Steve Lacy - Saxophone Special + (1998)

  • 16 Sep, 10:35
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Artist:
Title: Saxophone Special +
Year Of Release: 1998
Label: Emanem [4024]
Genre: Jazz, Free Improvisation
Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue,log) | MP3/320 kbps
Total Time: 76:54
Total Size: 380 MB(+3%) | 182 MB(+3%)
WebSite:

Tracklist

1. 38 12:57
2. Flakes 7:37
3. Revolutionary Suicide 3:39
4. Staples 9:41
5. Dreams 11:24
6. Swishes 5:44
7. Sops 7:08
8. Snaps 9:19
9. Snaps (Alternate) 8:26

personnel :

Steve Lacy - soprano saxophone, gramophone
Steve Potts - soprano & alto saxophones
Trevor Watts - soprano & alto saxophones
Evan Parker - soprano, tenor & baritone saxophones
Derek Bailey - amplified guitar
Michel Waisvisz - synthesizer
Kent Carter - amplified double bass
John Stevens - percussion

Of both historical and musical value, Steve Lacy's Saxophone Special, which features a quartet of saxophonists, was recorded only a couple of months after Anthony Braxton's New York, Fall 1974, which also features a saxophone quartet, and a year or so before the advent of the well-known World Saxophone Quartet. Though the four here are augmented by guitar and synthesizer, the multi-saxophone conception is clearly similar; perhaps the idea was simply "in the air" around that time. All five compositions are by Lacy, and their structure will be familiar to fans of his: quirky, oddly sing-songy, and intricate, their crooked themes serving as complicated ground for improvisation. Evan Parker, Trevor Watts, and future longtime collaborator Steve Potts are lucid and imaginative throughout, riding the ornery accompaniment of Derek Bailey's guitar and the somewhat loopy synthesizer sounds of Michel Waisvisz. It's also a rare (possibly unique) opportunity to hear Parker on baritone for one track. If all involved have performed more inspirationally elsewhere, Saxophone Special is still deserving of a listen both for good, solid playing and to hear one of the earliest manifestations of a grouping that would become more and more common in ensuing years. In 1998, Emanem issued this on disc along with three cuts from a 1973 release, The Crust.~Brian Olewnick