on "Third Scan" with bowed passages that eerily
sound like a coffin lid being slowly lowered, and others which conjure
up the metal image of taut bass strings being stretched away from the
wood. Matching this are little excited clawing tones from the guitarist
and the stentorian sound of that giant cowbell.
Treatments
in the form of pre-recorded tapes seem only to make their appearance on
"Fourth Scan," a restrained -- at less than four minutes --
drum excursion. Pushing the backing tracks behind him, as he would never
do with a live musician, Oxley is able to extract sounds as different
as cymbal-created ringing fire bells and breakers of deep-sea basso profondo
tones from his bass drum.
--
Ken Waxman
Track
Listing: 1. First Scan; 2. Second Scan; 3. Third Scan; 4. Fourth Scan
Personnel:
Ivar Grydeland, guitar; Tommy Kluften, bass; Tony Oxley, percussion and
pre-recorded tapes
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