
Potlatch
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LAZRO /
ZINGARO / LÉANDRE / LOVENS
Madly You
Potlatch
P102
Without exaggeration, this more than one-hour slab of free improvisation
recorded live last year, features an object lesson in how to best express
this subtle art. It's particularly noteworthy because it shows that, unlike
the hushed minimalism that characterizes the work of many younger improvisers,
these seasoned pros aren't afraid to express their craft at the volume
it deserves.
However, even with the alto and baritone saxophone of France's Daunik
Lazro plus the percussion and musical saw (!) of Germany's Paul Lovens
the sounds don't degenerate into blaring discord either. After all, Lovens,
the master of selected and unselected percussion, has had a long relationship
with folks like British saxophonist Evan Parker and German pianist Alexander
von Schilppenbach who know their notes and timbres. While Lazro, who is
probably -- undeservedly -- the least known of the four musicians here,
has in the past matched wits with such sonic shamans as American multi-instrumentalist
Joe McPhee, Parker and American trombonist George Lewis. He also played
with the final two improvisers here -- French bassist Joëlle Léandre
and Portuguese violinist Carlos Zingaro as long ago as 1985. Léandre,
who also specializes in performing John Cage's works, often played with
Zingaro and Lovens in the 1990s, as well as with practically ever other
improviser of note from British guitarist Derek Bailey to Swiss pianist
Irène Schweizer. As multi- disciplinary as Léandre, Zingaro
too moves back and forth between composed and improvised sounds, as well
as music for theatre, film and dance.
With this combination of individual expertise, the four can divide and
subdivide amoeba-like into a variety of combinations. Lazro and Lovens,
for instance, can function as an Energy-music power duo; while Léandre
and Zingaro can pretend to be a conventional string duo. Lazro, Léandre
and Lovens can offer the sort of speedy, minute interactions possible
in a sax-and-rhythm-section free improv trio; and classically trained
Zingaro can soar as a solo violinist.
But there's a lot more here. Some of the most interesting collaborations
occur when the deeper tones of Lazro's baritone mesh with busy low string
tugs from Léandre's bass. Other times, an entire birdcage of distinctive
cries is unleashed when the saxophonist's alto gets together with Zingaro's
high-pitched fiddle tones.
Individually, Léandre's guttural throat cries and rolling vocal
impersonations sometimes go up against screeching strings and perfectly
timed bashes from Lovens' kit; while at one point Lazro, alone on baritone,
seems to be playing the head from Shirley Ellis' 1960s hit, "The
Name Game." With a leaking hiss of baritone sound in the background,
Lovens not only demonstrates how well music can just be made with unattached
cymbals, but at one point goes the treatments crowd one better by doing
this completely acoustically. During the CD's second, shorter, instant
composition, the whoops and miniscule cracks you hear sound as if they're
escaping from a souped up PowerBook. They're not. It's Lovens' musical
saw, with a sound as old as vaudeville.
Want to experience exceptional EuroImprov in all its glory? Go no further
than Madly You.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing: 1. Madly you; 2. Lyou mad
Personnel: Daunik Lazro, alto and baritone saxophones; Carlos Alves "Zingaro,"
violin; Joëlle Léandre, bass, voice; Paul Lovens, percussion,
musical saw
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