Liberty Ellman - Ophiuchus Butterfly (2006)

  • 29 Sep, 10:01
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Artist:
Title: Ophiuchus Butterfly
Year Of Release: 2006
Label: Pi Recording
Genre: Contemporary Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 57:47
Total Size: 337.3 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Ophiuchus Butterfly (6:35)
02. Aestivation (6:56)
03. Snow Lips (4:11)
04. You Have Ears (6:37)
05. The Naturalists (1:52)
06. Pretty Words, Like Blades (4:34)
07. Tarmacadam (7:09)
08. Looking Up (7:59)
09. Chromos (8:49)
10. Borealis (3:05)

Acoustic Bass – Stephan Crump
Alto Saxophone – Steve Lehman
Artwork [Drawings] – Matthew Brennan (3)
Composed By, Guitar, Mixed By, Photography, Producer, Sampler, Synthesizer – Liberty Ellman
Design [Package Design] – Figureground
Drums – Gerald Cleaver
Engineer – Andy Taub
Engineer [Assistant] – Yohei Goto
Executive Producer – Seth Rosner, Yulun Wang
Mastered By – Michael Fossenkemper
Photography – Kate Chumley
Tenor Saxophone – Mark Shim
Tuba – Jose Davila

Ophiuchus Butterfly is guitarist Liberty Ellman's third release as a leader, but his widest exposure has come as guitarist in Henry Threadgill's acoustic Zooid ensemble. From the distinctive opening notes of the title track, one can hear that Ellman has been absorbing lessons from the master. Blending Threadgill's taste for multiethnic rhythms and Eastern scales with his own loose interpretation of urban M-Base funk, Ellman delivers a truly forward-thinking album.

Ellman's second album for Pi features an eclectic array of tunes from minimal, atmospheric tone poems to invigorating full-group excursions. On the shorter pieces, Ellman conjures an ethereal, almost cinematic mood with samples, synthesizer drones and gritty but subtle electronics. When leading the full ensemble, Ellman demonstrates a singular vision for rhythm-dependent improvisational music that crosses stylistic boundaries.

With a cerebral combination of taut, metric funk rhythms and freewheeling collective improvisation, Ellman's sextet churns out complex, invigorating grooves full of interlocking structures, shifting lines and contrapuntal melody. Powerhouse drummer Gerald Cleaver is perfectly attuned to Ellman's needs, shifting gears attentively, revealing an adept melodic quality during the show-stopping drum solo that closes "Tarmacadam." Bassist Stephan Crump and tubaist Jose Davila (also from Zooid) concoct a dense, throbbing undercurrent, skirting around each other's lines in an abstract lock-step dance; both get generous solo features on "Chromos."

The paired saxophones of Steve Lehman and Mark Shim make a winning combination. Lehman's involvement with the M-Base scene includes numerous collaborations with Vijay Iyer. His pungent alto tone and irregular phrasing are especially potent on the delicate ballad "Aestivation." Shim, a veteran from Ellman's previous album, is still perplexingly underexposed as a solo artist. He demonstrates remarkable technical facility and a surprising capability for abstraction, especially on "You Have Ears," which features rapid, turbulent chromaticism from his husky tenor.

Ellman trades his acoustic guitar for an electric with a bright searing tone. Hearing him zigzag through these abstruse harmonic mazes while weaving over, under and through metrically syncopated rhythms is enthralling, even more impressive than his acoustic work in Zooid.

Allowing for individual solos and collective improvisation in equal measure, Ellman elevates the intensity of these intricate pieces beyond mere vamping. An impressive release, Ophiuchus Butterfly is the sound of a sideman discovering his own sound and making inroads into the future.