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AMN Reviews

AMN Reviews: Gianni Lenoci – A Few Steps Beyond-The Very Last Concert, Live at Talos Festival 2019 [Amirani AMRN065]

The subtitle of pianist Gianni Lenoci’s A Few Steps Beyond is The Very Last Concert, which it sadly turned out to have been. Lenoci’s performance took place at the Pinocateca d’Arte Moderna in Ruvo di Puglia on 4 September 2019; on 30 September he died at age 56. Lenoci was called “L’anima jazz della Puglia” but he was also an inspired interpreter of the experimental and open-form compositions of postwar avant-garde art music as shown by, for example, the recordings he made of the music of Morton Feldman, Earle Brown, and Sylvano Bussotti. Both sides of his musical personality—the jazz side and the avant-garde “classical” side—are apparent in the six performances on A Few Steps Beyond, which as luck would have it were captured by the small recorder Lenoci happened to place under the piano.

Lenoci’s inventiveness and capacity to recast preexisting structures as open forms are on full display in his performance of, of all things, the old standard All the Things You Are. It’s no easy thing to make of this overly familiar tune an exciting and unpredictable piece of music, but this he does. Lenoci starts with highly elastic and oblique allusions to the song’s harmonic cycles, which he proceeds to drive into increasingly convoluted and inward-turning musical territory. Just when the tension of anticipation—underscored by the urgent rhythm Lenoci maintains throughout—becomes nearly unbearable, a straight reading of the song breaks through, recognition of which registers as a shock after all that came before. Lenoci’s interpretation of Carla Bley’s Ida Lupino is less radical but still demonstrates his ability to transform standing structures in original ways. Working largely through variations on the basic melody, he moves in and out of form by subjecting that main theme to a kind of Cubist presentation from all perspectives, while maintaining it as the piece’s (deliberately flexible) backbone.

A Few Steps Beyond also contains Lenoci’s interpretations of Ornette Coleman’s Lorraine and Latin Genetics, as well as Paul Bley’s Blues Waltz and–in a bit of unintended irony–Gordon Jenkins’ Goodbye. On these performances no less than on the others, Lenoci’s inspired pianism offers a view into a unique musical sensibility that was all-too-soon gone. We are fortunate to have this final concert as a part of his recorded legacy.

https://www.amiranirecords.com

Daniel Barbiero

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AMN Reviews

AMN Reviews: Bobby Naughton – Solo Vibraphone Hartford [OTIC Records OTIC 1016]

Since its founding in 1975, Hartford, Connecticut’s Real Art Ways, originally an upstairs space on Asylum Street and since moved to Arbor Street, where it still operates, has provided a hospitable venue for avant-garde visual artists and musicians. During the late 1970s through the early 1980s, RAW often hosted concerts put on by New Haven’s Creative Music Improvisers’ Forum. On August 5, 1978, vibraphonist Bobby Naughton, a founding member of CMIF, played a solo concert there; fortunately it was recorded by RAW’s then-director Joseph Celli and has now been released for the first time on Naughton’s OTIC label.

For this set Naughton put together a program that included compositions by Wadada Leo Smith, Charles Mingus and Carla Bley, as well as a flute etude by Joachim Andersen that Naughton adapted to vibes, two standards, and an original composition. These choices, as varied as they are, serve not only to demonstrate Naughton’s versatility as a performer, but show as well the kind of open-minded ferment that characterized so much of the creative music of the period.

Smith’s Hapnes, Portrait of Braxton, for example, is a largely linear composition made up of asymmetrical phrases with irregular accents. Smith’s concept at the time was to create melodies delineated by silences; Naughton’s playing respects these boundaries while maintaining a sense of forward motion. Bley’s Ictus, a piece first recorded in 1961 by the trio of Jimmy Giuffre, Paul Bley and Steve Swallow, presents its own set of challenges by threading its lines through constantly changing time signatures, to be played “as fast as possible.” After introducing the piece with gongs and drumming, Naughton races sure-footedly through the melody, as required. By contrast, Naughton plays Jesus Maria, also by Carla Bley, with a gently rocking rhythm and lyrical feeling. His interpretation of Mingus’ Goodbye Porkpie Hat is suitably poignant.

The briskly paced Andersen etude is an unusual choice, and in some ways the most audacious, but it’s one that Naughton turns into a virtuoso display of disciplined mallet work. His own Untold Tale, which opens the set, is a pianistic piece that seems to tell of Naughton’s own roots as a keyboard player. It also introduces a degree of timbral exploration in the form of struck metal objects and muted keys.

Although Solo Vibraphone Hartford is a forty-year-old archival recording, it gives the listener the feeling of being right there in the room above Asylum Street—even as the sound of a siren punctuating Goodbye Porkpie Hat brings home the reality of improvising in an urban environment, where anything could happen either inside or outside the performance space. It documents Naughton during a period when he was working in ensembles ranging from trios to large groups, as part of CMIF, Leo Smith’s New Dalta Ahrki, and on his own projects. Thus it’s a real pleasure to hear him in the intimate setting of a solo performance, where his voice as an improviser and interpreter of others’ compositions can clearly be heard.

https://bobbynaughton.com/

Daniel Barbiero

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Performances Reviews

Terri’s Music Blog

Peter Apfelbaum & Paul Shapiro
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Terri’s Music Blog reviews a bunch of recent New York shows.

# Peter Apfelbaum & the NY Hieroglyphics @ LPR 10/26…
# Zeena Parkins @ Roulette 10/25/08
# Mary Halvorson & Jessica Pavone @ The Stone 10/23/…
# John McNeil/Bill McHenry Quartet @ Iridium 10/23/0…
# Red Commie Storm @ The Stone 10/22/08
# Gutbucket @ The Stone 10/21/08
# Rashanim @ The Stone 10/19/08

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General

Creative Music Studio Yields a Trove of Tapes

saxophonist Roscoe Mitchell at the Pomigliano ...
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An article discusses a proejct to restore hundreds of hours of archival recordings.

The constant musical activity at the studio, in workshops and concerts, yielded about 400 hours of tapes: startling performances by Don Cherry, Anthony Braxton, Cecil Taylor, Lee Konitz, Frederic Rzewski, Jimmy Giuffre, Roscoe Mitchell, Steve Lacy, Abdullah Ibrahim, Carla Bley, Ed Blackwell and many others.

If the studio is to get its historical due, the tapes will lead the way. Karl Berger and Ingrid Sertso, the husband and wife who founded the school, have recently started restoring and remastering the recordings, a task expected to cost about $120,000. A benefit concert on Friday at Symphony Space will raise money toward that end, gathering friends, supporters and former associates of the school, including Mr. Braxton, John Zorn and Steven Bernstein. (Information and tickets are at symphonyspace.org.)

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Performances

Symphony Space – Creative Music Studio Celebration

John Zorn (cropped version)
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From New York’s Symphony Space:

Creative Music Studio Celebration

Friday, October 24 at 7:30 pm • Peter Jay Sharp Theatre
Day of Show $35; Advance $30; Members $25

Leading jazz artists come together for an unforgettable concert honoring the legacy of the Creative Music Studio, the Woodstock hotbed of musical exploration that gave birth to the concept of world jazz—the improvisational and compositional expansion of the world’s musical traditions.

Join founders Karl Berger and Ingrid Sertso for a roof-raising concert, along with John Zorn, Anthony Braxton, and Steven Bernstein’s Millennial Territory Orchestra comprising Steven Bernstein, Clark Gayton, Charlie Burnham, Doug Wieselman, Peter Apfelbaum, Erik Lawrence, Matt Munisteri, Ben Allison and Ben Perowsky

This event benefits the efforts to preserve and digitize the CMS Archive, containing more than 400 audio and video tapes of live performances by some of the world’s greatest musical innovators, including Dave Holland, Lee Konitz, Carla Bley, Steve Reich, Lester Bowie, and Allen Ginsberg.

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Performances

Seattle’s Earshot Jazz Festival: The sweet sounds of independence

Peter Apfelbaum & Paul Shapiro
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A preview of this year’s Earshot Jazz Fest is available.

Aaron Parks Trio: 7 and 9:30 p.m. Oct. 23, Triple Door, 216 Union St., Seattle; $22.

Amir El Saffar: Two Rivers Ensemble: 7:30 p.m. Oct. 25, Triple Door, 216 Union St., Seattle; $20.

Cecil Taylor: 8 p.m. Oct. 26, Town Hall, 1119 Eighth Ave., Seattle; $25-$32.

Peter Apfelbaum & New York Hieroglyphics with Abdoulaye Diabate: 8 p.m. Oct. 28, Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center, 104 17th Ave. S., Seattle; $18.

Charlie Haden‘s Liberation Music Orchestra with Carla Bley: 8 p.m. Oct. 31, Town Hall, 1119 Eighth Ave., Seattle; $25-$32.

Toumani Diabate: 7 and 9:30 p.m. Nov. 9, Triple Door, 216 Union St., Seattle; $25-$30.

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