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KAINKWATETT
Kainkwatett
Schraum
1
ARNAL/DAHLGREM/MISTERKA
Red
Generate
GEN LE10
Freely improvised trio performances by two trios, each including a saxophonist
and a bassist on micro-labels continue to point out the differences between
European in this case German and American sound explorers.
Although both call on the tenets of minimalism and so-called New Music,
the Yanks still have a tincture of jazz in their playing, replaced by
electro-acoustic musings when it come to the Teutons.
Kainkwatett is the Berlin-based trio. Its made up of bassist Axel
Haller, who also works with dancers and theatre groups; Antoine Chessex,
of the noise band Monno, who doesnt list which saxophone he plays,
though it sounds like an alto; and guitarist Torsten Papenheim, who also
work in a pop-noise duo Rant. The later two werent even born until
the 1980s.
Slightly older, though not by much, the Brooklyn-based trio on RED, a
one-track mini-CD, include percussionist Jeff Arnal, who has his own Berlin
connection in a group featuring German composer/pianist Dietrich Eichmann
and alto saxophonist Lars Scherzberg. Longtime collaborator with choreographers,
Arnal is involved in notated and improvised music as are the other two
players. Alto saxophonist Seth Misterka was a member of Anthony Braxtons
Ghost Trance Ensemble, among other bands, while bassist Chris Dahlgren
is in Braxtons present sextet and has worked with everyone from
boppers to the Jazz Mandolin Project. There are no signs of either of
those influences on RED, which is 15 minutes plus of free improv.
From the beginning though, variations on the jazz bedrock are introduced.
Following the squeak of drum stick on ride cymbal, ngoni-like plucks from
the bass, and the sound of colored air being forced through the saxs
body tube, Arnal often appears to be thumping a kettle drum. As the piece
develops, Misterkas tone lightens and takes on Arabic connotations,
followed by resonation from the drummers large unlathed cymbal.
Deviating from the straight and narrow, the saxophonist begins vibrating
his axes upper partials, presaging complementary prestissimo action
from the drums and spiccato from the bass. Eventually as the bass lines
drone and Arnals rim shots and nerve beats spike the kit, the reedist
turns to glossolalia, reaching a climax of bagpipe-chanter style intensity.
Joined for a time by an arco bass buzz, Misterka then constructs variation
on the theme from a sandpaper thick reed texture. Kettledrum bounces and
scouring noises from the bass strings, encourage a final series of reed
twirls and double tonguing, with so many overtones that the saxophonist
could be channeling both Trane and Pharoah. With Misterka seemingly spent,
the finale involves quick drum rumbles and arco bass sweeps.
Kainkwatett the band, doesnt have a percussionist but the clangs
and flanges from Papenheims guitar and the concentrated echo from
Hallers bass that resemble some of Ellen Fullmans long
string instrument inventions make up for that. Probably through
the properties of Papenheims amp, sinuous loops and ringing electro-acoustic
interface animate the seven tracks here. Additionally, while Misterkas
reed variations may reflect the jazz advances of Trane and his followers,
Chessexs closest parallel is to the fluttering distortions, colored
air expelling and circular breathing of the Evan Parker school, unless
tongue slaps are now considered a jazz affectation.
Thats the macro part of the sound. Drawing equally on microtonalism,
the trio builds themes out of claw-hammer string clicks, steady bass drones,
burbling single notes and protracted silences. Other time an entire improvisation
takes place as a spinning top-like mechanized pulse quivers below. Often
operating in double or triple broken chords, output slows down for mechanized
cross feeds, some of which take on protracted windshield wiper sounds
or those of bubbling loops.
All this reaches a climax with the almost-10-minute sixth track, where
gong-like clangs, concentrated drones and oscillating arpeggios share
aural space with reed exhortations, harsh, laconic plectrum plinks and
a final sul tasto expansion from Haller. Having reached minimalisms
nadir, teeny metallic plinks appear then fade to silence.
Continental Europe and North America may be superficially drawing together,
but when it comes to improv, major differences in approach still exist.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing: Red: 1. Red
Personnel: Red: Seth Misterka (alto saxophone); Chris Dahlgren (bass);
Jeff Arnal (percussion)
Track Listing: Kainkwatett: 1. 4:42 2. 6:48 3. 5:11 4. 7:50 5. 6:04 6.
9:55 7. 6:26
Personnel: Kainkwatett: Antoine Chessex (alto saxophone); Torsten Papenheim
(guitar); Axel Haller (bass)
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