* Miles Davis: In Concert: Live At Philharmonic Hall (Columbia/Legacy 2CD)
* Charles Mingus: The Jazz Workshop Concerts 1964-1965 (d.7) (Mosaic 7CD)
* Sun Ra Quartet: New Steps (Horo 2LP>CDR)
* Sun Ra Quartet: Other Voices, Other Blues (Horo 2LP>CDR)
* Sun Ra Quartet: Media Dreams (Saturn/Art Yard 2CD)
* Sun Ra Quartet: Disco
3000 (Saturn/Art Yard CD)
* Ornette Coleman:
Sound Grammar (Phrase Text CD)
* Anthony Braxton: Two
Compositions (Orchestra) 2005 (New Braxton House FLAC>CDR)
* Anthony Braxton: GTM
(Iridium) 2007 Vol.1 (New Braxton House FLAC>2CDR)
* Anthony Braxton:
Quartet (FRM) 2007 Vols.1-4 (New Braxton House FLAC>4CDR)
* Anthony Braxton:
Creative Music Orchestra (NYC) 2011 (New Braxton House FLAC>CDR)
* Anthony Braxton: Trio
(NYC) 2011 (New Braxton House FLAC>CDR)
* Anthony Braxton:
Quartet/Quintet (NYC) 2011 (New Braxton House FLAC>CDR)
* Derek Bailey: Pieces
For Guitar (Tzadik CD)
* Billy Cobham:
Spectrum (Atlantic LP)
* Daft Punk: Random
Access Memories (Columbia 2LP)
* Bob Dylan: Bootleg
Series Vol.9: The Whitmark Demos (d.1) (Columbia/Legacy 2CD)
* Grateful Dead:
Coliseum, New Haven, CT 1979-10-25 (set 2) (SBD 2CDR
* Grateful Dead: The
Spectrum, Philadelphia, PA 1979-11-05 (selections) (SBD 2CDR)
* Grateful Dead:
Truckin’ Up To Buffalo: July 4, 1989 (GDP/Monterey DVD)
* Love: Love
(Epic/Sundazed LP)
* Guided By Voices: The
Bears For Lunch (GBV, Inc. LP)
* Guided By Voices:
English Little League (GBV, Inc. LP)
* Robert Pollard: Honey
Locust Honky Tonk (GBV, Inc. LP)
* Teenage Guitar: Force
Fields At Home (GBV, Inc. LP)
* Boards Of Canada:
Tomorrow’s Harvest (Warp 2LP)
* Opeth: Heritage
(Roadrunner 2LP)
* The Mars Volta:
Tremulant EP (Gold Standard Labs CDEP)
* The Mars Volta:
De-Loused In The Comatorium (Gold Standard Labs/Universal CD)
* The Mars Volta:
Frances The Mute (Gold Star Labs/Universal CD)
* The Mars Volta: “The
Widow” (Gold Star Labs/Universal CDEP)
* The Mars Volta:
Amputechture (Gold Standard Labs/Universal CD)
* Kylesa: Spiral Shadow
(Season of Mist LP)
* Kylesa: Ultraviolet
(Season of Mist LP)
* Baroness: Red Album
(Relapse CD)†/‡
* Baroness: Yellow
& Green (Relapse 2LP)
* Baroness: Live At
Maida Vale BBC (BBC/Relapse EP)†/‡
* Intronaut: Habitual
Levitations (Instilling Words With Tones) (Century Media 2LP)
* Grails: Deep Politics
(Temporary Residence 2LP)
* Locrian: Return to
Annihilation (Relapse 2-45RPM LP)
* The Sword: Gods Of
The Earth (Kemado LP)
* Deafheaven: Sunbather
(Deathwish, Inc. 2-45RPM LP)
* Beach House: Bloom
(Sub Pop CD)
* Wild Nothing:
Nocturne (Captured Tracks CD)
* Wild Nothing: Empty
Estates (Captured Tracks CDEP)
†=iPod
‡=car
Commentary:
It being a long, rainy holiday weekend (with my car in the
shop with a broken clutch), I was compelled to stay indoors. Now seemed like a good time to catch up with my subscription to the New Braxton House downloads
over at the Tri-Centric Foundation—they were really starting to pile up over the past few months! And it was the perfect soundtrack for a soggy bunch of stay-at-home days.
Anthony Braxton is the Robert Pollard of avant-jazz art
music. Braxton has a discography that
runs into the hundreds of albums, both as a leader and sideman. And for the
past three years, the Tri-Centric Foundation has been releasing monthly
downloads of yet more music, most of it dating from the past decade or so—more
than fifty CDs—which barely scratches the surface of the man’s output. As with
Pollard, I like some things more than others—but it’s always interesting,
sonically and conceptually. And the truth is: art is not always about “liking”
something and, of anyone I can think of, Braxton most deserves the appellation
of artist/genius. Braxton has finally received some long overdue recognition
since his 1994 MacArthur grant: this year he was named “Jazz Master” by the
National Endowment for the Arts (along with Richard Davis, Keith Jarrett and
Jamey Aebersold) and he also received the 2013 Doris Duke Artist Award, which
includes a sizable stipend. No doubt every penny will be devoted to getting his
most ambitious projects performed and heard—and I can’t wait to hear it.
The most recent downloads from the Tri-Centric Foundation
document two concerts at Wesleyan University (where Braxton is the John Spencer
Camp Professor of Music) on December 6 and 8, 2007 featuring Braxton’s “Falling
River Music.” Like the “Diamond Curtain Wall Music,” the “Falling River” scores
are notable for their use of color: brushy strokes of paint, dotted with
conventional and wildly unconventional notation. The “Falling River Music” also
dispenses with the rhythm section, relying instead on sparse but flexible
instrumentation, in this case Erica Dicker on violin, Katie Young on bassoon
and Sally Norris on piano. The music is largely improvised, the players
subjectively reacting to an optical abstraction yet it still retains a remarkable
consistency across the four CDs. Less aggressive than the “Diamond Curtain Wall
Music,” lacking as it does the squeal of the laptop or Mary Halvorson’s
electric guitar, the “Falling River Music” is still mostly about sound and
timbre: the violin scrapes and sings; the bassoon croons, burps and farts;
Norris fiddles with the piano’s insides. Meanwhile, Braxton blows on saxophone
in his own inimitable way, or lays out completely and lets the textures build
and subside. The first set starts out tentatively but gradually gains
confidence over the hour-long performance. The ensemble only continues to gel
and by the end of the second concert, it sounds like they could go on forever. Braxton’s
music has a way of doing that.
The Tri-Centric Foundation is once again changing their
membership program in September and will be moving away from the monthly download
model. Instead, members donate $100.00 to the foundation, which will entitle
you to discounts on limited edition CD box sets, including 4CDs of “Falling
River Music” with percussionists Tomas Fujiwara and Tom Rainey and 12 discs of
“Diamond Curtain Wall Music” in duos with Erica Dicker, vocalist Kyoko Kitamura
and bassoonist Katie Young. Additionally 13 new “bootlegs” will be available to
members only and discounts and advance purchasing options for the forthcoming
3CD set of “Echo Echo Mirror House Music” being produced by Firehouse 12.
While I will happily continue to support their endeavors, I
can’t help but feel a little disappointed. In the beginning, membership cost
$7.99 per month, which entitled you to two monthly downloads—a total bargain,
no matter how you slice it. Then it changed to $6.99/month but with one monthly
download included and all others a la carte at $6.99 each, an arrangement that sometimes
doubled the monthly fee. But I was OK with that. Now, as much as I appreciate a nicely produced CD,
Braxton’s download program was one I could wholeheartedly support—even though I
generally hate the idea of paying for digital files. Given Braxton’s prolific
nature, the monthly download (in lossless FLAC format) seems ideal. But, as
with many things these days, we are asked to pay more for less—or rather, pay much
more for luxury and exclusivity. Well, that’s fine – good for Braxton! But I
will miss the continual flow of releases—even if it always takes me a few
months to catch up.
What’s unclear is what happens to these forty-something
volumes of New Braxton House downloads. Do they disappear after September 1? If
so, I recommend everyone who has read this far to get cracking! If you don’t already
have this stuff (and you really should), here are some other ones I consider
essential:
Fans of Mary Halvorson will want to have Septet
(Pittsburgh) 2008 (which I wrote about here) as well as Quartet (Mannheim) 2010
and Trio (NYC) 2011, documenting the wonderfully psychedelic “Diamond Curtain
Wall Music.” She also appears on GTM (Iridium) 2007, eight sets of “Accelerated
Ghost Trance Music” played by Braxton’s usual band plus a rotating cast of
guest musicians like Nicole Mitchell, Kyle Brenders and Matt Bauder. The
smaller, seven-to-nine-person ensembles lend a transparency to the textures making
these CDs more approachable than the mammoth 12(+1)-tet heard the year before
on 9 Compositions (Iridium) 2006 (Firehouse 12). This is all mind-blowingly great
stuff!
There are also a number of Braxton’s large-scale
“classical”-type compositions available, such as Two Compositions (New Trumpet
Music), Composition No.19 (For 100 Tubas) (!), Composition 30 for solo piano,
Two Compositions (Orchestra) 2005 and Creative Music Orchestra (NYC) 2011. Braxton
is America’s finest living composer bar none and these are a rare chance to
hear why. The heroic performance of "Composition 19" is worth the cost of the
subscription alone. Then there’s the really crazy stuff like Echo Echo Mirror
House (NYC) 2011, where everyone in the band has an iPod loaded with hundreds
of hours of Braxton music, which they play through tiny amplifier, thereby adding
further layers to the seeming chaos (see also the recent Victo CD, Septet (Victoriaville) 2011,
which presents this stuff in incredibly vivid, ultra-hi-fi sound quality). Then
there’s Syntactical Ghost Trance Choir (NYC) 2011, which is just as bizarre as the
title implies, and the Pinetop Aerial Quartet, which theatrically combines
voice, instruments and movement (and found on Quartet/Quintet (NYC) 2011, which
also includes twenty-five blissful minutes of “Falling River Music” with Ingrid
Laubrock, Sara Schoenbeck, Renee Baker and Shelley Burgon).
Try as I might, I still have a hard time getting into the early
species “Ghost Trance Music” of the late-‘90s and early-‘00s, mostly due to its
static rhythmic structures and limited instrumentation—and there’s certainly a
lot of that stuff available here. I guess I’ll keep trying. But around 2005,
things started to loosen up, thanks to the solidification of a working Sextet with
Taylor Ho Bynum, Jessica Pavone, Jay Rozen, Carl Testa and Aaron Siegel. Sextet (Philadelphia) 2005, Sextet (Boston)
2005, Sextet (Molde) 2005 and Sextet (Piacenza) 2007 (the latter two featuring
Chris Dahlgren subbing for Carl Testa) are all spectacular performances and
recordings. Also, be sure to check out an early “Diamond Curtain Wall” session
with Tom Crean on guitar, found on Trio (Wesleyan) 2005. Finally, there are two
solo saxophone sets (Solo (Carnegie Hall) 1972 (taken from a bootleg) and the
two-disc Solo (Wesleyan) 2005), which offer deep insights into Braxton’s
methodology and thinking.
Heck, like I said, the man is a bona fide genius and
everything he’s ever done is worth hearing. I’m definitely looking forward to
whatever comes next. Viva Braxton!
+++
SHAMELESS PLUG DEPT.
Do you like “out” jazz? Check out my CD, Rodger Coleman
& Sam Byrd: "Indeterminate (Improvisations for Piano and Drums)" by clicking
the link below. Thank you for your support!
I tried some Braxton several years ago but never really connected with it. Might possibly appreciate it a bit better nowadays but I still have far too much Sun Ra and John Zorn to explore. Interesting write up though.
ReplyDeleteThis weeks listening:
Another bunch of CD's arrives this week(ahead of the massive Sun Ra order still in transit), so have managed to get through or sample parts of the following:
Sun Ra - The Great Lost Sun Ra Albums(Cymbals and Crystal Spears)
Sun Ra - Piano Recital Teatro La Fenice, Venezia
Sun Ra - Janus
Bruce Springsteen - Live 1975-85
Black Sabbath - 13(Mrs.Roddus picked me up a copy on her weekly trip tio the city)
Naked City - Live Vol. 1: Knitting Factory 1989
Pain Killer - 50th Birthday Celebration Volume 12
John Zorn - At The Gates Of Paradice
The Dreamers - Dreamers Christmas
The Lounge Lizards - The Lounge Lizards
Sonic Youth - Daydream Nation
Swans - Children Of God/World Of Skin
Been re-ripping all my back issues of the Uncut Magazine CDs and filling in the gaps from the Uncut Jukebox blog and so have been sampling randon tracks from the rather large itunes playlist I have created.
Still on rotation in the work van:
Shearwater - animal Joy
Led Zeppelin - Celebration Day
Ryan Adams - III/IV
DR. John - Locked Down
Masters Of Reality - Masters Of Reality
Radiohead - OK Computer
P.G.Six - Starry Mind
P.G.Six - Slightly Sorry
Neil Young - Psychedelic Pill
The Dead Weather - Sea Of cowards
Neneth Cherry and the Thing - The Cherry Thing
The Decemberists - The King Is Dead
First Aid Kit - The lions Roar.
Thanks for the Braxton update! Too bad my current budget doesn't allow for any of this!
ReplyDeleteHere are my lists from last week:
Playlist 2013-07-08:
*Anthony Braxton: Echo Echo Mirror House
*Joe Henderson: Canyon Lady
*Andrew Hill: Passing Ships
*Ingrid Laubrock Sleepthief: The Madness of Crowds
*Living By Lanterns: New Myth/Old Science
*Charles Mingus: Cumbia & Jazz Fusion
*Wadada Leo Smith: Ten Freedom Summers
*Sun Ra: Continuation (Saturn/Corbett vs. Dempsey 2CD)
*Sun Ra: Cosmo Earth Fantasy: Sub Underground Series Vol. 1 & 2 (Art Yard)
*Sun Ra: Media Dreams (Art Yard) disc 2
*Sun Ra: Sound Mirror
*B-52s: The B-52s
*B-52s: Cosmic Thing
*Beach Boys: Pet Sounds
*Beach Boys: 50 Big Ones (disc 1)
*Jeff Beck: Truth
*Scott Brookman: Smellicopter
*Deerhoof: web site mp3 compilation (CDR)
*Deerhoof: Breakup Song
*English Beat: I Just Can’t Stop It
*Flaming Lips: The Terror
*Impressions: The Fabulous Impressions/We’re a Winner
*Paul McCartney & Elvis Costello: bootleg selections
*Rolling Stones: The Rolling Stones Singles Collection: The London Years (disc 1)
*Various artists: 1960-1966 (CDR compilation)
*Various artists: 1967-1970 (CDR compilation)
*Various artists: As Good As It Gets: Rockabilly (disc 1)
*Various artists: Bombshell Baby of Bombay
*Various artists: Psych Funk Sa-Re-Ga! Seminar: Aesthetic Expressions of Psychedelic Funk Music in India 1970-1983
*Various artists: The Stax Story (disc 1)
*Various artists: That Devilin' Tune (Vol. 2, disc 2)
*White Stripes: Elephant
Reading List 2013-07-08:
*Fleming, Ian. Moonraker (started)
*Brown, Dan. Inferno (started/finished)
*Fleming, Ian. Casino Royale (started/finished)
*Fleming, Ian. Live and Let Die (started/finished)
*Theroux, Alexander. Laura Warholic, or, The Sexual Intellectual (in progress)
*Weldon, Michael J. Psychotronic Video Guide (in progress)