Elton Dean - QED (2000)

  • 10 Feb, 17:16
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: QED
Year Of Release: 2000
Label: Blueprint (Voiceprint)
Genre: Free Jazz, Free Improvisation
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue, log)
Total Time: 71:12
Total Size: 415 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Hammond X (14:33)
02. Quartered (11:21)
03. Sax.Com (3:13)
04. Altored Strait (7:23)
05. Sheepdogs (5:18)
06. Deep Crease (20:32)
07. New Roads (8:53)

QED features saxophonist Elton Dean in various contexts, from a duet with bassist Paul Rogers to trios, quartets, and a quintet with Jim Dvorak (trumpet), Nick Evans (trombone), Rogers, and Mark Sanders (drums). Other players include Alex Maguire (Hammond organ and piano), Tony Bianco (drums), Paul Dunmall (tenor sax), Simon Picard (tenor sax), and Robert Bellatalla (bass). The seven improvisations were recorded during one studio session and three live dates, all in January 2000. Even though collaborators and configurations change from one track to the next, this set forms a more cohesive (and interesting) whole than Moorsong, another Dean hodgepodge released around the same time on Cuneiform. These are all free improvisations with jazz roots. Highlights include the opening and closing numbers, two energy-filled trios with Maguire and Bianco on which Dean also plays electric piano (a wink to his Soft Machine days?). Bianco's Rashied Ali-inspired drumming and Maguire's funky Hammond playing turn these two tunes into exciting free-form fusion numbers. The horribly titled "Sax.com" is a nice sax quartet with Dean, Dunmall, Picard, and Jason Yarde. It makes a great contrast with "Sheepdogs," the aforementioned duet, where Dean reminds us how soulful his playing can be. The longest track is the quintet improv, "Deep Crease," the most textural of all. QED is a healthy dose of Elton Dean and a release his fans will not want to pass on.