ramboy 01
€9.00
Michael Moore, alto saxophone,
clarinet, melodica
Ernst Reijseger, cello, electric cello
Han Bennink, drums, percussion |
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1. Pipistrello I (Bennink/Moore/Reijseger) 7:26
2. Providence (Moore) 3:46
3. Pipistrello II (Bennink/Moore/Reijseger) 4:11
4. Girl Talk (Neil Hefti/Bobby Troup) 3:54
5. Ao Velho Pedro (Paulo Moura) 3:31
6. Marie Pompoen (Franky Douglas) 1:27
7. Sunday Stroll (Herbie Nichols) 6:09
8. Bebe (Hermeto Pascoal) 6:46
9. 117th Street (Herbie Nichols) 4:35
10. New Shoes (Moore) 4:26
11. Debbie Warden (Moore) 7:21
12. Rollo II (Misha Mengelberg) 4:27
13. Hinde-wu (Moore) 7:56
Recorded March 28, 1990, Geneva, Switzerland
except tracks 7-9 recorded April 21, 1991, Reggio Emilia, Italy
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The first live documentation of this, at the time, three-year-old, hard
working trio. A wild romp of different jazz and world music styles
connected by intense improvisation.
"You could subtitle this "ICP does the west coast" as three stellar
members of the lCP Orchestra, among other groups, do a set that
bears a slight resemblance to the chamber jazz of Chico Hamilton
and Jimmy Giuffre but, with their penchant for musical anarchy,
is much wider. There are a few passages of free blowing
noises but they always resolve into something more disciplined
like the jaunty European Ornette Coleman variations of "Providence"
or a slow, rapturous reading of "Girl Talk" where Moore plays as
sensuously as Johnny Hodges. There's shape-shifting everywhere.
"New Shoes," a simple post-bop head, is pulled by Bennink's
hopped-up beat into screaming free territory. "Debbie Warden" turns
from scraping abstraction into an urbane blues line in the Billy Strayhorn
manner with Moore's acrid clarinet flying over Bennink's madly
simmering percussion. Moore impresses the most of this trio probably
because he hasn't gotten the exposure of Reijseger or Bennink.
He cuts a wide swath on alto playing everything from screaming energy
music to honking rhythm and blues. He also srinet? on the section that
contains two Herbie Nichols compositions, "Sunday Stroll" and
"117th Street" and Hermeto Pascoal's "Bebe". His inquisitive, bluesy
sound is what makes this trio sound like Jimmy Giuffre's old trios with
Jim Hall, though Moore's sound is a little thicker. In fact, on this showing
clarinet is probably his best instrument. The serpentine dexterity he
gets on "Bebe" is remarkable. Of his partners Han Bennink is his usual
demonic self, frantically hitting anything that moves and daring his mates
to keep up. He's probably the only great percussionist who could pull
off he tricky polyrhythms of the samba "Ao Velho Pedro" and then
swing into a heavy Gene Krupa 4/4 on "Rollo II". Reijseger is content to
stalk the middle ground, playing the part of a bass, guitar or harp as
called for and occasionally showing his superb bowing abilities. This
is a delightful set of three great musicians playing wild and wooly games
with the jazz tradition."
Jerome Wilson, Cadence February 1993
"   " - Jazzthetik
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