Affichage des articles dont le libellé est John Greaves. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est John Greaves. Afficher tous les articles

lundi 5 avril 2010

Henry Cow & Robert Wyatt - The Last Nightingale

Chris Cutler: drums
Bill Gilonis: guitar, bass guitar
Lindsay Cooper: piano, electric piano, sopranino saxophone, bassoon
Tim Hodgkinson: piano, electric piano, Moog synthesizer, baritone and alto saxophone
John Greaves: bass guitar
Fred Frith: guitar
Robert Wyatt: vocals
Adrian Mitchell: spoken voice

1984 THE LAST NIGHTINGALE
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dimanche 4 avril 2010

Henry Cow - Leg End

HENRY COW:
Geoff Leigh: saxophones, flute, clarinet, recorder, voice
Tim Hodgkinson: organ, piano, alto saxophone, clarinet, little bells, voice
Fred Frith: guitars, violin, viola, piano, voice
John Greaves: bass guitar, piano, whistle, voice
Chris Cutler: drums, toys, piano, whistle, voice
Lindsay Cooper: bassoon (on 1991 CD re-issue only)
Guests:
Jeremy Baines: pixiphone on "Yellow Half-Moon"
Sarah Greaves, Maggie Thomas and Cathy Williams: chorus on "Teenbeat"

Political astuteness aside, Henry Cow's Leg End is simply a busy musical trip, comprised of snaking rhythms, unorthodox time signatures, and incongruous waves of multiple instruments that actually culminate in some appealing yet complex progressive rock. Here, on the band's debut, both Fred Frith and woodwind man Geoff Leigh hold nothing back, creating eclectic, avant garde-styled jazz movements without any sense of direction, or so it may seem at first, but paying close attention to Henry Cow's musical wallowing results in some first-rate instrumental fusion, albeit a little too abstract at times. Through tracks like "Amygdala," "Teenbeat," and "The Tenth Chaffinch," it's simply creativity run amok, instilling the free-spiritedness of the late '60s into this, a 1974 album. The techniques are difficult to follow, but the stewing that emerges between the piano, guitar, flute, and percussion is so animated and colorful, it actually sounds pleasant as a whole. Chris Cutler lends his uncommitted, self-governing brand of drumming to the album to help culminate the frenzy, and Leigh's tenor flute does add some extraordinary musical fabric to each of the album's ten cuts. "Nine Funerals of the Citizen King" is one of the easiest pieces to listen to, while the short but amiable "Bellycan" is an excerpt removed from the group's work with the Greasy Truckers, performed a year earlier. In 1974, Henry Cow released Unrest, which contains the same vigor and spontaneity as Leg End, only it didn't receive the same amount of attention. Shortly after, they united with Dagmar Krause and the rest of Slapp Happy to further their unconventional route.

1973 LEG END
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Henry Cow - Unrest

HENRY COW:
Tim Hodgkinson: organ, piano, alto saxophone, clarinet
Fred Frith: stereo guitar, violin, xylophone, piano
John Greaves: bass guitar, piano, voice
Chris Cutler: drums
Lindsay Cooper: bassoon, oboe, recorder, voice

By this point Henry Cow consisted of guitarist Fred Frith, drummer Chris Cutler, bassist John Greaves, keyboardist Tim Hodgkinson, and, of particular importance to the band's sound at this point, bassoonist Lindsay Cooper. As is so often the case with avant-garde rock & roll, it's the composed pieces that work best, and the fact that Frith is responsible for the majority of them is significant. "Bittern Storm Over Ulm" is an absolutely brilliant demolition of the Yardbirds' "Got to Hurry," while the brief but lovely "Solemn Music" unfolds in a stately manner with atonal but pretty counterpoint between Frith and Cooper. The improvised material succeeds in a more spotty way. "Upon Entering the Hotel Adlon" demonstrates how fine the line can be between bracing free atonality and mindless cacophony. The unsettling but eventually gorgeous "Deluge," on the other hand, shows how well Henry Cow could walk that line when they tried; in this piece, random guitar skitterings, scattershot drum clatter, and pointillistic reed grunts are eventually snuck up on and overtaken by softly massed chords and Cooper's gently hooting bassoon. The effect is startlingly moving. Overall, this is one of Henry Cow's better efforts.

1974 UNREST
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jeudi 1 avril 2010

Henry Cow with Slapp Happy - Desperate Straights

HENRY COW with SLAPP HAPPY:
Dagmar Krause: voice, wurlitzer
Peter Blegvad: guitar, voice
Anthony Moore: piano
Tim Hodgkinson: clarinet, piano
Fred Frith: guitar, violin
John Greaves: bass guitar, piano
Chris Cutler: drums, etc
Guests:
Geoff Leigh – flute
Pierre Moerlen – percussion ("Europa")
Mont Campbell – french horn
Mongezi Feza – trumpet
Nick Evans – trombone
Lindsay Cooper – bassoon, oboe

A surprising team up at the time of its release (1975), Desperate Straights is a surprisingly melodic album, light on the art school angst and heavy on the playfulness, which one would hardly expect from such determined socialists as these. But here it is: "Some Questions About Hats" sounds like a Kurt Weill outtake, "A Worm Is at Work" gallops along with a sweet tune. Dagmar Krause remains restrained and not given to flights of horrible fancy. "Strayed" is reminiscient of Kevin Ayers's brand of art rock, and most of the songs clock in under two minutes. But never fear: the album ends on the eight minute "Caucasian Lullaby," a minimal woodwind piece that suddenly bursts into one last jab of Krausian despair.

1975 DESPERATE STRAIGHTS
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Henry Cow with Slapp Happy - In Praise of Learning

HENRY COW with SLAPP HAPPY:
Tim Hodgkinson: organ, clarinet, piano
Fred Frith: guitar, violin, xylophone, piano
John Greaves: bass guitar, piano
Chris Cutler: drums, radio
Dagmar Krause: voice
Peter Blegvad: guitar, voice, clarinet
Anthony Moore: piano, electronics and tapework
Lindsay Cooper: bassoon, oboe
Guests:
Geoff Leigh – soprano saxophone
Mongezi Feza – trumpet
Phil Becque – oscillator

A team-up with Slapp Happy may seem an obvious meeting of minds in 2000, but not at the time (1975) when all they really shared was a Marxist outlook and a record label (Virgin). The two bands had already recorded Desperate Straights, which focused more on songs and Dagmar Krause's vocals. Here, Krause gets one good song, the terrific Kurt Weill-esque "War" (subsequently covered by the Fall many years later), which leads off the album. "Living in the Heart of the Beast" takes up the rest of side one, and in long form Kraus seems lost. There's some free noise on side two, and it's a bit of a waste seeing Mongezi Feza among others play on the album. The best thing to take away from this meeting is that it went on to produce Art Bears, News From Babel, and several other groups made up from this spectacular personnel.

1975 IN PRAISE OF LEARNING
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