Taylor Ho Bynum Sextet & 7-tette - Navigation (The Complete Firehouse 12 Recordings) (2013)
Artist: Taylor Ho Bynum Sextet & 7-tette
Title: Navigation (The Complete Firehouse 12 Recordings)
Year Of Release: 2013
Label: Firehouse 12 Records
Genre: Avant-Garde Jazz, Modern Composition
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 03:06:00
Total Size: 935 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Navigation (The Complete Firehouse 12 Recordings)
Year Of Release: 2013
Label: Firehouse 12 Records
Genre: Avant-Garde Jazz, Modern Composition
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 03:06:00
Total Size: 935 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Navigation (Possibility Abstract X) (43:35)
2. Navigation (Possibility Abstract XI) (44:49)
3. Navigation (Possibility Abstract XII) (54:10)
4. Navigation (Possibility Abstract XIII) (43:25)
On November 12th, Firehouse 12 Records will release Navigation
(The Complete Firehouse 12 Recordings), a four-album, multi-format set from cornetist and composer Taylor Ho Bynum. The project documents four different versions of Bynum’s modular composition Navigation, with two sets recorded live with his Sextet (featuring Jim Hobbs on alto saxophone, Bill Lowe on bass trombone and tuba, Mary Halvorson on guitar, Ken Filiano on bass, and Tomas Fujiwara on drums and vibraphone), and two sets recorded in studio with the 7-tette (which adds drummer and vibraphonist Chad Taylor). The music was recorded over two days, December 7 and 8, 2012. - Firehouse 12 Records
If Duke Ellington and Anthony Braxton were able to mix their DNA and reproduce themselves, the cornetist Taylor Ho Bynum would certainly be their scion. The best example of this Ellington/Braxton spawn is the latest recordings by Bynum's Sextet: the simultaneous release of an LP with digital download of the live date Navigation (Possible Abstracts X & XI) and a studio session, Navigation (Possible Abstracts XII & XIII), augmented here by drummer Chad Taylor to form a 7-tet.
TheNavigation recordings are the Sextet/7-tet's fourth and fifth recordings, and they follow Apparent Distance (Firehouse 12, 2011), the session that forged Bynum's vision for composition/improvisation centered on this recognizable ensemble of players.
Bynum's fusion of Braxton's cartographic symbols and modular compositions with Ellington's writing for specific players informs this music. It is quite unthinkable to listen to these six movements: "MANCH," "ZADE," "WUK," "TRIST," "ISH," and "KID" without imagining anything but Mary Halvorson's dysmorphic guitar sounds or Jim Hobbs' sailing alto saxophone figures. The music written in independent modules allows for shifts from one theme to the next at the signaling of a player. Each piece continues from one track to the next as one continual whole, transitions sometime not readily apparent, except for the overarching themes of each block.
Like Braxton's music the symbols and structures are explorations into new forms of composing. Bynum, a disciple of Braxton, has configured this music to swing à la Duke's concept of the blues. "MANCH" has Bill Lowe's bass trombone vocalizing lines from the 1940s while the leader's cornet imitates a carnival barker. The pieces draw extended technique and outward improvisations into long form structures without resorting to a "theme-solo-theme" structure. Binding the entire affair together is drummer Tomas Fujiwara a longtime collaborator and bassist Ken Filiano who maintain a pulse and structure to the music.
Bynum threads his musical vision through the Advancement of Creative Music (AACM) innovations by way of a traditional jazz orchestra's superstar collection of players. - Mark Corroto, All About Jazz
(The Complete Firehouse 12 Recordings), a four-album, multi-format set from cornetist and composer Taylor Ho Bynum. The project documents four different versions of Bynum’s modular composition Navigation, with two sets recorded live with his Sextet (featuring Jim Hobbs on alto saxophone, Bill Lowe on bass trombone and tuba, Mary Halvorson on guitar, Ken Filiano on bass, and Tomas Fujiwara on drums and vibraphone), and two sets recorded in studio with the 7-tette (which adds drummer and vibraphonist Chad Taylor). The music was recorded over two days, December 7 and 8, 2012. - Firehouse 12 Records
If Duke Ellington and Anthony Braxton were able to mix their DNA and reproduce themselves, the cornetist Taylor Ho Bynum would certainly be their scion. The best example of this Ellington/Braxton spawn is the latest recordings by Bynum's Sextet: the simultaneous release of an LP with digital download of the live date Navigation (Possible Abstracts X & XI) and a studio session, Navigation (Possible Abstracts XII & XIII), augmented here by drummer Chad Taylor to form a 7-tet.
TheNavigation recordings are the Sextet/7-tet's fourth and fifth recordings, and they follow Apparent Distance (Firehouse 12, 2011), the session that forged Bynum's vision for composition/improvisation centered on this recognizable ensemble of players.
Bynum's fusion of Braxton's cartographic symbols and modular compositions with Ellington's writing for specific players informs this music. It is quite unthinkable to listen to these six movements: "MANCH," "ZADE," "WUK," "TRIST," "ISH," and "KID" without imagining anything but Mary Halvorson's dysmorphic guitar sounds or Jim Hobbs' sailing alto saxophone figures. The music written in independent modules allows for shifts from one theme to the next at the signaling of a player. Each piece continues from one track to the next as one continual whole, transitions sometime not readily apparent, except for the overarching themes of each block.
Like Braxton's music the symbols and structures are explorations into new forms of composing. Bynum, a disciple of Braxton, has configured this music to swing à la Duke's concept of the blues. "MANCH" has Bill Lowe's bass trombone vocalizing lines from the 1940s while the leader's cornet imitates a carnival barker. The pieces draw extended technique and outward improvisations into long form structures without resorting to a "theme-solo-theme" structure. Binding the entire affair together is drummer Tomas Fujiwara a longtime collaborator and bassist Ken Filiano who maintain a pulse and structure to the music.
Bynum threads his musical vision through the Advancement of Creative Music (AACM) innovations by way of a traditional jazz orchestra's superstar collection of players. - Mark Corroto, All About Jazz