Tri-Dim plus Jim O'Rourke & Barry Guy - 2 Of 2 (2002)
Artist: Tri-Dim plus Jim O'Rourke & Barry Guy
Title: 2 Of 2
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: Sofa
Genre: Jazz, Free Improvisation
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:07:23
Total Size: 343 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: 2 Of 2
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: Sofa
Genre: Jazz, Free Improvisation
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:07:23
Total Size: 343 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. 01 (18:42)
2. 02 (12:39)
3. 03 (27:34)
4. 04 (8:27)
Guitar – David Stackenäs
Percussion – Ingar Zach
Saxophone – Håkon Kornstad
Jim O'Rourke: remix (2)
Barry Guy: double bass (3,4)
Track 1 recorded live at Blå, Oslo, on April 6, 2002.
Track 2 is a remix of Tri-Dim unreleased material.
Tracks 3 and 4 recorded live at Molde Jazz Festival in July 2001.
This record presents three different tappings of TRI-DIM.
TRI-DIM was one of the first young improv groups to rise to the surface on the vital, ever growing music scene in Oslo. This is TRI-DIM's second album and it should in more than one way document the work they have been doing over thee last two years.
The first track is a live recording from Blå from April 2002. Second, a remix by Jim O'Rourke, using some of TRI-DIMs unreleased material. The two last pieces are taken from a live recording at Molde International Jazzfestival 2001, where TRI-DIM performed with the English bass player, Barry Guy. - subradar.no
For its second album, the Norwegian-Swedish free improv trio Tri-Dim got help from two illustrious artists from different countries and fields: Jim O'Rourke and Barry Guy. The Scandinavian guys don't need such help; they play exciting improv, challenging and lively, but the extra players can help them get some outside attention. 2 of 2 starts with a 19-minute piece by the trio alone. Håkon Kornstad (reeds), David Stackenäs (guitar), and Ingar Zach (percussion) show all the signs of a unit where the players are used to each other but still thrilled to be together. Stackenäs' style recalls Derek Bailey in the busiest moments. When it comes to Scandinavian drummers, music critics in 2002 only had eyes (and ears) for Paal Nilssen-Love, but Zach is a fantastic player, agile and inventive, and should not be overlooked. It's Speedy Gonzales (yes, the Looney Tunes mouse) trying to use a feather touch. Track two is a remix by O'Rourke of an unreleased trio track. Free improv fans may find it disruptive and, in fact, it doesn't achieve much good in this context. The sampling, slicing, and looping create an alien soundscape that transmutes the communicative energy of the group into something cold, lifeless, and much more minimalist (including three minutes of near silence). The last two pieces were recorded at the Molde Jazz Festival in July 2001 and feature Tri-Dim joined by bassist Barry Guy. He blends in very nicely. The first track, 28 minutes long, is a delight. It picks up tremendous momentum near the end, even though it had never really cooled down. The last piece remains very quiet, as the trio hangs on to every move of Guy's mystical bow. - Francois Couture, AMG
TRI-DIM was one of the first young improv groups to rise to the surface on the vital, ever growing music scene in Oslo. This is TRI-DIM's second album and it should in more than one way document the work they have been doing over thee last two years.
The first track is a live recording from Blå from April 2002. Second, a remix by Jim O'Rourke, using some of TRI-DIMs unreleased material. The two last pieces are taken from a live recording at Molde International Jazzfestival 2001, where TRI-DIM performed with the English bass player, Barry Guy. - subradar.no
For its second album, the Norwegian-Swedish free improv trio Tri-Dim got help from two illustrious artists from different countries and fields: Jim O'Rourke and Barry Guy. The Scandinavian guys don't need such help; they play exciting improv, challenging and lively, but the extra players can help them get some outside attention. 2 of 2 starts with a 19-minute piece by the trio alone. Håkon Kornstad (reeds), David Stackenäs (guitar), and Ingar Zach (percussion) show all the signs of a unit where the players are used to each other but still thrilled to be together. Stackenäs' style recalls Derek Bailey in the busiest moments. When it comes to Scandinavian drummers, music critics in 2002 only had eyes (and ears) for Paal Nilssen-Love, but Zach is a fantastic player, agile and inventive, and should not be overlooked. It's Speedy Gonzales (yes, the Looney Tunes mouse) trying to use a feather touch. Track two is a remix by O'Rourke of an unreleased trio track. Free improv fans may find it disruptive and, in fact, it doesn't achieve much good in this context. The sampling, slicing, and looping create an alien soundscape that transmutes the communicative energy of the group into something cold, lifeless, and much more minimalist (including three minutes of near silence). The last two pieces were recorded at the Molde Jazz Festival in July 2001 and feature Tri-Dim joined by bassist Barry Guy. He blends in very nicely. The first track, 28 minutes long, is a delight. It picks up tremendous momentum near the end, even though it had never really cooled down. The last piece remains very quiet, as the trio hangs on to every move of Guy's mystical bow. - Francois Couture, AMG