Paul Dunmall - Paul Dunmall Quartet and Sextet / Babu Trio (1994)

  • 11 Sep, 12:02
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Quartet And Sextet / Babu Trio
Year Of Release: 1994
Label: Slam Productions
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:50:04
Total Size: 645 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

Disc 1
1. Dobunni (03:24)
2. Moths and Spiders (03:59)
3. In the Haddock (07:35)
4. The Devil's Chair (06:04)
5. Scramasax (06:51)
6. Apocalypse Now and Then (25:41)

Disc 2
1. Lert (16:24)
2. Trickly Hausen (14:37)
3. Shun Fat (17:45)
4. Separate Balls (07:40)

Quartet: Paul Dunmall, Simon Picard (tenor saxophones), Paul Rogers (bass), Tony Levin (drums)
Sextet: Paul Dunmall, Simon Picard (tenor saxophones), Jon Corbett (cornet), John Adams (guitar), Paul Rogers (double bass), Tony Levin (drums)
Babu Trio: Paul Dunmall (saxophones), Paul Rogers (bass), Tony Levin (drums)

Three groups led by free jazz saxophonist Paul Dunmall, a trio, quartet and sextet, recorded at Lanes End Studio, Kidderminster, England, 13 and 14 September, 1993.

“Possessed of a rich, full-bodied tone and great technical command, Dunmall is best heard - as on this double CD - in no-holds-barred improvising contexts, where his intense, occasionally volcanic virtuosity can be given free rein...Dunmall consistently produces powerful and passionate music.” - Chris Parker BBC Music Magazine

"Featuring one of the country's true virtuoso voices on saxophone. Dunmall's intense, Coltrane-inspired tenor, baritone, C Melody and soprano keep up a fierce, free-wheeling momentum, with the help of bassist Paul Rogers and drummer Tony Levin, with fine contributions by cornetist Jon Corbett, guitarist John Adams and fellow sax man Simon Picard." - Linton Chiswick, Time Out

"The second disc features Mujician without Tippett! I’m not sure whether I miss Keith Tippett or not, since the music is just as astounding...There’s much focus on rhythms with the trio, and I would have to say that the Mujician-style improvisations are near perfect...Once disc one permeates your mind, works its way down deep, it’s time for the release of disc two. Of course, this is relative. There are no expectations for disc two, just pure improvisation. The two discs represent two sides of the same coin, and one needs the other to survive." - Fred Barrett, Beyond Coltrane