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MICHEL PORTAL
Alors!!!
Futura
Ger 12
Followers
of the vaporous, boreal undertakings of British saxophonist John Surman
are going to be thrown for a loop by this session. Far from the punctilious,
withdrawn playing he has exhibited over the past two decades, here's the
26-year-old reedist as a romping, stomping New Thinger who could easily
blow the present day Surman off the stand.
Of course inspiration has a lot to do with the company you keep. And this
1970 session is actually a collusion between the saxophonist's Anglo-American
trio of the day -- filled out by bassist Barre Phillips and drummer Stu
Martin, both Yanks -- with two Frenchman -- percussionist Jean-Pierre
Drouet and the chameleon-like woodwind master Michel Portal.
Furthermore, it's the Gaelic reedist whose name is topmost here, since
in the midst of a decade-long commitment to avant- jazz's furthest reaches,
he provides much of the impetus for the improvisations.
Born in Bayonne in 1935, Portal has been involved with every type of music
during his career. An accomplished technician, who won first prize for
clarinet at the Conservatoire De Paris in 1959, he had already played
pop music and went on to record with such chansonniers as Barbara and
Serge Gainsbourg. Later, he not only excelled in playing traditional chamber
music, plus jazz with well-regarded countrymen like bassist Pierre Michelot
and violinist Jean-Luc Ponty, but was in demand to interpret the scores
of such formidable, contemporary composers as Luciano Berio, Karlheinz
Stockhausen and Vinko Globokar.
Keeping up these associations, plus his jazz work involving continental
and American stylists ranging from percussionists Pierre Favre and Jack
DeJohnette to bassists Henri Texier and Charlie Haden, he has also found
time to score the music for about 145 films and TV programs. Non-jazzers
may know his name from the soundtrack of 1983's Le retour de Martin Guerre.
ALORS! is different however. At the time it was a clear indication that
European born and domiciled improvisers has finally internalized the New
Thing. Naturally this came at a time when the style was being denigrated
in North America ... but that's gist for another discussion. All tracks
are on the swift side, with Phillip's exercises in onomatopoeia "Oo
Bam Ba" and "Ca Boom" and Surman's mouthful of a title,
"Yes, Oh Yes, You Wonderous (sic) Sun-Kissed Maiden!" -- also
appropriately the longest track -- as energetic as Portal's one contribution.
"Undercurrent", the quiet tune of the set, penned by the baritone
saxist isn't subdued like Surman's later work on ECM, but serene, with
an undercurrent of potential explosions like those little instrument-filled
songs from the Art Ensemble of Chicago.
"Oo Bam Ba" even features some four square pizzicato bass work
from Phillips, just three years into what would be a permanent expatriation
to Europe. With the sax power on display it probably convinced him to
play the way he would have in mainstream settings with the likes of Coleman
Hawkins rather than styles he adopted for seconding Cecil Taylor or composing
interactive electronic music. Notwithstanding this, both saxmen come across
with angry, predatory bird cries, spelled by the rattle of metal from
percussionist Drouet, another Frenchman who has gone back and forth from
so-called serious music to jazz.
Leaving aside the identity of the "wonderous (sic) sun-kissed maiden"
it appears that Surman and Portal are trying to attract her attention
by blending the former's baritone with the latter's bass clarinet in the
dance of a French frog and a British hedgehog. At times the blends that
go from very high to bottom scraping can be heard as a foreshadowing of
Surman's later all-saxophone SOS trio, although a closer link to pioneering
New Thinger Charles Tyler's partnership with Albert Ayler was probably
more on the musicians' minds.
Before and after that, Phillips scratches out a diffident arco solo that
moves into dog whistle territory, Martin unleashes a powerful roll and
rim shots exhibition. On it, he shows the same strongman exhibition he
brings to the high tuned sound of his double bass drums on "Y En
A Marre", which moves at an exaggerated triple march tempo.
Martin (1938-1980), had extensive big band (Maynard Ferguson, Quincy Jones)
and small groups experience (Curtis Fuller, Sonny Rollins) experience
before his European sojourn. On the Continent, besides the trio with Surman
and Phillips, he recorded with the cream of emerging EuroImprovisers including
trombonist Albert Mangelsdorff and pianist Joachim Kuhn. Had he lived,
it's possible that he may have been the one member of the trio to evolve
while resisting more restrained sounds.
Not that he wasn't capable of subtlety as well. On "... Maiden ..."
when Phillips produces a protracted string buzz that then meshes with
unison, almost bagpipe-blowing sax lines, Martin counters with occasional
cymbal pings and drum stick scrapes. Resembling the scratch-and-drone
music centred in Berlin and Vienna right now, it makes evident that the
five were evolving new tones as well as emulating the then revolutionary
sounds on this session.
The rest of the disc is like this is well, which is what makes it doubly
valuable to be heard. With Portal and Phillips today spreading their talents
over a variety of fields; Surman settling into a languid middle age; Drouet
a little-heard "serious" composer; and Martin dead, it's an
interesting artifact of what came together one day. It also raises the
possibility of what with different and musical circumstances might have
appeared from these men in the then near future.
--
Ken Waxman
Track Listing: 1. Oo Bam Ba Deep 2. Billie The Kid 3. Yes, Oh Yes, You
Wonderous Sun-Kissed Maiden! 4. Ca Boom? 5. Y En A Marre 6. Undercurrent
7. New Peace 8. Ca Boom!
Personnel: Michel Portal (alto saxophone, bass clarinet); John Surman
(baritone and soprano saxophones, bass clarinet); Barre Phillips (bass);
Stu Martin (drums); Jean-Pierre Drouet (percussion)
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