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(Avant-garde, Improvisation, Free-jazz) Steve Lacy Trio (or Third Person feat. Steve Lacy) (Tom Cora, Samm Bennett) - Knitting Factory, New York, NY january the 4th 1992 - 1992, FLAC (tracks) lossless

Steve Lacy Trio (or Third Person feat. Steve Lacy ) ( Tom Cora, Samm Bennett ) / Knitting Factory, New York, NY january the 4th 1992
Жанр: Avant-garde, Improvisation, Free-jazz
Страна-производитель диска: Virtualandia
Год издания диска: 1992
Издатель (лейбл): imaginary label
Номер по каталогу: Lym 003
Аудио кодек: FLAC (*.flac)
Тип рипа: tracks
Битрейт аудио: lossless
Продолжительность: 42:17
Источник (релизер): blogspot
Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: нет
Треклист:
1. Name (Lacy) 8:29
2. Rudders (Cora) 5:39
3. Cliches (Lacy) 8:32
4. The Wane (Lacy) 9:10
5. Bone (Lacy) 6:09
6. untitled (likely free improv) 4:16
 
Лог создания рипа
no
 
Содержание индексной карты (.CUE)
no
 
Лог проверки качества
AUDIOCHECKER v2.0 beta (build 457) - by Dester - opdester@freemail.hu
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-=== DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE! ===-
Path: ...\Steve Lacy - (1992) New York 1992.04.01 (Trio)
1 -=- LACY 1992-04-01_01 Name.flac -=- CDDA (100%)
2 -=- LACY 1992-04-01_02 Rudders.flac -=- CDDA (100%)
3 -=- LACY 1992-04-01_03 Cliches.flac -=- CDDA (100%)
4 -=- LACY 1992-04-01_04 The Wane.flac -=- CDDA (100%)
5 -=- LACY 1992-04-01_05 Bone.flac -=- CDDA (100%)
6 -=- LACY 1992-04-01_06 untitled.flac -=- CDDA (100%)
Summary 100,00% CDDA
164847988
 
Об альбоме (сборнике)
Steve Lacy's Sax Steve Lacy, the Knitting Factory, 47 East Houston Street, at Mulberry Street, Manhattan, (212) 219-3055. The soprano saxophonist Steve Lacy is to perform in two settings. Tomorrow at 9 P.M., he joins Samm Bennett on percussion and Tom Cora on cello as part of Third Person, a continuing series of collaborations. Tickets are $10.
Excerpt from: Point of Departure an online music journal
Issue 20 - December 2008 - What's New?: The PoD Roundtable
…In teaching and clinics, he spoke fairly negatively about the kind of free improvisation that doesn’t have clearly stated, shared constraints on form or material. He talked about free playing autobiographically as a period of research in the past that was of its time (mid- to late 1960s, Italy and Argentina, The Forest and the Zoo) and yielded some useful results, but was over and done with. He explained that it was useful in that it helped him try out material, weed out unwanted things, and it led to his own much more structured compositions with guided improvisation. He seemed to have very strong guidelines in mind about improvisation, even ostensibly free, open-ended improvisation. When I played in his Precipitation Suite with him and the Boston-based Jazz Composers Alliance he was very definite about what he wanted me to do in an improvised duet, and gave similar instructions for larger group improvisations. And the few other times I got to perform with him, we played 12-bar blues (“Misterioso”, or “Baghdad Blues” with a short, conducted, programmatic group sound improvisation). These glimpses of working with Steve matched stories I heard from Lee Konitz about their playing “free” together, and about his interactions with Third Person (Tom Cora and Samm Bennett) and perhaps ROVA. Steve seemed to prefer working with his own material, or with pretty strictly controlled structures for improvisation, in his later years. When he performed in off-campus clubs or galleries with students while teaching in Boston, they played largely Monk tunes, sticking to the forms and changes, or (much less often) his songs. A brief bio excerpt about Third Person Cora was also a member of the improvising trio Third Person, formed in 1990 as a live collaboration with percussionist Samm Bennett and a "third person" who changed from concert to concert. Two CDs of some of their performances were released, The Bends in 1991 (with "third persons" Don Byron, George Cartwright, Chris Cochrane, Nic Collins, Catherine Jauniaux, Myra Melford, Zeena Parkins, and Marc Ribot) and Luck Water in 1995 (with "third person" Kazutoki Umezu).
Translated from Italian Interview by Fabrizio Gilardino
appeared on Musiche Year VI n. 1 (14) 1993
• What kind of group du You tink Third Person is? The answer is in the name. It sound almos like a slogan, and in some way it is one. The idea was born when Samm and me were doing a lot of concerts togheter, every time inviting a new “third person”. So wu found the name of the band about after two years of plyin that way. We played two times with George Lewis, teo eith Butch Morris,, once with George Cartwright, and finally we decided that it was a very nice way of playin, We were searching for a band’s name and naturally thought to “Third Person . I think it’s a good one in itself and almost describes well what we are doing.
• What’s the third person role, playin’ with You’ The thids persons are our victims. It greatly depends on who is the third person: some people have a stronger musical personality than others…What Tom and me are playin isnt’ exactly what You would expect from in a totally improvised musical situation, expecially the use we made of some rhythms and the song-form.
A Tom Cora discography link: www.wnur.org/jazz/artists/cora.tom/discog.html
I can add that from this magical encounter sorted out an astonishing music, almost Lacy’s music but with the addiction of two marvellous musicians and free improvisers. As sometimes happens with such musical minds it seems they have played togheter for years since the trio is playin for a common goal: musical beauty.
 
Состав
Steve Lacy soprano sax
Tom Cora: cello
Samm Bennett drums
10:02
579
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