Showing posts with label Archie Shepp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Archie Shepp. Show all posts

November 28, 2011

Archie Shepp & Joachim Kühn: Pulse Beat live at 42nd German Jazzfestival Frankfurt 2011


Archie Shepp | ts
Joachim Kühn | p
recorded live at HR-Sendesaal, Frankfurt, October 28, 2011

1. Introspection/ Lonely Woman (Joachim Kühn/ Ornette Coleman)
2. Stablemates (Benny Golson)
3. Drivin´ Miss Daisy (Archie Shepp)
4. Nina (Archie Shepp)
5. Improvisation/ Sophisticated Lady (Archie Shepp & Joachim Kühn/ Duke Ellington)

There’s no end to the different ways two great jazz musicians can interact. In the case of German pianist Joachim Kühn and American saxophone player Archie Shepp, the collaboration is especially intriguing. They both came to maturity during the heady days of the Sixties free jazz scene and have played together often since.
The deep rapport between them is instantly apparent, but so are the differences. Kühn’s natural tone is compellingly dark, both as a pianist and a composer. He pursues a melodic idea in a concentrated way, and isn’t much interested in bright colours or fancy pedal-work.
Shepp tends more towards limpid arabesque, and his lovely husky tone is as instantly recognisable as Kühn’s wiry energy. Shepp’s compositions, such as Nina, leaven Kühn’s European seriousness with a sauntering American swing. They complement each other perfectly, which is just as it should be.
At first glance, the pairing of American saxophonist Archie Shepp and German pianist Joachim Kühn may seem an unlikely one. But Wo!man is not the first time the two have performed together. Two or three decades back—Shepp writes in the liner notes that he cannot now remember the year exactly—the saxophonist worked with Kühn in a band led by Finnish drummer Edward Vesala. It was a real pleasure, Shepp says, to have been reunited.
The pleasure is not, moreover, entirely Shepp's, or Kühn's, for Wo!man is a resplendently lyrical album. It is programmed over five sinuous Shepp/Kuhn originals and three jazz standards, Duke Ellington's "Sophisticated Lady," Ornette Coleman's "Lonely Woman" and Earle Hagen and Dick Rogers' "Harlem Nocturne." Shepp's signature rough edges and periodic free flights are intact, but so too are his retentions of balladeers Coleman Hawkins and Ben Webster, both formative influences: this is above all an album of lush romanticism.

November 24, 2011

Africa/Brass– hr-Big Band feat. Archie Shepp live at 42nd German Jazzfestival Frankfurt 2011


Archie Shepp | ts
Charles Tolliver | cond, arr
Frank Wellert, Martin Auer, Thomas Vogel, Axel Schlosser | tp
Günter Bollmann, Peter Feil , Christian Jaksjø | tb
Manfred Honetschläger | b-tb
Heinz-Dieter Sauerborn, Oliver Leicht | as
Ben Kraef, Karl-Martin Almqvist | ts
Rainer Heute | bs
Peter Reiter | p; Martin Scales | g
Thomas Heidepriem | b; Jean Paul Höchstädter | dr
recorded live at HR-Sendesaal, Frankfurt, October 27, 2011

1. Introduction
2. Song of the Underground Railroad (Trad.)
3. The Damned Don´t Cry (Calvin Massey)
4. Ujaama (Archie Shepp)
5. Greensleeves (Trad.)
6. Africa (John Coltrane)
7. On the Nile (Charles Tolliver)

Africa/Brass is the eighth album by John Coltrane, released in 1961 on Impulse Records. The sixth release for the fledgling label and his first for Impulse!, it features Coltrane's working quintet augmented by a larger ensemble to bring the total number of participating musicians to 21. Its big band sound, with the unusual instrumentation of french horns and euphonium, presented music very different from anything that had been associated with Coltrane to date.
Earlier in 1961, Coltrane had invited multi-instrumentalist Eric Dolphy to join his band, making it a quintet. Around the same time, bassist Steve Davis departed, replaced by Reggie Workman, at times Coltrane pairing him with a second bassist, Art Davis. With this group in tow, on May 23 Coltrane entered the new Van Gelder Studio in Hackensack, New Jersey for the first time; Rudy Van Gelder had been the sound engineer for most of his earlier sessions with Prestige Records. Coltrane would make the bulk of his recordings at the Van Gelder studio for the remainder of his career.
Apparently, Coltrane had initially contacted Gil Evans to assist with the arrangements; however nothing came of this, Coltrane turning to Dolphy and Tyner to orchestrate. Originally credited to Dolphy alone on the initial release, that has been corrected with the appearance of the 1995 reissue. Coltrane chose the ancient English folk ballad "Greensleeves," done in a similar major/minor contrast as his popular "My Favorite Things." For the two original pieces, "Africa" and "Blues Minor," Dolphy and Coltrane adapted Tyner's piano voicings for the orchestra. A second set of recording sessions for the album took place on June 4.

February 15, 2010

Archie Shepp Quartet live at 32nd International Jazzweek Burghausen 2001


Archie Shepp, tenor saxophone, vocals
Amina Claudine Myers, piano, vocals
Ronnie Burrage, drums, vocals
Wayne Dockery, bass

recorded live at Wackerhalle, Burghausen, May 4, 2001

1. Hope 2
2. God Bless The Child
3. Mama Rose/ Revolution
4. Ev´ry Day´s A New Day
5. Dedication to Bessie Smith´s Blues
6. You Gotta Call Him

Archie Shepp "populates his musical world with themes and stylistic elements provided by the greatest voices of jazz: from Ellington to Monk and Mingus, from Parker to Siver and Taylor. His technical and emotional capacity enables him to integrate the varied elements inherited by the Masters of Tenor from Webster to Coltrane into his own playing but according to his very own combination: the wild raspiness of his attacks, his massive sound sculpted by a vibrato mastered in all ranges, his phrases carried to breathlessness, his abrupt level changes, the intensity of his tempos but also the velvety tenderness woven into a ballad. His play consistently deepens the spirit of the two faces of the original black American music: blues and spirituals. His work with classics and with his own compositions (Bessie Smith’s Black Water Blues or Mama Rose) contributes to maintaining alive the power of strangeness of these two musics in relationship to European music and expresses itself in a unique mix of wounded violence and age-old nostalgia. (…) With his freedom loving sensitivity Archie Shepp has made an inestimable contribution to the gathering, the publicizing and the inventing of jazz."
His latest album called "Phat Jam in Milano" was released in 2009 on Dawn of Freedom.