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Clearings
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Christoph Irmer, Violin - John Butcher, Tenor and Soprano Saxophones - Agustí Fernández, Piano
Composed and produced by Irmer, Butcher, Fernández
Recorded at Friedrich-Ebert-Halle, Hamburg-Harburg (Germany), September 30, 2001
Recording Producer: Ulrich Vette, Toms Spogis
Titles: Christoph Irmer
Mix and CD Mastering by Toms Spogis
Photography: Toms Spogis
Graphic Design:
Contact:
Sponsered by Kulturbüro Wuppertal (Germany)
[Click for the whole comment]
"
Clearings (“in libertà”) è una registrazione effettuata il 30 settembre del 2001 che documenta
una storica sessione tra il sassofonista John Butcher, il violinista Christoph Irmer e il
pianista Agustí Fernández. Non c'è apporto elettronico per una registrazione effettuata
curiosamente nello stesso studio di Amburgo dove quarant’anni prima registrarono i Beatles.
Solo “instant compositions”, composizioni realizzate con un processo definito dell’instant
composing secondo il quale free, impro e eredità jazz o classica sono chiamate ad interagire
in una incisione effettuata tale e quale è stata realizzata. Tre personalità con diversi
back-ground, con prospettive impro-compositive diverse, con distinte sensibilità s’incontrano
dunque e convergono ciascuno verso l’altro. Il pianista Fernández e il violinista Irmer
hanno già registrato assieme. Irmer ha una discreta esperienza con musicisti dell’area impro,
come il bassista Dominic Duval, il bassista tedesco Peter Kowald e il flautista Jane Rigler.
Fernández vanta collaborazioni con William Parker ed Evan Parker. Di Butcher c’è poco da dire,
è certamente uno dei sassofonisti più importanti della scena europea.
Quel che risulta dal loro incontro è una registrazione di grande interesse e spessore.
Dal punto di vista musicale i tredici brani di Clearings sono un vero e proprio crescendo
emotivo. Piano e violino sembrano tirare le fila verso territori più classici, laddove il
sassofono spiega le maglie verso territori totalmente free, dissonanti e astratti. Ma è un
gioco, perché le parti spesso s’invertono e i ruoli finiscono per scambiarsi. Così il piano
di Fernández domina la scena, fermando o prolungando – con un interessante gioco di forte/piano
– le mischie sonore dove s’intrecciano il sassofono di Butcher e il violino di Irmer. I
movimenti sono ora rarefatti, ora terribilmente profondi e gravi. Punto d’arrivo ideale di
Clearings è forse il brano più lungo “Prophecy”. Il sassofono di Butcher è spettrale,
galleggia su lunghissime note tirate, laddove il piano di Fernández incede con tremoli
sincopati e gli staccati al violino di Irmer creano una atmosfera profondamente nervosa,
contratta, sentitamente potente. Di qui, si dispiegano le vele, i tre si accomiatano con
gesti più rarefatti e astratti. Chiude il simbolico “arco del silenzio”, il gesto ritratto
nella copertina, un commiato che sublima una registrazione davvero eccezionale.
"
altrisuoni.org
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Lucia Caponi - Altri Suoni, Italy
[Click for the whole comment]
"
Mein Glückwunsch zu dieser Produktion. Trifft voll meinen musikalischen Nerv als Impromusiker mit offenen Ohren.
"
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Udo Schindler - Wörthsee, Germany
[Click for the whole comment]
"Trans-European improv, CLEARINGS showcases a meeting of minds among musicians from three
different countries with three distinct approaches to free music. Resulting in a substantial program
of melding timbres, the CD confirms that only in a liberated musical situation like this could disparate styles meld.
As a matter of fact, if there was ever a complete misnomer, then it's the title of the second track,
"Bumpy Ride". Here and elsewhere, the distinctive smeary trills of Britain's John Butcher morph into
wiggling irregular vibrations and join the speedy spiccato bowing of Germany's Christoph Irmer and
the dissonant, uneven note clusters of Spain's Agustí Fernández sans bumps.
Both with classical training, pianist Fernández and violinist Irmer have recorded together before, while
Irmer has also played with American bassist Dominic Duval and two of the pianist's collaborators
German bassist Peter Kowald and American flautist Jane Rigler. Fernández's partners have ranged from
American bassist William Parker to British reedist Evan Parker. Butcher who is universally acknowledged
as the most important sax explorer since Parker, seems to have played with nearly everyone in improvised
music from American drummer Gerry Hemingway to German synthesizer whiz Thomas Lehn.
There are no electronics in use on this session that took place in the same Hamburg studio where the
Beatles recorded as Tony Sheridan's sidemen in 1961, nor do the techniques of pop ever interfere. Instead
instant compositions like "Fire Stack" are featured. Here reed key pops, tongue slaps and colored air mix it
up with ponticello bowing and the literal scratching of the fiddle's wood. Meanwhile Fernández forages in the
piano innards, eventually encouraging legato glissandos to turn into straightforward harmonics -- which
brings forth sibilant duck-like quacks from Butcher.
Although there are times throughout when the two traditional instruments seem headed towards a formal
recital stance, extended saxophone technique gets them back into the free music arena.
Among the processes on offer are Fernández slapping and stopping the action of the piano strings, battering
the keys with dynamic pressure, sounding the occasional bent note and leaping hopscotch-like over the
keyboard. Irmer laterally saws away at his strings so that the tone begins to resemble that of a whining human
voice. And he also creates elongated grating string pitches to accompany repeated piano arpeggios or irregularly
pitched penny whistle vibrations from Butcher. As well as creating tiny, multi-note bird tweets from his soprano,
the reedist at points also smears and snorts tenor sax lines.
"Siege" is a summation of many of these patterns, featuring the three polyphonically sounding out three
separate but complementary lines. Measured violin harmonies, rumbling, bass piano lines and atmospheric
horn honks combine with a minimum of friction.
Perhaps the summation of the trio's work comes on the aptly-named, longest track, "Prophecy". As Butcher's
blaring spetrofluctuation, key pops and extended grainy slurs meet Fernández's syncopated tremolos and high
frequency chording and Irmer's staccato fiddle lines that build makes the prophecy of a Pan-European music a reality.
At least in that neck of the improv woods, that prophecy seems to have been realized."
JazzWeekly.com
JazzWord.com
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Ken Waxman - published on www.jazzweekly.com and www.jazzword.com, June 2004
[Click for the whole comment]
"Résultant de l'association inédite mais bien équilibrée de John Butcher (ss, ts),
Christoph Irmer (vln) et Agustí Fernández (p) en septembre 2001, cet enregistrement
séduit sur-le-champ : une musique évidente et aérée, acérée et déliée, ciselée en une
douzaine de saynètes ou clairières, comme autant de précieux jardins. La création de
ces espaces acoustiques contemporains doit autant au piano mélodique et fourrageur
(le musicien espagnol, que l'on connaissait plus ' torrentiel ', commence à recevoir une
juste reconnaissance, que ce soit dans le nouvel orchestre de Barry Guy ou avec l'ensemble
électroacoustique d'Evan Parker, voire en duo avec ce dernier) qu'à l'agile violon, tantôt viennois,
tantôt pointilliste ou chantant. Entouré de ces cordes (une matière qu'il affectionne, on le sait), le
saxophoniste surligne les contours et infléchit les processus de ces ' compositions improvisées '
avec un remarquable sens du placement et de l'architecture.
Le plaisir d'audition naît des contrastes habilement ménagés entre délicatesse et robustesse dans
cette musique européenne toute de netteté de découpage et d'articulation (qui n'est pas seulement
due à un interplay un peu précautionneux). Impeccable !"
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Guillaume Tarche, published in Improjazz n°105, May 2004
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Peter Stubley, European Free Improvisation Pages, April 2004
[Click for the whole comment]
"Free Improvisation is as much about community as it is about music.
Stunning free improvisation intrigues me when you can feel that the needs of the individual
are in perfect balance with the needs of the entirety. It allows the individual player to be totally
present in one moment, and completely invisible in the other. You can be in the foreground
and can submit to the whole when needed - and you're allowed to constantly shift between
these extremes.
So the set of skills is completely different from those you needed in other musical contexts. They certainly
have their own highest
requirements: An orchestra playing a composition needs players who are able to follow the conductor
simultaneously with the highest possible accuracy. A good dance band needs players where the time and
rhythm are in perfect sync with each other and the crowd. An 'idiomatic' improvisation - as Derek Bailey
calls improvisation in the context of jazz, rock, indian music, etc. - needs players who perfectly improvise
within the rules of that particular idiom, or at least know how far they can go over the edge before the
audience gets annoyed...
Free Improvisation - if done well - needs an interaction between the players, that allows you to apprehend
every single player as well as the whole group. In this regard it makes no sense to compare Free
Improvisation to any one of the other models I mentioned before.
'Clearings' is a masterpiece in this respect, made by three improvisers who rank among the finest in
present day Europe. Agustí Fernández from Spain, Christoph Irmer from Germany and John Butcher from
the UK come from three European countries, and all took off from different musical starting points, somewhere
between jazz and classical music. On this CD three disparate musical personalities merge in a way that
wouldn't probably be possible in any other music.
This CD offers a collection of music ranging from slow shifting layers of sound to rapid crisscrossing
melodies, from traditional techniques to extended ones. The trio puts all these elements in perfect
juxtaposition to each other. Let's look at 'Siege': Here John mainly draws growling noises out of his horn,
Agusti plays taylor-esque runs and clusters, and Christoph provides a counterpoint with long bowed notes.
While the latter keeps his instrument at a slow pace, the others assail each other with rapid firing sounds
and melodies - creating a wonderful tension that keeps the listener caught throughout the piece.
Listen to the 'Traps', where the players leave a lot of space, each one jumps right in to put his quick
reaction in juxtaposition to the others - only to create the next hook for someone else to grab. While
you really feel the close attention the players pay to reacting fast, the piece keeps its slow motion and
little density throughout. My favourite piece is the 'Owl', each player contributes his own part to the layers
of sound that dominate the piece throughout. Listen how the players work on the little details in each sound.
There is a lot going on within each layer, while a soft, almost romantic atmosphere is maintained throughout
the piece.
There is a saying that sometimes you can´t see the forest for the trees. While many people talk
about the aesthetic differences in music, these 'Clearings' open up the woods and shed new light
on the other, the community realm of contemporary European improvised music."
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Hans Tammen
John Butcher - saxophone | Christoph Irmer - violin | Agustí Fernández - piano
01. Entrance (hifi
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lofi)
02. Bumpy Ride (hifi
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lofi)
03. Owl Of Minerva
04. Mirror Images
05. Siege
06. Some Time Ago
07. Crystal Cube
08. Traps Of Silence
09. Haunted Place
10. Fire Stack
11. Prophecy
12. Fizzy Drive
13. Farewell
Published 01|2004 on ART.CappuccinoNet.com
(Product ID: ART 008, ILN: 4260046970095, LabelCode: 00327)
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buy the CD!
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€15 13 Tracks Length: 56:25 min.
Listen online
Press info (PDF)
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