Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Steve McCall. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Steve McCall. Afficher tous les articles

mardi 3 mai 2011

Anthony Braxton - This Time...(1970)





Anthony Braxton - This Time...

Tracklist
A1 Composition No 1 13:10
A2 Solo 5:42
B1 Small Composition No 1 2:22
B2 Small Composition No 2 3:03
B3 Small Composition No 3 1:00
B4 Small Composition No 4 1:55
B5 Small Composition No 5 3:30
B6 In The Street 3:56
B7 This Time... 1:45

Personnel:
Drums, Darbouka, Percussion - Steve McCall
Saxophone [Alto], Saxophone [Soprano], Clarinet, Clarinet [contrabass], Flute, Sound Machine, Chimes, Voice - Anthony Braxton
Trumpet, Flugelhorn, Horns, Logs, Siren - Leo Smith
Violin, Viola, Flute, Mouth Organ, Organ [Hohner] - Leroy Jenkins

Recorded January 1970 in Paris.

One of the greatest early days works of Anthony Braxton. The group recorded this consisted of Anthony Braxton / Leo Smith / Reloy Jenkins /Steve McCall. The group was called Creative Construction Company(CCC). Experimental, unique, humorous, ironical, diverse and creative.

This is ripped from cassette tape. And quality is not so good. If you like this music, pls. buy CD or MP3 download.

http://www.multiupload.com/5D0NK5RXJV

lundi 28 juin 2010

Joseph Jarman - Song For

Joseph Jarman: alto saxophone, voice
Fred Anderson: tenor saxophone
William Brimfield: trumpet
Christopher Gaddy: piano, marimba
Charles Clark: bass
Steve McCall: drums
Thurman Barker: drums

Reviewby Scott Yanow

This was one of the early classics of the AACM. Altoist Joseph Jarman, who would become a permanent member of the Art Ensemble of Chicago shortly after this recording, is heard in a sextet with trumpeter William Brimfield, the legendary tenor Fred Anderson, pianist Christopher Gaddy, bassist Charles Clark, and either Steve McCall or Thurman Barker on drums. The four very diverse improvisations include one that showcases a Jarman recitation, a dirge, the intense "Little Fox Run," and the title cut, which contrasts sounds and a creative use of silence. Overall, this music was the next step in jazz after the high-energy passions of the earlier wave of the avant-garde started to run out of fresh ideas. It's recommended for open-eared listeners. The 1996 CD reissue adds an alternate take of "Little Fox Run" to the original program.



1967 SONG FOR
thanks a lot to Joao from exp etc