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Thursday 23 July 2020

Luzzasco Luzzaschi - Quinto Libro de' Madrigali


"The Ferrarese Luzzasco Luzzaschi, a pupil of Cipriano de Rore and teacher in turn of Girolamo Frescobaldi, much admired and praised by the self-same Gesualdo da Venosa, has passed into history as the principal musical inspiration for the 'Concerto delle Dame', that vocal trio with instrumental accompaniment (for which Glossa has very recently produced a new recording). Luzzaschi’s 'Quinto Libro de Madrigali' from 1595, fully in keeping with the seconda prattica, which stressed the fundamental role of the text both at the point of composing and performing, and which was a new aesthetic which the ensemble La Venexiana led by Claudio Cavina have been responsible for reviving over the last twenty years with a superlative and refined commitment. With this disc from 1999 – their third such for Glossa – the group was definitively recognized as leading modern-day interpreters of madrigals." (From the Glossa website. See here.)

Performers: La Venexiana, Claudio Cavina

1. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Aura, Ch'errando Intorno
2. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Itene A Volo
3. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Lungi Da Te Cor Mio
4. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Se La Mia Vita Sete
5. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Aura Ch'errando Intorno
6. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: O Miracol D'amore!
7. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Ecco, O Dolce, O Gradita
8. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Ahi Cruda Sorte Mia
9. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Se Parti I'moro
10. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Tu Godi O Bell'amante
11. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Io Vissi Anima Mia
12. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Ecco, O Dolce, O Gradita
13. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Cinto Di Neve Homai
14. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: A L'hor Fia Lieto Il Core
15. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Credete A Me
16. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Vivo Da Voi Lontana
17. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Parte Il Corpo Da Voi
18. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Moro Ardendo
19. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: A L'hor Fia Lieto Il Core
20. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Come Viva Il Mio Core
21. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Godete Anima Bella
22. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Può Ben Fortuna Far
23. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Non Guardar, Che Se Guardi
24. Sesto Libro De' Madrigali: Itene Mie Querele
25. Quinto Libro De' Madrigali: Credete A Me
26. Sesto Libro De' Madrigali: Core Mio, Benchè Lontana
27. Settimo Libro De' Madrigali: Gioite Voi Col Canto

Richard Wagner - Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg


"'Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg' is Wagner's only comedy, albeit a far cry from traditional opera bouffe; not only long and heavily orchestrated, it sometimes turns a bit nasty. Its ruthless satire on Wagner's critical nemesis, Eduard Hanslick, is illustrated by the character of Beckmesser, whom the composer originally intended to call Hans Lick. Regardless of one's reaction to the humor, not to mention the unremitting chauvinism that climaxes in the final chorus praising German art above all others, there is no denying the power, complexity and skillful construction of this elaborate opera, as well as the unforgettable beauty of many of its melodies.

"The story is Wagner's invention, based on his considerable research into the medieval traditions of the Minnesinger, German equivalents of the French troubadours. He first sketched out a scenario in 1845, but waited 17 years before starting to compose the music, which then occupied him off and on for another six years, during which time he was also working on 'Tristan and Isolde' and 'Der Ring des Nibelungen'. The first performance in Munich on June 21, 1868, conducted by Hans von Billow, was a resounding success, and the opera has been acknowledged continuously ever since as one of Wagner's finest scores." (Bill Parker. From the liner notes.)

Performers: Chor und Orchester der Bayreuther Festspiele, Wilhelm Furtwängler, Jaro Prohaska, Josef Greindl, Max Lorenz, Maria Müller

1.1. Vorspiel
1.2. Aufzug I: 'Da Zu Dir Der Heiland Kam'
1.3. Aufzug I: 'Mein Herr! Der Singer Meister Schlag'
1.4. Aufzug I: 'Der Meister Tön' Und Weisen'
1.5. Aufzug I: 'Damit, Herr Ritter, Ist's So Bewandt!'
1.6. Aufzug I: 'Aller End' Ist Doch David Der Allergescheit'st'!'
1.7. Aufzug I: 'Seid Meiner Treue Wohl Versehen'
1.8. Aufzug I: 'Gott Grüß Euch, Meister!'
1.9. Aufzug I: 'Das Schöne Fest, Johannistag'
1.10. Aufzug I: 'Vielleicht Schon Ginger Ihr Zu Weit'
1.11. Aufzug I: 'Dacht' Ich Mir's Doch!'
1.12. Aufzug I: 'Am Stillen Herd In Winterzeit'
1.13. Aufzug I: 'Nun, Meister, Wenn's Gefällt'
1.14. Aufzug I: 'Fanget An!'
1.15. Aufzug I: 'Seid Ihr Nun Fertig?'
1.16. Aufzug I: 'Halt! Mesiter! Nicht So Geeilt!'

2.1. Aufzug II: 'Johannistag! Johannistag!'
2.2. Aufzug II: 'Laß Seh'n, Ob Meister Sachs Zu Haus?'
2.3. Aufzug II: 'Zeig Her! - 'S Ist Gut'
2.4. Aufzug II: 'Was Duftet Doch Der Flieder'
2.5. Aufzug II: 'Gut'n Abend, Meister!'
2.6. Aufzug II: 'Hilf Gott! Wo Bliebst Du Nur So Spät?'
2.7. Aufzug II: 'Da Ist Er!'
2.8. Aufzug II: 'Geliebter, Spare Den Zorn!'
2.9. Aufzug II: 'Üble Dinge, Die Ich Da Merk''
2.10. Aufzug II: 'Tu's Nicht! Doch Horch!'
2.11. Aufzug II: 'Jerum! Jerum!'
2.12. Aufzug II: 'Das Fenster Geht Auf'
2.13. Aufzug II: 'Den Tag Seh' Ich Erscheinen'

3.1. Aufzug III: Vorspiel
3.2. Aufzug III: 'Gleich Meister! Hier!'
3.3. Aufzug III: 'Am Jordan Sankt Johannes Stand'
3.4. Aufzug III: 'Wahn! Wahn! Uberall Wahn!'
3.5. Aufzug III: 'Grüß Gott, Mein Junker!'
3.6. Aufzug III: 'Mein Freund! In Holder Jügendreit'
3.7. Aufzug III: 'Morgendlich Leuchtend In Rosigem Schein'
3.8. Aufzug III: 'Ein Webelied! Von Sachs? - Ist's Wahr?'

4.1. Aufzug III: 'Das Gedicht? Hier Ließ Ich's'
4.2. Aufzug III: 'Sieh, Evchen!'
4.3. Aufzug III: 'Hat Man Mit Dem Schuhwerk Nicht Seine Not!'
4.4. Aufzug III: 'Sankt Crispin, Lobet Ihn!'
4.5. Aufzug III: 'Ihr Tanzt? Was Werden Die Meister Sagen?'
4.6. Aufzug III: 'Silentium! Silentium!... Wach Auf, Es Nahet Gen Den Tag'
4.7. Aufzug III: 'Euch Macht Ihr's Leicht, Mir Macht Ihr's Schwer'
4.8. Aufzug III: 'Nun Denn, Wenn's Meistern Und Volk Believt'
4.9. Aufzug III: 'Morgen Ich Leuchte In Rosigem Schein'
4.10. Aufzug III: 'Das Lied, Fürwahr, Ist Nicht Von Mir'
4.11. Aufzug III: 'Morgendlich Leuchtend Im Rosigen Schein'
4.12. Aufzug III: 'Verachtet Mir Die Meister Nicht'

Tuesday 21 July 2020

Contagious Orgasm & Guilty Connector - Guilorga


Collaborative effort from the two Japanese noise/industrial projects, released as a CD in 2000 on Utsu Tapes, which is owned by Kohei Nakagawa (Guilty Connector). A strange and captivating blend of harsh noise, samples and melodic EBM-type beats.

1. Connect
2. Searching Sentence Slave Masochist

Black Leather Jesus / MSBR - Sonic Destruction


Split between Richard Ramirez's Black Leather Jesus moniker and the late great Koji Tano's 'Molten Salt Breeder Reactor' (MSBR). Both sides are fanatically intense, with Ramirez making more use of screeching sounds with high variation and Tano favouring a driving, building momentum of noise and atmosphere. Released on Ramirez's Deadline Recordings label in 1995 in an edition of three hundreds LPs.

A1. Black Leather Jesus - 1,000 Days
A2. Black Leather Jesus - Mock Injury Test
B1. MSBR - 14 Minutes Over Nagoya
B2. MSBR - Metaphysical Murder

Vomir - Coma


Cassette on Deathbed Tapes from Romain Perrot. Comes in a camouflage cloth pouch with meteorite fragments and various badges. Released in 2019, the special edition was limited to twenty copies. Audio is Perrot's customary relentless wall noise for 110 minutes over two sides.

A. Coma 1
B. Coma 2

Pain Jerk & John Wiese - Terrazzo


Collaboration between 'japanoise' giant Kōhei Gomi (Pain Jerk) and American west coast veteran John Wiese. Crisp and intense full-frontal noise, recorded via mail collaboration during 2005 following a 'chance meeting' in Japan and released as an issue of one thousand CDs on UK label Harbinger Sound in 2007.

1. Triangle Sky
2. Japan
3. Palms
4. Absolute Hell

Valkoinen Kohina


Murky, dark power electronics from Finland released on the Italian Urashima label in 2015, re-issued on Filth and Violence two years after. Features two Pekka Perä-Takala projects (Snuff, Sick Seed) as well as contributions from Unclean, Chloroform Rapist (probably Mikko Aspa), Silence of Vacuum and Edge of Decay.

A1. Chloroform Rapist - Untitled
A2. Edge Of Decay - Kidutettujen Mieli
A3. Silence Of Vacuum - Under Three Layers 1
A4. Silence Of Vacuum - Under Three Layers 2
B1. Sick Seed - Meidän Herramme
B2. Snuff - Anonymous
B3. Unclean - Filth Pig

Pelt - Max Meadows


Early release from American psych-drone collective Pelt, recorded between 1995 and 1996 and released the following year. Features a customary blend of droning guitar feedback, with more of an intense distorted "rock" sound than later more roots-influenced material. The musicians here are very talented at created their rich, psychoactive carpet of chaotic sound and it is on full display here in a rougher, rawer form than we might be accustomed to.

1. Outside, Listening
2. Sun Is Standing
3. Sunken
4. Abcdelancey (Gimme That Dickel)
5. Samsara
6. Hippy War Machine
7. Dismal Falls

The New Blockaders - Nonchalant Acts of Artistic Nihilism


Two live German performances from 2012 (Berlin) and Dresden (2014). Both feature excellent and diverse noise performances with a very spirited crowd. Released as an edition of 300 CDs in 2015 on Austrian label Klanggalerie.

1. NK (Berlin 2012)
2. Club Puschkin (Dresden 2014)

The New Blockaders - Eine Kleine Nichstmusick


Self-released CD from English noise veterans The New Blockaders (as 'TNB Orchestra'), released in 2013 in an edition of 50 copies. This is a very dense, very intricate noise assault. The sounds are often layered and reward close listening. The cover features unique burnt fragments of sheet music, with some copies having the CD booklet partially burnt also.

1. Eine Kleine Nichtsmusik (Part 1)
2. Eine Kleine Nichtsmusik (Part 2)

Forced Womanhood


Noise compilation from defunct American label 23 Productions, features contributions centering on themes of sadomasochism and gender dysphoria. If the repugnance of the subject matter (and often vile samples) can be penetrated, there are lot of very, very good tracks here from lesser known noise artists as well as the likes of Dominick Fernow (as Prurient) and Richard Ramirez (as Black Leather Jesus). Not for listening during meal times.

A1. Cleanse - Angel's Trumpet
A2. Clew Of Thesus - Cut Me
A3. Prurient - Tailor
A4. Prosexist - Girl Power
A5. Karlheinz - What You Want
A6. Ga-Ne-Tli-Yv-S-Di - Penal Exile
B1. Immaculate Grotesque
B2. Eugene's Council - Taint (Needledick Mix)
B3. Eugene's Council - Taint
B4. Black Leather Jesus - Issues
B5. V.D. - No Love For A Bottom
B6. Loop Retard - Untitled
B7. Survival Unit - Let Me Die A Woman

C1. Raquel de Grimstone & Prosexist - Paint You Up
C2. Moribund - Cut It Off
C3. Moribund - My Salvation
C4. The Viodre - Phalcam Mancunt
D1. Panicsville - Slut Torture
D2. Karmanjakan Intonarumori - Locked For Humiliation/Tied Down For The Transformation
D3. Human Is Filth - Penectomic Scisson Venesection
D4. Concrete Violin - Castration Anxiety Overcome
D5. Mansfield Deathtrap - Bitch Me In

Strict & Pain Jerk - Collaboration



Transatlantic collaboration between japanese noise giant Kōhei Gomi (Pain Jerk) and American Jeremy Kart (Strict), released on German label Art Konkret in 1997. The resulting session of classic, high intensity noise is on par with any Pain Jerk work from around this time.

A1. Cock Tracks
A2. Queer
B. Folliclabia

Tourette - Cendrier du Voyage


Release from French noise artist Benjamin Clement. The noise here is very lo-fi and fuzzy, morphing through the ears with a calm intensity. Originally released on 'Foyer Second' in 2013 (according to Discogs, the first and only release on this label), then re-issued on Italian label Archivio Diafònico in 2015. The title is taken from the title of a book of poetry by Jacques Dupin.

A1. Untitled
A2. Untitled
B1. Untitled
B2. Untitled

Fecalove - X3



Early release from Italian Nicola Vinciguerra's Fecalove project, on short lived web label Dead Birds Records. The sounds here are high fidelity and sound as if they were made digitally. Varies from fragile twisting sounds to high intensity ear assaults and Italian movie samples.

1. Malocclusione Iniziale
2. Diagnosi
3. Il Profilo E L'assetto Facciale
4. Espansione Ortodontica
5. Odontoiatria Canina
6. Con Eventuali Estrazioni
7. Rapporti Sagittali
8. A Una Valutazione Più Critica
9. Dentale
10. No
11. Agenesia Degli Incisivi
12. Esigenze Estetiche

Emil Beaulieau - Kill the All-Noise Japanese Artists



More tongue-in-cheek noise blasting from Emil Beaulieau. The premise here is the use of 'japanoise' artists as source material for Beaulieau's own work. This is a fine and bountiful premise and the results are reflective of both the quality and intensity of the sources and Beaulieau's own audio skill. The punk samples and quasi-ironic vocal wailing are present here but less so than other Beaulieau Pure releases posted recently (see here and here).

1. Merz Bow-Wow-Wow
2. Violins O.G.
3. Hi-Fi K. Dan
4. Madonna
5. NSBR
6. Nerd
7. Nell
8. Aude
9. Incapacitated
10. Boring Boring Boring Boring Boring Boring Boring Boring Boring

Monday 20 July 2020

Dancehall '69: 40 Skinhead Reggae Rarities


Double CD collection of skinhead reggae tunes from the legendary Trojan Records label. Some excellent selections here, the music is full of humour, infectious rhythms and positive vibes throughout. Does a very good job at capturing in miniature a fleeting cultural epoch.

1.1. Bunny Lee All Stars - Warfare
1.2. Busty Brown - Fight For Your Right
1.3. Medetators - Soul Fight
1.4. Victors - Reggae Buddy
1.5. Karl Bryan - Red Ash
1.6. Hortense Ellis - My Last Date
1.7. Hippy Boys - What's Your Excuse
1.8. Bunny Lee All Stars - Annie Pama
1.9. Lloyd Charmers - In The Spirit
1.10. Hippy Boys - Peace Maker
1.11. Soul Twins - Cherrie
1.12. Roland Alphonso - One Thousand Tons Of Megaton
1.13. Hippy Boys
1.14. Reggae Boys - Ba Ba
1.15. Glen Adams - Power Cut
1.16. Hippy Boys - Dreams To Remember
1.17. Max Romeo & The Hippy Boys - Clap Clap
1.18. Roland Alphonso - Musical Resurection
1.19. Derrick Morgan - The Conqueror
1.20. Tommy McCook - The Saint (The Saints Go Marching In)

2.1. Prophets - Revenge Of Eastwood
2.2. King Horror - Zion I
2.3. Desmond Riley - Tear Them
2.4. Des All Stars - Walk With Des
2.5. Corporation - Walkin Thru Jerusalem
2.6. Dandy - Shake Me Wake Me
2.7. Dice The Boss - Tea House From Emperor Rosko
2.8. Music Doctors - Going Strong
2.9. Sir Collins - Black Panther
2.10. S S Binns - Bossa Moon
2.11. Music Doctors - Music Doctor, Chapter 1
2.12. Rudies - The Split
2.13. Cimarons - Kick Me Or I'll Kick You
2.14. King Horror - Cutting Blade
2.15. Joe Mansano - The Thief
2.16. Hot Rod Allstars - Return Of The Bad Man
2.17. Des All Stars - Black Scorcher
2.18. Music Doctors - Bush Doctor
2.19. Rudies - Devil's Lead Soup
2.20. Dice The Boss - Your Boss DJ

Sunday 19 July 2020

Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji - Symphonic Nocturne



"Further proof that Sorabji somehow managed simultaneously to adhere to one of the most instantly recognisable personal idioms in twentieth-century music while never coming close to repeating himself even in thousands of pages and repeated returns to a number of favourite genres and forms. The Symphonic Nocturne is a late work, from 1977-78, in the final phase of the composer's career in the years following the self-imposed hiatus in the late 1960s which was broken by the astonishingly vigorous, fresh and youthful 'Symphonia brevis' (04M065). The works of this late period tend to be somewhat sparer of texture as compared to the dense opulence of those from the 30s, 40s and 50s, and the composer's "meta-tonality", though a constant throughout his career, tends more toward triads with added-note dissonances than the harmonic density of earlier years, while retaining the inevitable, if often unpredictable, sense of harmonic direction that was always a driving force in his vocabulary. The work's title is a little misleading to anyone expecting a huge (over two hours in this performance) 'tropical nocturne' of the Gulistān type; there is arguably more that is symphonic than nocturnal about much of the piece, especially as its argument progresses. The passages that are limned in the shades of night have less to do with the entangled vines and oppressive heat of the earlier nocturnes than a chilly, bleaker landscape; the direction 'fosco' - overcast, gloomy - is often to be found. The work has something in common with the large 'intrecciata' first movements of the piano symphonies, presenting a great many episodes of different material without adhering to particular forms that were explored in subsequent movements of multi-movement pieces. There are brief fugues and canons among the Symphonic Nocturne's many episodes, but only en passant, so to speak. A better analogy might be a vast mosaic that, rather than having a symmetrical pattern, progresses in shape, size and design of tiles as one views it from one end to the other; the piece is in fact largely made up of small sections - a single system to a couple of pages at most - that follow a distinct trajectory (with many diversions along the way) toward a kind of 'finale', with successive volcanic climaxes finely calibrated to suggest a dramatic progression. This, and the work's structuring not by large musical forms but (as the pianist points out in a perceptive analysis in the booklet) by numerological relationships which influence the listener's perception of the work's progress in the way that the proportions of the golden section make a painting pleasing to the eye, prevent any sense of diffuseness, a further tribute to Sorabji's skill in maintaining a cogent argument over a very large span." (Review from Records International. See here.)

Performer: Luke Huisman

1.1. Symphonic Nocturne, KSS97

2.1. Symphonic Nocturne, KSS97

Saturday 18 July 2020

Macronympha - Close to the Edge



An excellent hour-long noise assault from Macronympha, incorporating cut-ups from Chris Goudreau's Skin Crime. There is a large and skilled variety of sounds here, from straight-up harsh noise through to rhythmic sections and slow, droning sound. Joint CDr release on Self Abuse Records and Macronympha's own Mother Savage Noise Productions. Recorded in 2002 and released in 2003.

1. Untitled

Emil Beaulieau - Dedicated to Charlie Ward



Another early Pure release from label owner and great jester of noise Emil Beaulieau. This is primarily made of chopped and screwed samples from various extreme sources, from G.G. Allin (G.G. Junkie) to Merzbow (Abby Soda) to The Gerogerigegege (Gerogerigaygaygayhomofaggotqueerpansy). A whimsical mess of sound.

1. G.G. Junkie
2. Sugar Bullets
3. A&A
4. Perpetual Motor
5. Facts Ahead
6. Park Queer
7. Jeff Dugout
8. P69.D-Foul
9. Bigfootsies
10. Abby Soda
11. John Tease
12. Bring Downers
13. Obit
14. Staple Sneaks
15. Gerogerigaygaygayhomofaggotqueerpansy

Macronympha / Government Alpha - Obliteration


Split CD issue joint released on Macronympha-run Mother Savage Noise Productions and Yasutoshi Yoshida (Government Alpha) co-run Xerxes. Both artists are in their analogue prime and this is extreme and hard-hitting harsh noise which does well in delivering on the promise of the title and the BDSM/torture tools on the cover.

1. Macronympha - Fifty Years Ahead Is Fifty Years Behind
2. Government Alpha - The 13th Floor
3. Macronympha - Transform Correlation Technique
4. Government Alpha - Mock Trail (Moderate) Torture
5. Macronympha - Shatter Brained
6. Government Alpha - Reduced To Ashes
7. Macronympha - Brute Force
8. Government Alpha - Chloroform (Cerebral Hemorrhage Mix)
9. Macronympha - Ride The Screaching Beast (To Know Death... Be Death)
10. Government Alpha - Missile To Hell

Friday 17 July 2020

Henry Purcell - Twelve Sonatas of Three Parts



"On 28 May 1683, the 24-year-old Henry Purcell proudly announced in the London Gazette that his Sonnata's of Parts were 'compleatly finished' and would be available for delivery to subscribers from June 11 from his house in St. Ann's Lane, near to Westminster Abbey. By October, 'all lovers of Musick' were invited to purchase from Playford and Carr, at their premises at the Temple, Fleet Street, 'the new Musical Compositions called Sonata's lately published by Mr Henry Purcell'. From variations between surviving sets (perhaps made between subscription and public sale), it would appear that a second impression was created: changes were made to the preface, and a few corrections too were incorporated.

"Purcell clearly put a great deal of effort into the publication. Rather than choosing the cheaper system of moveable type, he had his publication engraved by Thomas Cross Junior (in one of the first recorded examples of Cross's work as an engraver). Purcell dedicated the set to Charles II, stating that the compositions were 'the immediate Results of your Majesties Royall favour, and benignity to me (which have made me what I am)'. King Charles had indeed been a good patron to Purcell, appointing him Composer-In-Ordinary for the violins in succession to Matthew Locke in 1677 (when Purcell was only eighteen), and subsequently as organist both at Westminster Abbey and at the Chapel Royal.

"At some point in the early 1680s Purcell seems to have spent a considerable amount of time producing instrumental sonatas. We know that when Purcell explored a new musical concept, he poured out works with extraordinary fecundity. He had already shown in his early sacred compositions (for instance, penning masterworks such as 'My beloved spoke' and 'Blow up the trumpet' while he was still a teenager) that he possessed astonishing melodic and harmonic inventiveness, as well as highly-developed technical facilities. Now it seems that he additionally turned these remarkable skills towards instrumental compositions. Comparing the 'Twelve Sonatas of Three Parts', published in 1683, with the 'Ten Sonatas In Four Parts' (published by Purcell's widow, Frances, in 1697), we can be fairly certain on stylistic grounds that all these sonatas seem to have been written at around the same time. The summer recess of the court to Newmarket, when musical duties for the royal musicians were suspended, could have provided a perfect few months of peace and quiet for the youthful Purcell to pour out these new works.

"A further pointer towards the possible period of composition comes in the preface to the 1683 set, where Purcell states that the works would have been 'in the whole world much Sooner, but that he has now thought fit to cause the whole Thorough Bass to be Engraven, which was a thing quite besides his first Resolution'. The catalyst for that revision, resulting in the production of a separate basso continuo part, may have been the publication, in Rome in 1681 (and presumably arriving in Britain shortly afterwards), of Corelli's first set of 'Sonata da chiesa', which contained variations between the instrumental bass line and the continuo line. So perhaps Purcell had written his own sonatas before 1681, electing then to revise them in the light of these latest revelations from Italy.

"The addition of that semi-independent fourth part, which Purcell states is suited 'To the Organ or Harpsechord', creates a major shift in the construction and sound of the sonatas. The level of decoration in the bass viol comes close to that of the two violin parts, whereas the continuo line is slower moving, instead enhancing and strengthening the harmonic basis of the ensemble (especially when played on the organ, as seems more fitting in the majority of the sonatas). Purcell's sonatas are no modernised version of the old viol fantasia, typified by the delicious compositions of his mentor, Matthew Locke, the works of John Jenkins or the suites of William Lawes. With strengthened harmonic language that is not Just wonderfully individual, but highly developed in its use of dissonance and angularity, coupled with melodic lines that cover all possibilities from plangent to daringly pointed, here is the new, English Sonata.

"Purcell's fluent melodic and harmonic invention is underpinned by a highly skilled grasp of compositional technique, which had been thoroughly learned from study of the works of three lines of English composers. In the composer's Fitzwilliam autograph (MS 88) we can see Purcell's copies of music by the great English polyphonists, Orlando Gibbons, William Byrd, Thomas Tallis and William Mundy. Alongside his studies of the old masters, he also experienced the remarkable compositional flowering that greeted the Restoration: old hands who had survived the interregnum, such as Matthew Locke (1621/2-77), Orlando's son Christopher Gibbons (1615-76) and John Jenkins (1592-1678). Their wisdom was passed, live, onto the new generation, led by Pelham Humfrey (1647-74) and John Blow (1649-1708). For Purcell, this fusion of the music of three generations of fine English composers, the continuing musical buzz that had arisen with the return of the monarchy, the excitement brought with each successive arrival of the latest works from France and Italy, and the genuine love of music that was fostered and encouraged by King Charles, proved to be a potent basis for an extraordinary, highly individual musical style.

"That the sonatas were quite a new concept to his audience is made clear by Purcell's guidance in his preface 'To the Reader'. Purcell writes that his works are 'a just imitation of the most fam'd Italian Masters', and that he wishes to bring 'the seriousness and gravity of that sort of Musick into vogue'. He cautions the potential buyer that his works are 'bold and daring', whilst professing his 'unskilfulness in the Italian Language' (noting that this is due to 'the unhappiness of his Education, which cannot justly be accounted his fault'), and recommends to English musicians 'the power of the Italian Notes' and the 'elegancy of their Compositions'. Finally he gives useful instructions about tempi: Adagio and Grave are 'a very slow movement' [speed], Presto Largo, Poco Largo or Largo are 'a middle movement' and Allegro and Vlvace are 'a very brisk, swift, or fast movement'. That Purcell needs to instruct in Italian tempi suggests that at least some English musicians would have been unfamiliar with such foreign terms." (Robert King. From the liner notes.)

Performers: The King's Consort

1. Sonata 1 In G Minor, Z. 790: (Grave) - Vivace - Adagio
2. Sonata 1 In G Minor, Z790: Presto - Largo
3. Sonata 2 In B Flat Major, Z791: Andante - Largo - Presto
4. Sonata 2 In B Flat Major, Z791: Adagio - Vivace - Allegro - [Grave]
5. Sonata 3 In D Minor, Z792: (Grave) - Adagio - Canzona - Adagio
6. Sonata 3 In D Minor, Z792: Poco Largo - Allegro
7. Sonata 4 In F Major, Z793: [Largo] - Canzona
8. Sonata 4 In F Major, Z793: Poco Largo - Allegro - [Largo]
9. Sonata 5 In A Minor, Z794: [Largo] - Adagio
10. Sonata 5 In A Minor, Z794: Largo - Grave - Canzona - Adagio
11. Sonata 6 In C Major, Z795: (Grave)
12. Sonata 6 In C Major, Z795: Canzona - Largo - Allegro
13. Sonata 7 In E Minor, Z796: [Grave] - Canzona
14. Sonata 7 In E Minor, Z796: Largo - Grave - Vivace - Adagio
15. Sonata 8 In G Major, Z797: [Largo] - Poco Largo - Allegro
16. Sonata 8 In G Major, Z797: Grave - Vivace
17. Sonata 9 In C Minor, Z798: [Grave] - Largo
18. Sonata 9 In C Minor, Z798: Canzona - Adagio - Allegro
19. Sonata 10 In A Major, Z799: [Allegro] - Largo
20. Sonata 10 In A Major, Z799: Grave - Presto
21. Sonata 11 In F Minor, Z800: [Grave] - Canzona
22. Sonata 11 In F Minor, Z800: Adagio - Largo
23. Sonata 12 In D Major, Z801: Adagio - Canzona - Poco Largo
24. Sonata 12 In D Major, Z801: Grave - Presto - Allegro - Adagio

Thursday 16 July 2020

Benjamin Britten - A Midsummer Night's Dream



"Benjamin Britten's own recordings of his operas must be considered authoritative, but any great art can yield insights from a variety of interpretations, and an objective performer may find felicities in a score of which the composer was hardly aware. Additionally, new recording technology can create a truer realization of the sound, and in vocal music, the quality of voices in subsequent productions can surpass the originals, so new recordings are always welcome.

"Virgin's reissue of its 1990 recording of 'A Midsummer Night's Dream', conducted by Richard Hickox is notable for how closely it resembles Britten's 1966 version in many aspects. The sound quality is somewhat fuller than Britten's, and orchestral details emerge with more clarity, but the engineers have gone overboard in duplicating the spatial relationships of a stage performance, so there is a distracting variability in the soloists' miking; some are very close and some are so distant as to be nearly inaudible. It may be an accurate replication of the theater experience, but more sonic consistency would have been less annoying. (Some decisions seem random; Lysander almost always sounds distant, and Demetrius, close. The miking is, however, very effective in capturing Puck's fleet leaps from near to far.) The soloists in the two versions are similar in quality, which is very high, as well as in interpretation. Britten's conducting of the diaphanous opening and the fairies' sound world has a magic that Hickox's does not, but Hickox's handling of the comic elements is generally more deft and funnier, except for the play of Pyramus and Thisbe, which Britten handles incomparably. Britten's reading of the score unfolds more organically, while Hickox is less successful in making the sound worlds of the fairies, the mortals, and the mechanicals flow together as an integrated whole. If a choice must be made, Britten's original remains the preferred version, but not by so large a margin as to disqualify Hickox's very reputable effort, which has much to recommend it." (Review by Stephen Eddins. From AllMusic. See here.)

Performers: City of London Sinfonia, Richard Hickox, James Bowman, Della Jones, Lillian Watson, Henry Herford, John Graham-Hall, Jill Gomez, Donald Maxwell, Dexter Fletcher

1.1. Act I: Introduction. The Wood, Deepening Twilight/'Over Hill, Over Dale'
1.2. Act I: 'Oberon Is Passing Fell And Wrath'
1.3. Act I: 'Well, Go Thy Way'
1.4. Act I: 'How Now My Love?'
1.5. Act I: 'Be It On Lion, Bear, Or Wolf, Or Bull'
1.6. Act I: 'Welcome Wanderer... I Know A Bank'
1.7. Act I: 'Is All Our Company Here?'
1.8. Act I: 'Fair Love, You Faint With Wand'ring In The Wood'
1.9. Act I: 'Through The Forest Have I Gone'
1.10. Act I: 'Stay, Though Thou Kill Me, Sweet Demetrius'
1.11. Act I: 'Come, Now A Roundel And A Fairy Song'
1.12. Act I: 'You Spotted Snakes With Double Tongue'
1.13. Act I: 'What Thou Seest When Thou Dost Wake'
1.14. Act II: Introduction. The Wood
1.15. Act II: 'Are We All Met?'
1.16. Act II: 'I See Their Knavery'
1.17. Act II: 'Be Kind And Courteous To This Gentleman'
1.18. Act II: 'Hail, Mortal, Hail!'
1.19. Act II: 'I Have A Reas'nable Good Ear In Music'
1.20. Act II: 'How Now, Mad Spirit?'

2.1. Act II: 'Flower Of This Purple Dye'
2.2. Act II: 'Puppet? Why, So?'
2.3. Act II: 'This Is Thy Negligence'
2.4. Act II: 'Up And Down, Up And Down'
2.5. Act II: 'On The Ground, Sleep Sound'
2.6. Act III: Introduction. The Wood, Early Next Morning/'My Gentle Robin, Seest Thou This Sweet Sight?'
2.7. Act III: 'Helena! Hermia! Demetrius! Lysander!'
2.8. Act III: 'When My Cue Comes, Call Me'
2.9. Act III: 'Have You Sent To Bottom's House?'
2.10. Act III: 'Now, Fair Hippolyta'
2.11. Act III: 'If We Offend, It Is With Our Good Will'
2.12. Act III: 'Gentles, Perchance You Wonder At This Show'
2.13. Act III: 'In This Same Interlude It Doth Befall'
2.14. Act III: 'O Grim-look'd Night, O Night With Hue So Black'
2.15. Act III: 'O Wall, Full Often Hast Thou Heard My Moans'
2.16. Act III: 'You Ladies, You Whose Gentle Hearts Do Fear'
2.17. Act III: 'This Lanthorn Doth The Hornèd Moon Present'
2.18. Act III: 'Sweet Moon, I Thank Thee For Thy Sunny Beams'
2.19. Act III: 'Asleep, My Love?'
2.20. Act III: 'Come, Your Bergomask'
2.21. Act III: 'Now The Hungry Lion Roars'

Harry Partch - Enclosure Five


"[Revelation in the Courthouse Park] is one of the major music dramas by Harry Partch, the American pioneer of just intonation music. It is a powerful piece dramatically and musically, using the resources of Partch's collection of self-made microtonal instruments, including the bass instrument, the marimba eroica.

"In 1955, Partch, intrigued by the hero-worship of the stars of the new rock & roll music (especially Elvis Presley), mentioned a plan for transplanting Euripides' 'The Bacchae' into a contemporary American setting. Eventually, Partch alternated 'The Bacchae', set in ancient Thebes, with scenes in an American courthouse park, where Dion, the new popular music star, makes an appearance surrounded by his rapturous (mostly female) fans. The frenzied, half-nonsensical American segments provide a kind of relief from the searing tragedy of the King of Thebes, who, due to his lack of reverence for the newly-proclaimed god, Dionysus (or Bacchus), is mauled by the spellbound Theban women. The powerful stage spectacle is a telling of the classic tragedy, with running commentary on how the same phenomena noted by Euripides exist today. Partch's main target was the destructive nature of cultural conformism.

"Partch, then associated with the University of Illinois, proposed his idea, called 'Revel and Revelation', to the University for the 1961 Festival of Contemporary Arts. He began seriously writing the text in June 1959 and the music in February 1960. Staging Revelation was an unusually smooth process. For the first time, Partch worked with a producer (Barnard Hewitt) and choreographer (Jean Cutler) who understood, and were in accord with, his ideas. The two sides to the drama were set on opposite sides of the stage, where Partch's often massively beautiful instruments and their players were on full display and gave the whole production a ritualistic quality. Partch, as always, had to teach the players how to play his instruments and how to read their parts, assisted by Danlee Mitchell and Jack McKenzie. The production was a success and largely well received.

"While rehearsals were in progress, gymnastic coach Charles Pond saw a sequence from Chorus III of 'Revelation' called 'Tumble On', using tumblers and a trampoline. He asked Partch to prepare the scene, 'with added music,' to be used in the upcoming NCAA Gymnastics Championship. This music was named 'Rotate the Body in All Its Planes' and was premiered three days before the performance of the major work, on April 11, 1961." (Description of 'Revelation in the Courthouse Park' by Joseph Stevenson. From AllMusic. See here.)

"In 1933, [Harry Partch] had read William Butler Yeats' English translation of Sophocles' 'Oedipus Rex' and wrote the poet asking for a meeting after Partch came to Europe. Partch built a new instrument, the adapted guitar, with frets allowing him to play in his new scale system. Partch played and sang his setting of 'By the Waters of Babylon' for the aging poet. Partch was thrilled when the performance excited Yeats and his comments showed 'total comprehension' of Partch's musical ideas. Yeats said that ' ...a play done entirely in this way, with this wonderful instrument, and with this type of music, might really be sensational.'

"Partch then went through his proposed outline for 'Oedipus'. Yeats approved the plan, and brought in an Abbey Theater actor. Yeats and the actor read through parts of 'King Oedipus' and Partch made a rough graph of their speech inflection.

"The immediate result of the meeting was that Partch began to build more instruments. But several years intervened - some lost as Partch wandered, often as a hobo, without access to his instruments - before Partch found support for a production of his opera.

"Partch began actual composition in San Diego early in 1951, and completed it in Oakland, CA, on July 31 of that year. Four actors - portraying Oedipus, Jocasta, Tiresias, and the Spokesman of the Chorus - sing in intoning voice, while the other characters speak normally. The orchestra comprised clarinet, cello, and double bass, plus nine Partch-built instruments, including the contemporarily built marimba eroica, an enormous sub-bass percussion instrument. Partch cut Yeats' drama to its human core, and, true to his representations to Yeats, created intensified lines closely following speech. Allan Louw, as Oedipus, mastered Partch's style immediately, a comprehension shared by director Arch Lauterer.

"'King Oedipus' was premiered on March 14, 1952, at Mills College in Oakland and was given three times to sold-out houses. However, lack of funding stymied efforts to give the opera in New York, and Yeats' literary administrators elected not to honor Yeats' own letter to Partch granting permission for the setting. Partch, therefore, had to write a new text himself, for a 1954 staging (he called the new version, simply, 'Oedipus'). Release of the recording made of the Mills College production was prevented until decades later, when Yeats' text went into Public Domain.

"Although the music mostly underlines the drama until the catastrophe of the final section, Partch's Oedipus is a gripping, emotionally shattering setting, miles removed in impact from the brittle and artificial opera-oratorio form of the century's most famous musical setting, Stravinsky's 'Oedipus Rex'." (Description of 'King Oedipus' by Joseph Stevenson. From AllMusic. See here.)

"Harry Partch completed 'The Bewitched' in 1955. The composer referred to it as a satyr play, ritual theatre, and 'A Dance-Satire.' It is in ten scenes and about 75 minutes in duration. It is exotic and bizarre, not resembling Western art in any knowable sense. This work appeals to the imagination of the listener as a work from a fictional past. The stage is dominated by instruments at different locations on stage and on risers of different heights. Among the instruments are those of the composer's own invention, as well as Western and Asian instruments, the majority of them being winds and percussion. The central figure of the concert is The Witch, who for the most part sits on a throne at the front of the stage, robed, and exposed to changing lights that often render her to a silhouette and always a powerful presence. She also conducts a mixed chorus, and none of the vocal work includes actual text, though the work has an extensive plot synopsis. The work's argument, provided by the composer, maintains that humanity is divided into those who prefer good music and those who prefer less-good music, and that both sorts of people are frequently forced to contend with the other musical preference. In the piece's prologue, musicians are on stage as though they had always been there, like the Egyptian phoenix that was the first living creature in the universe. They are eternal spirits of music, and it is also to be understood that they are on a university campus. The witch appears and complains (in nonsensical speak) that the world prefers background music, to her displeasure. Following the prologue are ten different scenes of deep strangeness, mingling academic life with figures from mythologies representing different cultures and periods in history. The scenes have strange names such as 'A Lost Political Soul Finds Himself Among the Voteless Women of Paradise,' and 'A Court in its Own Contempt Rises to a Motherly Apotheosis.'

"None of the intensively detailed plots would be detectable in the score, making a recording of the music and a performance of the work different events entirely. As background to many different sorts of occasions, the soundtrack of 'The Bewitched' is a wonderful find, not to be underestimated. It is wild in its exoticism and beautiful. There is no greater dramatic curve to be followed, and the listener is not missing anything vital if paying attention only periodically while the recording plays itself out. For other listeners, 'The Bewitched' is a subtle set of variations of moods, featuring a unique nuance to each. It is a kind of religious music, unhappy with academia, sitting askew among the Western canon." (Description of 'The Bewitched' by John Keillor. From AllMusic. See here.)

1.1. Ulysses Departs From The Edge Of The World (A Minor Adventure Of Rhythm)
1.2. Revelation In The Courthouse Park, Chorus One
1.3. Revelation In The Courthouse Park, Chorus Three, In Part
1.4. Revelation In The Courthouse Park, From Scene One: Hymn To Dionysus: Holy Joy And Get Religion
1.5. Revelation In The Courthouse Park, From Scene Two: Hymn To Dionysus: What The Majority Believes
1.6. Revelation In The Courthouse Park, From Scene Two: Hymn To Dionysus: Glory To The Male Womb
1.7. Revelation In The Courthouse Park, End Of Scene Three And All Of Chorus Four
1.8. Revelation In The Courthouse Park, End Of Scene Four And Coda
1.9. Introduction To King Oedipus
1.10. King Oedipus, Introduction
1.11. King Oedipus, Opening Scene
1.12. King Oedipus, First Chorus
1.13. King Oedipus, Tiresias Scene (Beginning)

2.1. King Oedipus, Tiresias Scene (Conclusion)
2.2. King Oedipus, Second Chorus
2.3. King Oedipus, Creon Scene
2.4. King Oedipus, Jocasta Scene
2.5. King Oedipus, Incidental Music
2.6. King Oedipus, Third Chorus
2.7. King Oedipus, Messenger Scene
2.8. King Oedipus, Fourth Chorus
2.9. King Oedipus, Herdsman Scene
2.10. King Oedipus, Oedipus Scene
2.11. King Oedipus, Fifth Chorus
2.12. King Oedipus, Instrumental Commentary
2.13. King Oedipus, Antiphony
2.14. King Oedipus, Exit Oedipus - Pantomime
2.15. King Oedipus, Final Chorus And Coda
2.16. Johann Krieger: Menuet (From Partita In G)
2.17. Douglas Moore: Come Away, Death
2.18. Come Away, Death
2.19. By The Rivers Of Babylon
2.20. Introduction To The Bewitched

3.1. The Bewitched, Prologue
3.2. The Bewitched, Scene 1: Background For The Transfiguration Of American Undergrads In A Hong Kong Music Hall
3.3. The Bewitched, Scene 2: Background For The Permutation Of Exercises In Harmony & Counterpoint
3.4. The Bewitched, Scene 3: Background For The Inspired Romancing Of A Pathological Liar
3.5. The Bewitched, Scene 4: Background For The Alchemy Of A Soul Tormented By Contemporary Music
3.6 The Bewitched, Scene 5: Background For The Visions Of A Defeated Basketball Team In The Shower Room
3.7. The Bewitched, Scene 6: Background For The Euphoria On A Sausalito Stairway
3.8. The Bewitched, Scene 7: Background For The Transmutation Of Detectives On The Trail Of Culprit
3.9. The Bewitched, Scene 8: Background For The Apothesis Of A Court In Its Own Contempt
3.10. The Bewitched, Scene 9: Background For A Political Soul Lost Among The Voteless Women Of Paradise
3.11. The Bewitched, Scene 10: Background For The Demonic Descent Of The Cognoscenti While Shouting Over Cocktails
3.12. The Bewitched, Epilogue

The Harry Partch Collection Volume 2


"In its final revised version (first performed in 1968), 'The Wayward' unfolds as a cross-country odyssey inspired by the nine years during the Great Depression that Partch spent as a 'broke-ass poor' hobo/composer. He rode the rails and thumbed rides across the country, often as not to get from one opportunity for musical employment to another, his self-created array of instruments packed up and shipped on ahead. They were hard times and it was a tough life. But despite that, it appealed to Partch for its camaraderie of the rails and the freedom of the open road.

"[...] As the scene evolves, the hobos' banter is accentuated by Partch's distinctive instruments: microtonal strums, plucks, and harmonic slurs from the surrogate kithara and large kithara II, bell-like tones from the cloud chamber with its chorale of suspended glass bowls, contrasting polyrhythms from diamond marimba and the enormous deep-voiced bass marimba, the clicky-clack of the multitubed bamboo boo II, and the melodious moans [...] of the modified organ Partch christened the chromelodeon.

"The huddle of the jungle camp gives way to the hawking of newsies: 'San Francisco – A Setting of Cries of Two Newsboys on a Foggy Night in the Twenties', with members of ensemble in the aisles brandishing the latest yellow journalism headlines of the Chronicle. Next came 'The Letter – A Depression Message From a Hobo Friend', with [...] the role of a slouchy, hatted narrator.

"It all builds toward what is by far the work’s most descriptive and lengthy movement — 'U.S. Highball – A Musical Account of a Transcontinental Trip, from San Francisco to Chicago'. It incorporates the entire array of instruments as well as narrative and song to form a truly great piece of American musical landscape painting.

"As the hero makes his way across the country, jolting along in an empty boxcar, puffing 'over the hump to Cheyenne,' his thumb out for anyone 'goin' east,' Partch layers tones atop tones and creates polyrhythms that clatter like the rails. There’s even a sarcastic 'praise the Lord' hymn offered up at a Salvation Army soup kitchen. [...]" (Jim Farber. From the San Francisco Classical Voice review of the Partch Ensemble premiere of The Wayward. See here.)

1. The Wayward: I. U.S. Highball - Musical Account Of A Transcontinental Hobo Trip
2. The Wayward: II. San Francisco - A Setting Of The Cries Of Two Newsboys On A Foggy Night In The Twenties
3. The Wayward: III. The Letter
4. The Wayward: IV. Eight Hitchhiker Inscriptions From A Highway Railing At Barstow, California
5. And On The Seventh Day Petals Fell In Petaluma

Åke Hodell - Spirit of Ecstasy; The Way to Nepal


"[...] Features two avant-garde masterworks from Swedish composer/artist, Åke Hodell. 'Spirit of Ecstasy (Racing Car Opera),' composed in 1977, is a bizarre experiment in 'non-music,' and an amazingly weird opera that tells the story of the first half of the 20th Century through that powerful symbol, the automobile. It features a compelling story despite consisting mostly of the repetitive chanting of car names, and it displays a witty sense of humor. 'The Way to Nepal (Landscape Music)' from 1971 is as unique and interesting, but more sombre, and noticeably darker in it's conception. It is as amazing as the first side, although probably the lesser known of the two. This package is beautiful and the reissue sounds crystal clear. A must-own album for avant-garde collectors, and a valuable work of experimental art." (From the Soundohm notes to the 2015 LP reissue. See here.)

A. Spirit Of Ecstasy (Racing Car Opera)
B. The Way To Nepal (Landscape Music)

Gene Ammons & Sonny Stitt - God Bless Jug and Sonny


Another early 70s date from Ammons and Stitt. This is a straight ahead date in contrast to contemporary soul jazz feel of "You Talk That Talk!" (see here), with a stellar lineup of Cedar Walton at the piano, Sam Jones on bass and Billy Higgins on drums. While the pedigree of the musicians here means the lineup might be unchanged were it recorded ten or fifteen years earlier, the live recording is of stellar quality and, in particular, the reverberating bass tone marks this out distinctly as a 1970s date. Jug and Sonny pair on tenor on "Blue 'n' Boogie", "Stringin' the Jug" and "Bye Bye Blackbird" (no electric tenor here!), with Ammons taking a tenor solo for an excellent "God Bless the Child", Stitt displaying his lightning chops and soulful playing in tandem on alto on "Autumn in New York", and the rhythm section taking the fore for "Ugetsu". The music here is, as might be expected, flawless and timeless in equal measure. It was issued, at long last, in 2001 as a CD on Prestige.

Performers: Gene Ammons (t-sx), Sonny Stitt (a/t-sx), Cedar Walton (pi), Sam Jones (bs), Billy Higgins (dr)

1. Blue 'N' Boogie
2. Stringin' The Jug
3. God Bless The Child
4. Autumn In New York
5. Ugetsu
6. Bye Bye Blackbird

Wednesday 15 July 2020

Gene Ammons & Sonny Stitt - You Talk That Talk!


One in a long series of collaborations between the two tenors, this date is brimming with all the confidence, charisma and casual dexterity Ammons and Stitt had in seemingly limitless quantities. The first collaboration between the two following Jug's release from the penitentiary, his tone is immediately mellow and anchoring, offset by Stitt's characteristically faster playing (and electric saxophone!). The depth of feeling in Ammons' solos on "Body and Soul" and "The Sun Died" is perfectly human and clearly reflective of those long nights spent inside. Guitarist George Freeman and organist Leon Spencer Jr. do a fine job of accenting and driving proceedings (even if their solos are sometimes lacking the limitless musicality of the two legendary leaders) and we are even treated to the late (and, as always, faultless) Idris Muhammad on drums.

Performers: Gene Ammons (t-sx), Sonny Stitt (t-sx), George Freeman (gt), Leon Spencer Jr. (og), Idris Muhammad (dr)

A1. You Talk That Talk!
A2. Body And Soul
A3. The People's Choice
B1. Katea's Dance
B2. The Sun Died
B3. Out Of It

Don Patterson - Satisfaction!


A lesser known organist mainly known for his excellent work with Sonny Stitt and Booker Ervin, Don Patterson shreds no less in a traditional organ trio with the even lesser known Gerry Byrd and Billy James on guitar and drums respectively. Despite the hallmarks of the mid-sixties (an ice cool cover of The Rolling Stones' "Satisfaction") this music is pretty much timeless, straight ahead and endlessly comfortable in its own skin. Proof positive that lofty experimental ambitions (looking at you, Larry Young) are not a prerequisite of fine, fine jazz.

Performers: Don Patterson (og), Gerry Byrd (gt), Billy James (dr)

A1. Bowl Full Of Yok
A2. Goin' To Meeting
B1. John Brown's Body
B2. Satisfaction
B3. Walkin'

Emil Beaulieau - America's Greatest Noise


In what can only be an incisive and valiant effort to break into foreign markets, Emil Beaulieau here undertakes an exegesis of his frenetic, intense noise-making capabilities in the form of this collection of 44 locked grooves (only two of which, 'Harbinger - Full On Noise' and 'Bye Bye Noise Music', have titles). The sounds are as varied as one might expect from this artist, ear-churning in the best way. Sure to wash away the cobwebs or lighten up any slow moving July 4th proceedings. Released as a double LP in 2005 on veteran UK noise/experimental label Harbinger Sound.

A1. Untitled Locked Groove
A2. Untitled Locked Groove
A3. Untitled Locked Groove
A4. Untitled Locked Groove
A5. Untitled Locked Groove
A6. Untitled Locked Groove
A7. Untitled Locked Groove
A8. Untitled Locked Groove
A9. Untitled Locked Groove
A10. Untitled Locked Groove
A11. Untitled Locked Groove
A12. Harbinger - Full On Noise
B1. Untitled Locked Groove
B2. Untitled Locked Groove
B3. Untitled Locked Groove
B4. Untitled Locked Groove
B5. Untitled Locked Groove
B6. Untitled Locked Groove
B7. Untitled Locked Groove
B8. Untitled Locked Groove
B9. Untitled Locked Groove
B10. Untitled Locked Groove
B11. Untitled Locked Groove
B12. Bye Bye Noise Music

C1. Untitled Locked Groove
C2. Untitled Locked Groove
C3. Untitled Locked Groove
C4. Untitled Locked Groove
C5.
Untitled Locked Groove
C6. Untitled Locked Groove
C7. Untitled Locked Groove
C8. Untitled Locked Groove
C9. Untitled Locked Groove
C10. Untitled Locked Groove
D1. Untitled Locked Groove
D2. Untitled Locked Groove
D3. Untitled Locked Groove
D4. Untitled Locked Groove
D5. Untitled Locked Groove
D6. Untitled Locked Groove
D7. Untitled Locked Groove
D8. Untitled Locked Groove
D9. Untitled Locked Groove
D10. Untitled Locked Groove