1210 lines
55 KiB
Plaintext
1210 lines
55 KiB
Plaintext
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Newsgroups: rec.music.bluenote
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From: matt@volga.Berkeley.EDU (Matt Wright)
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Subject: Bill Frisell Discography
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Message-ID: <1993Mar2.065202.12386@pasteur.Berkeley.EDU>
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Summary: Everything Frisell has ever recorded --- long!
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Organization: University of California, at Berkeley
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Date: Tue, 2 Mar 1993 06:52:02 GMT
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Lines: 1200
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As promised some weeks ago, here's my (hopefully) definitive Bill Frisell
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discography. I would *love* feedback on it; if there are any substantive
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changes I'll correct it and post a new version in the future.
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As per Bill Hery's request, please don't post little factual corrections or
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additions to the newsgroup; just mail them to me and I'll fix them. (But I
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hope some of my comments on the recordings might start some interesting
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discussion threads...)
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-Matt
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------------------------------cut here------------------------------
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The "complete" Bill Frisell discography
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---------------------------------------
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by Matt Wright (matt@cory.berkeley.edu)
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This discography is divided into 5 sections:
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1) Albums with Bill Frisell as a leader
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2) Bill Frisell as a sideman, Jazz and Experimental (I'm not going
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to draw the line between the two.)
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3) Bill Frisell as a sideman, Rock/Pop (Something of a judgement call
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in some cases.)
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4) Compilation albums with only one or at most a few cuts by Frisell
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5) Albums I've never seen but are said to exist
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Each entry in this discography has the following format:
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<artist>, "<title>", <label and number>, <year>
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<musicians>
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<comments>
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When possible, <year> will indicate the date of the recording; otherwise it
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will be copyright date. <label and number> will refer to the CD version
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unless otherwise indicated. Listings of musicians will indicate the number
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of cuts that they appear on, if it's not the whole album. On albums with
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Frisell as a sideman, I'll indicate if any of the tunes are his
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compositions. Comments are all my own, and biased; your mileage may vary.
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If you discover any errors or omissions, please send me mail and I'll fix
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the list. Also, I'll be happy to hear people's reactions to my comments.
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Thanks!
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======================================================================
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Section 1: Bill Frisell as a leader
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(This section is arranged chronologically.)
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Bill Frisell, "In Line", ECM 1241, rec. August 1982
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Bill Frisell (electric and acoustic guitars), Arild Anderson (bass - 5 cuts).
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This is early, with the "ECM sound": reverberant, lush, quiet, slow,
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beautiful. Great compositions.
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Bill Frisell, "Rambler", ECM 1287, rec. August 1984
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Bill Frisell (guitar, guitar synthesizer), Kenny Wheeler (trumpet, cornet,
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and fluegelhorn), Bob Stewart (tuba), Jerome Harris (electric bass), and
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Paul Motian (drums).
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Still Bill's early ECM sound, but more lively. The brass adds more color
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than the first album.
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Bill Frisell and Vernon Reid, "Smash and Scatteration", rec Dec. 1984,
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Rykodisc RCD 10006.
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Bill Frisell and Vernon Reid (electric and acoustic guitars, guitar synth,
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banjos, and drum programming)
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Yes, the Vernon Reid from Living Color. Great guitar improvisations, but
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the cheesy no-reverb drum machines, badly programmed by Frisell and Reid,
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mar the album for me.
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Bill Frisell, "Works", ECM 837 273-2
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Contains tracks from "In Line", "Rambler", Paul Bley's "Fragments", Marc
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Johnson's "Bass Desires", and Paul Motian's "It Should Have Happened a Long
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Time Ago" and "Psalm".
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This is an ECM "greatest hits" album of Frisell's work. It's heavy on the
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atmospheric, slow, ECMish tunes. In my opinion, it contains in many cases
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the weakest cut from various albums.
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The Bill Frisell Band, "Lookout For Hope", ECM 1350, rec. March 1987
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Bill Frisell (electric and acoustic guitars, banjo), Hank Roberts (cello and
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voice), Kermit Driscoll (bass), and Joey Baron (drums).
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One of my favorite Frisell albums. Combines his "beautiful" ECM sound with
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more experimental and energetic music.
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Bill Frisell, "Before We Were Born", Elektra/Musician 9 60843-2, Rec. Aug 88
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The Bill Frisell Band (see above), Arto Lindsay (guitar and vocals - 3
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cuts), Peter Scherer (keyboards and drum programming - 3 cuts), Julius
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Hemphill (alto Sax - 4 cuts), Billy Drewes (alto Sax - 4 Cuts), Doug
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Wieselman (bari Sax - 4 cuts), and Cyro Baptista (shaker - 1 cut).
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Contains the 13 minute Zorn-arranged "Hard Plains Drifter", and other
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great tracks. Lots of energy. "Steady, Girl" is a remake of "Throughout"
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from "In Line", but with Arto Lindsay singing. I like this a lot.
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Bill Frisell, "Is That You?", Elektra/Musician 9 60956-2, Rec. August 1989.
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Bill Frisell (guitars, bass, banjo, ukulele, clarinet), Wayne Horvitz
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(keyboards, drum programming, "momentary bass"), Joey Baron (drums), Dave
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Hofstra (tuba - 1 cut, and bass - 1 cut).
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A good album, but it feels a little unfocused to me. Some cuts have more
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groove than melody; perhaps it's Horvitz's touch as a producer. Some of the
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tracks feel a little empty; perhaps its the lack of a bass, or because they
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did lots of multitracking instead of a band playing in the studio. The
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slower tunes, especially the solo guitar work, are much better.
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The Bill Frisell Band, "Where in the World?", Elektra/Musician 61181-2, Rec
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October 1990 and February 1991.
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The Bill Frisell Band (see above, but Bill plays guitars and ukulele)
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Fantastic. To me this album is both directly appealing the first time you
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hear it, as well as deep and complex enough to reward repeated listenings.
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Lots of tunes sound normalish on the surface but are actually sort of creepy
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deep down inside. Maybe his best album.
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Bill Frisell, "Have A Little Faith", Elektra/Nonesuch 9 79301-2, rec 3/92
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Bill Frisell (guitar), Don Byron (clarinet, bass clarinet), Guy Klucevsek
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(accordion), Kermit Driscoll (bass), Joey Baron (drums).
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I *love* this album. It's all "covers"---Aaron Copland's "Billy the Kid",
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Charles Ives, Bob Dylan, Muddy Waters, Madonna, Sonny Rollins, J.P. Sousa,
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and more. It has a fantastic live feel; they really sound like a band
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playing together. A lot of these pieces are ones that Frisell has played a
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lot in concert a lot with Driscoll and Baron and sometimes Byron; I think
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playing them live a lot really helped the feel when they recorded them in
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the studio. Buy it!
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======================================================================
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Section 2: Bill Frisell as a sideman, Jazz and Experimental
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(This section is arranged alphabetically, and then chronologically within
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each artist.)
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Arild Andersen, "A Moulde Concert", ECM 1236, rec. August 1981 (vinyl only)
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Arild Andersen (bass), John Taylor (piano), Bill Frisell (guitar), Alphonse
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Mouzon (drums).
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A great album! They're all great musicians, and they really swing.
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Recorded live in concert. Lots of solos by Frisell.
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Chet Baker - Steve Houben [no title], "52e Rue Est" RECD 019, Rec. 1980
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Chet Baker (vocals and trumpet), Steve Houben (alto sax), "Bill Frisel
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[sic]" (guitar), Dennis Luxion (piano), Kermit Driscoll (bass), Bruno
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Castellucci (drums).
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Totally not a Bill Frisell album. Frisell solos twice, competently, in
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generic jazz guitar style. Even his comping is secondary to the piano. For
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completists (or Chet Baker fans) only.
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Tim Berne and Bill Frisell, "Theoretically", Minor Music 008 (035021) (vinyl
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only.)
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w/ Tim Berne (alto sax, I assume)
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I don't have this album, because I've never been able to find it.
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Tim Berne, "Fulton Street Maul", Columbia CK 40530, rec. 8/10-14/86
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Tim Berne (alto sax), Hank Roberts (cello and voice), Bill Frisell (electric
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guitar), Alex Cline (percussion, voice).
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High energy, frenetic, outside music, with lots of activity. Very rocking.
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The Paul Bley Quartet, "Fragments", ECM 1320 (829 280-2), rec Jan 1986
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Paul Bley (piano), John Surman (soprano sax, bass clarinet), Paul Motian
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(drums).
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Moody and intense. ECMish. Contains Frisell's tune "Monica Jane". Mostly
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very slow tunes.
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The Paul Bley Quartet, [no title] ECM 1365 (835 250-2), rec. November 1987
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(same musicians as above)
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Moodier and intenser than the first, but features Frisell quite a bit,
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including some very energetic fuzz-box solos. Contains Frisell's tune
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"After Dark".
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Gavin Bryars, "After the Requiem", ECM 1424 (847 537-2), rec. Sept. 1990
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First piece: Bill Frisell (electric guitar), Alexander Balanescu and Kater
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Musker (viola), and Tony Hinnigan (cello). Second and fourth pieces:
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Alexander Balanescu (violin), Roger Heaton (bass clarinet), Dave Smith
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(tenor horn, piano), Gavin Bryars (bass), Martin Allen and Simon Limbrick
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(percussion), and Bill Frisell (electric guitar). Third piece: Evan Parker
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and Stan Sulzmann (soprano sax), Ray Warleigh (alto sax), and Julian
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Arguelles (bari sax).
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Four pieces, each 15-20 minutes and entirely composed (i.e., not
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improvised). This is heavily classically influenced music, very demanding,
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and very emotionally intense. The first piece, for Frisell, two violas, and
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cello, is amazing.
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Don Byron, "Tuskegee Experiments", Elektra/Musician 9 79280-2, rec. Nov 1990
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Don Byron (clarinet and bass clarinet), Bill Frisell (guitar - 4 cuts),
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Lonnie Plaxico (bass - 4 cuts), Ralph Peterson, Jr. (drums - 4 cuts), Reggie
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Workman (bass - 2 cuts), Edsel Gomez (piano - 2 cuts), Greta Buck (violin -
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1 cut), Pheeroan akLaff (drums - 2 cuts), Joe Berkovitz (piano - 2 cuts),
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Richie Schwarz (marimba - 1 cut), Kenny Davis (electric bass - 1 cut), Sadiq
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(poet/vocals - 1 cut)
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Amazing stuff. Very swinging combos with intense tunes. A couple of
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great solos by Bill.
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Jan Garbarek, "Paths, Prints", ECM 1223 (829 377-2), rec. Dec 1981
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Jan Garbarek (tenor and soprano saxes, wood flutes), Bill Frisell (guitar),
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Eberhard Weber (bass), John Christensen (drums, percussion).
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*Very* ECMish. Slow, atmospheric, slightly amorphous. Lots of ringing
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guitar ambience. Sort of new-age.
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Jan Garbarek Group, "Wayfarer", ECM 1259, (811 968-2), Rec March 1983
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(same musicians as above)
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Simliar to "Paths, Prints", but more intense and focused. I like it better.
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The Mike Gibbs Orchestra, "Big Music", Virgin Records CDVE 27, copyright 88.
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Bob Moses, Bill Martin, and Ben Wittman (drums and drum programming), Kai
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Eckhardt (bass guitar), Duke Levine and Dave Fiuczynski (rhythm guitar),
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John Scofield, Bill Frisell, and Kevin Eubanks (guitar), Brad Hatfield and
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Dave Bristow (keyboards), Jim Odgren, Chris Hunter, Lou Marini, Bob Mintzer,
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Dave Tofani (reeds), Lew Soloff, Allan Rubin, Earl Gardner, Ian Carr
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(trumpet), John Clark (French horn), Dave Bargeron and David Taylor
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(trombones), Mike Gibbs (trombone and piano).
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Geez, enough talent for 4 albums. High-energy fusion. To me, it's light on
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material and heavy on arrangement. A little too "bitchin'" for my tastes.
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One tune, "Pride Aside", features Frisell.
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Jerry Granelli, "A Song I Thought I Heard Buddy Sing", ITM Pacific 970066,
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recorded Feb. 92.
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Jerry Granelli (drums), Kenny Garrett (alto sax), Julian Priester
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(trombone), Bill Frisell (guitar, banjo), Robben Ford (guitar), Anthony Cox
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(bass), J. Granelli (electric bass - 4 cuts), Denny Goodhew (soprano sax - 1
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cut).
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I like this album. Mostly blues, played interestingly. Really good
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musicians, with lots of great soloing (including a number by Frisell). Also,
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I like the contrast of Frisell's and Robben Ford's guitar playing.
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The Gunter Hampel New York Orchestra, "Fresh Heat---Live at Sweet Basil",
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Birth Records 0039, rec. 2/4/85 10pm-2am. Vinyl only.
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Stephen Haynes and Vance R. Provey (trumpets), Curtis Fowlkes and Ceta
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(trombone), Bob Stewart (tuba), Perry Robinson (clarinet), Mark Whitecage
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and Thomas Keyserling (alto sax and flute), Bob Hanlon (tenor sax and
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flute), Lucky Ennett (tenor sax), Gunter Hampel (vibes, bari sax, flute,
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composer and arranger), Jeanne Lee and Art Jenkins (voice), Bill Frisell
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(guitar), Kyoto Fujiwara (bass), Marvin "Smitty" Smith (drums).
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High-energy, up, swinging, outside big-bandish music. Frisell takes a turn
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when they play fours in the second tune but otherwise you can't hear him. I
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like this album a lot, though; great live feel.
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Billy Hart, "Oshumare", Gramavision 18-8502-2, rec. 1985
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Jabali Billy Hart (drums), Dave Holland (bass), Branford Marsalis (tenor
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sax), Steve Coleman (alto sax), Bill Frisell (electric guitar), Kenny
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Kirkland (keyboards), Mark Grey (keyboards), Didier Lockwood (violin).
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Peppy, but also some substance. Lots of chops. I like this album. One
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composition, "Waiting Inside", by Frisell.
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Billy Hart, "Rah", Gramavision 18-8802-2, rec. Sept 1987
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Dave Liebman (soprano sax), Caris Visentin (oboe), Eddie Henderson
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(fluegelhorn), Ralph Moore (tenor sax), Kevin Eubanks (guitar), Bill Frisell
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(guitar), Mark Grey (synthesizer), Kenny Kirkland (piano), Eddie Gomez
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(bass), Buster Williams (bass), Billy Hart (Drums).
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A lot like "Oshumare". A little deeper, maybe. Two tunes, "Breakup" and
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"Reminder", by Frisell.
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Julius Hemphill, "Big Band", Elektra/Musician 9 60831-2, rec. Feb. 1988
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Julius Hemphill, Marty Ehrlich, J.D. Parran, John Purcell, and John
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Stubblefield (reeds), David Hines and Rasul Siddik (trumpet), Frank Lacy and
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David Taylor (trombones), Vincent Chancey and John Clark (French horn), Jack
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Wilkins and Bill Frisell (guitar), Jerome Harris (electric bass), Ronnie
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Burrage (drums), Gordon Gottlieb (percussion).
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Outside big band music. Very energetic and amazing. Frisell solos twice.
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Horvitz/Morris/Previte, "Todos Santos", Sound Aspects CD 019, rec. Jan 1988
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Six tracks are Wayne Horvitz (acoustic and amplified piano, DX-7), Butch
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Morris (cornet), and Robert Previte (drums, DX-7, drum-machine, and
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marimba). The other three are Doug Wieselman (Tenor sax, Clarinet) and Bill
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Frisell (guitars).
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An album of Robin Holcomb compositions, but not played by her. Mostly quiet
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and contemplative, and mostly non-improvised, I think. It's an interesting
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blend of folk and jazz; chord progressions seem to drift strangely, but then
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come back to a solid tonal base. Very noisy recording, even on CD; I find
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that listening to it on headphones is too distracting.
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Wayne Horvitz, "This New Generation", Elektra/Musician 9 60759-2, rec. 9/85
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Wayne Horvitz (keyboards, drum programming, harmonica), Chris Brown
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(gazamba, wing - 4 cuts), Bill Frisell (guitar - 3 cuts), Dave Hofstra
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(bass, tuba - 4 cuts (same 3 as Frisell)), Joey Peters (electronic drums - 2
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cuts), Bobby Previte (drums, drum programming, keyboards - 3 cuts (same 3 as
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Frisell)), Elliot Sharp (guitars, bass - 4 cuts), Doug Wieselman (clarinet,
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tenor sax, rhythm guitar - 8 cuts (same 3 as Frisell)), Robin Holcomb
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(keyboards - 1 cut), Jim Mussen (emulator drums operation - 2 cuts), Nica
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(vocals - 1 cut), Jon Rose (unintentional cello - 1 cut).
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"All selections are previously available on the recording _Dinner_at_Eight_,
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except [four cuts] from _The_President_". The four cuts from
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_The_President_ are awesome; the other eleven are quite weak---thin DX-7
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ostinatos and uninteresting melodic lines in the saxophone, with lots of bad
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drum programming.
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Wayne Horvitz, "The President", ???
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I only know about this from the liner notes to "This New Generation".
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Wayne Horvitz---The President, "Miracle Mile", Elektra Nonesuch 9 79278-2,
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copyright 1992.
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Wayne Horvitz (keyboards, amplified piano, harmonica), Stew Cutler (guitar),
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J.A. Deane (trombine, electronics), Kermit Driscoll (electric bass), Bobby
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Previte (drums), Doug Wieselman (tenor sax, clarinet). "Additional
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Musicians:" Bill Frisell (guitar), Denny Goodhew (saxes), Elliot Sharp
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(guitar), Ben Steele (guitar controlled sampler).
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I can barely hear Frisell in the background of track 3 for a few seconds.
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This suffers from some of the same problems as the non-Frisell tracks on
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"This New Generation", but to a much lesser extent. (The drum machine
|
||
|
problem is gone, thanks to Previte's great live drumming.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Marc Johnson, "Bass Desires", ECM 1299 (827 743-2), rec. May 1985
|
||
|
Marc Johnson (bass), Bill Frisell (guitar, guitar synth), John Scofield
|
||
|
(guitar), Peter Erskine (drums).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Amazing talent, and a very good record. The first two tracks, including
|
||
|
Coltrane's "Resolution" from "A Love Supreme" are excellent and highly
|
||
|
charged; I wish the rest of the album were a little more upbeat. I love
|
||
|
Frisell's comping to Scofield's solos, and his guitar synth solo on
|
||
|
"Resolution" is outstanding.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Marc Johnson's Bass Desires, "Second Sight", ECM 1351 (833 038-2), rec 5/87
|
||
|
(same cast as above, but no guitar synth for Frisell)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Similar to the first album. Two tunes by Frisell. The first piece seems a
|
||
|
little disjointed. The two Scofield tunes are quite good, including the
|
||
|
surfy "Twister". This album has a "contented" quality that's hard for me to
|
||
|
describe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Henry Kaiser, "Re-Marrying for Money", SST Records CD 222, rec. 11-21-85
|
||
|
Henry Kaiser (electric guitar), Hilary Hanes (bass), John Hanes (drums).
|
||
|
"Special guest guitarists" (one track each): John Abercrombie, Bruce
|
||
|
Anderson, Bill Frisell, Amos Garrett, Fred Marshall, Glenn Phillips.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"This album has been previously issued, with much less material, on the
|
||
|
German Minor Music label as _Marrying_For_Money_." Only one track with
|
||
|
Frisell, but it's 16:28 long. It's a live improvised duet, "the first time
|
||
|
that my friend Bill Frisell and I played together," pretty outside. The
|
||
|
rest of the album is heavy rock-oriented, with lots of guitar sound.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Joe Lovano Wind Ensemble, "Worlds", Label Bleu LBLC 6524 HM 83, rec 5/5/89
|
||
|
Joe Lovano (tenor and soprano saxes, clarinet), Bill Frisell (guitar), Tim
|
||
|
Hagans (trumpet), Paul Motian (drums), Judi Silverman (soprano voice), Henri
|
||
|
Texier (bass), Gary Valente (trombone).
|
||
|
|
||
|
This was recorded live in concert. Very intense compositions, and lots of
|
||
|
virtuosic playing. Extended solos, frequently accompanied by only one or
|
||
|
two other musicians, and frequently two players soloing as a duet. Very
|
||
|
horn-like singing from Judi Silverman, soloing like a soprano sax. I like
|
||
|
this album a lot.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lyle Mays [self-titled], Geffen 9 24097-2, rec. 1985
|
||
|
Lyle Mays (piano, synths, autoharp), Alejandro N. Acu~na (drums), Billy
|
||
|
Drewes (alto and soprano sax), Bill Frisell (guitar), Marc Johnson (acoustic
|
||
|
bass), Nana Vasconcelos (percussion).
|
||
|
|
||
|
A little lite for my tastes. Everything to me is either over-poppy or
|
||
|
amorphous. Not much soloing by Frisell, and not great material, IMHO.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lyle Mays, "Street Dreams", Geffen 9 24204-2, copyright 1988
|
||
|
Lyle Mays (piano, keyboards). "Featuring" Bill Frisell (guitar - 7 cuts),
|
||
|
Marc Johnson (acoustic bass - 7 cuts), Steve Rodby (electric bass - 2 cuts),
|
||
|
Peter Erskine (drums - 5 cuts), Steve Gadd (drums - 2 cuts), Steve Jordan
|
||
|
(drums - 1 cut), Vicki Randele (percussion, "vocorder [sic]", voice - 6 cuts).
|
||
|
Also a host of studio horn players (Bob Mintzer: "contractor", whatever that
|
||
|
means) and a chamber orchestra.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Same as above. Definite fluff.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sato Michihiro, "Rodan", Hat Art CD 6015, rec April 11-16, 1988
|
||
|
Sato Michihiro (tsugaru shamisen on all tracks), Bill Frisell (guitar - 5
|
||
|
cuts), Fred Frith (guitar - 6 cuts), Tenko (voice - 3 cuts), Mark Miller
|
||
|
(bass - 2), Nicolas Collins (electronics - 4 cuts), Christian Marclay
|
||
|
(turntables - 4 cuts), Steve Colemann (alto sax - 2 cuts), Toh Ban Djan
|
||
|
(Ikue Mori (drums, drum machine) and Luli Shioi (bass, voice) - 1 cut),
|
||
|
Semantics (Elliott Sharp (double neck guitar/bass), Samm Bennett (drums),
|
||
|
Ned Rothenberg (alto sax) - 1 cut), Tom Cora (cello - 1 cut), Joey Baron
|
||
|
(drums - 1 cut), Mark Dresser (bass - 2 cuts), Gerry Hemingway (drums - 1
|
||
|
cut).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Zorn-produced experimental improvised shamisen music. What else can I say?
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Alphabetized under Mingus:) "Hal Willner Presents Weird Nightmare:
|
||
|
Meditations on Mingus", Columbia CK 52739, copyright 1992
|
||
|
A house band of Don Alias (percussion), Bill Frisell (guitar), Michael Blair
|
||
|
(drums), Greg Cohen (bass), Don Byron (clarinet), Art Baron (trombone), and
|
||
|
Francis Thumm (Partch instruments), and guest musicians too numerous to
|
||
|
mention, including Bobby Previte, Henry Threadgill, Marc Ribot, Elvis
|
||
|
Costello, Vernon Reid, Geri Allen, Henry Rollins, Chuck D (from Public
|
||
|
Enemy), Keith Richards, Diamanda Galas, Robert Quine, Ray Davies, and Doctor
|
||
|
John.
|
||
|
|
||
|
An album of Mingus covers. Most pieces have a few parts for "Partch
|
||
|
instruments", strange musical instruments invented by the American composer
|
||
|
Henry Partch. There was a big thread about this album a while ago, and
|
||
|
everybody seemed to hate it, except the part where Chuck D raps over
|
||
|
Frisell's guitar solo. This album is dark and contemplative, and sort of
|
||
|
clever, which I think is great, but everybody else thinks it's not true to
|
||
|
the spirit of Mingus. In any case, it features lots of Frisell.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bob Moses, "When Elephants Dream Of Music", Gramavision GR8203, rec.
|
||
|
4/11-12/82. Vinyl only.
|
||
|
Joe Bonadio (percussion), Marion Cowings (voice - 2 cuts), Ayieb Dieng
|
||
|
(percussion), Michael Formanek (acoustic bass), David Friedman (vibes,
|
||
|
marimba), Bill Frisell (electric guitar), David Gross (alto sax), Doc
|
||
|
Halliday (tenor and soprano sax), Terumasa Hino (cornet), Howard Johnson
|
||
|
(electric contrabass clarinet, tuba), Shelia Jordan (voice - 1 cut), Jeanne
|
||
|
Lee (voice - 1 cut), Jahnet Levatin (voice - 1 cut), Lyle Mays
|
||
|
(synthesizers), Rahboat Ntumba Moses (drums, humdrums, voice), Jim Pepper
|
||
|
(tenor sax), Paula Potocki (voice - 1 cut), Barry Rogers (trombones), Chris
|
||
|
Rogers (trumpet), Paul Socolow (electric bass - 1 cut), Jeremy Steig (bass
|
||
|
flute - 1 cut), Steve Swallow (electric bass), Nana Vasconcelos (percussion,
|
||
|
voice), Bob Weiner (drums - 1 cut), Toni Wilson (voice - 1 cut).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Big and free, but swinging. A loose sound, with lots of collective
|
||
|
improvisation. I like this album a lot, although there's not much Frisell.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bob Moses, "Visit With The Great Spirit", Gramavision GR8307, rec 1983.
|
||
|
Vinyl only.
|
||
|
Tiger Okoshi (trumpet, flugelhorn, electric trumpet), Bob Mintzer (tenor
|
||
|
sax, electric bass clarinet), David Liebman (soprano sax - 4 cuts), George
|
||
|
Garzone (soprano sax, tenor sax - 4 cuts), David Gross (alto sax, flute - 5
|
||
|
cuts), Howard Johnson (bari sax, tuba, electric contrabass clarinet), Tony
|
||
|
Coe (tenor sax), John D'earth (electric trumpet - 2 cuts), David Sanborn
|
||
|
(alto sax - 1 cut), Michael Gibbs (trombone - 2 cuts), Jerome Harris
|
||
|
(electric bass, guitar), Lincoln Goines (electric bass - 3 cuts), Steve
|
||
|
Swallow (electric bass - 1 cut), Eddie Gomez (bass - 1 cut), Steve Kuhn
|
||
|
(piano - 2 cuts), Delfmar Brown (synthesizer - 1 cut), Cliff Korman
|
||
|
(synthesizer - 1 cut), Bill Frisell (guitar - 4 cuts), John Scofield (guitar
|
||
|
- 1 cut), Manoel Manteiro (surdo, repinique, berimbau, cuica, tamborim,
|
||
|
misc. percussion, voice - 4 cuts), Bill Martin (snare drum, talking drum,
|
||
|
ganza, go go bell, tamborim, misc. percussion - 4 cuts), Claudio Silva
|
||
|
(pandeiro, surdo, go go bell, voice - 3 cuts), Ron De Francesco and Jahnet
|
||
|
Levatin (misc percussion - 1 cut), Danny Gottlieb (gong), Hiroshi Hieda,
|
||
|
Rayko Shiota and Kyoko Baker (voice), Rahboat Moses (drums, repinique,
|
||
|
timbales, talking drums, hum drums, cuica, voice, wood flute, synthesizer).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Similar to "When Elephants Dream of Music". I haven't heard it in a while
|
||
|
(my record player broke...) so I can't really comment on it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Paul Motian Band, "Psalm", ECM 1222 (847 330-2), rec. December 1981
|
||
|
Paul Motian (drums), Bill Frisell (guitar), Ed Schuller (bass), Joe Lovano
|
||
|
(tenor sax), Billy Drewes (tenor and alto sax).
|
||
|
|
||
|
ECMish, i.e., slow, ambient, and timbrally beautiful. This album is also
|
||
|
surprisingly energetic and focused for early ECM. Motian's drumming is, as
|
||
|
always, as much about color as about timekeeping.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Paul Motian, "The Story of Maryam", Soul Note 1074, rec. July 83
|
||
|
Jim Pepper (tenor and soprano sax), Joe Lovano (tenor sax), Bill Frisell
|
||
|
(electric guitar), Ed Schuller (bass), Paul Motian (drums)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Very similar to "Psalm", perhaps a little less atmospheric and a little more
|
||
|
"composed".
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Paul Motian Quintet, "Jack Of Clubs", Soul Note 121124-2, rec 3/26-28/84
|
||
|
(same musicians as above)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Again, similar to previous Paul Motian albums. A little more outside in
|
||
|
spots, especially the "duet" solos like just the two saxes, or just guitar
|
||
|
and drums.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Paul Motian Trio, "It Should Have Happened a Long Time Ago", ECM 1283, rec.
|
||
|
July 1984
|
||
|
Paul Motian (drums, percussion), Bill Frisell (guitar, guitar synthesizer),
|
||
|
Joe Lovano (tenor sax).
|
||
|
|
||
|
These three guys made about a million albums together. All are very loose
|
||
|
rhythmically and very colorful, with fantastic interaction between the three.
|
||
|
The lack of a bass player is a major asset---it makes the form and rhythm
|
||
|
much more free and makes it easier for the three musicians to interact.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Paul Motian Quintet, "Misterioso", Soul Note 121174-2, rec. 7/14-16/86
|
||
|
(same musicians as "Jack of Clubs")
|
||
|
|
||
|
Similar again to previous albums. Rhythmically, the tunes are a little more
|
||
|
obvious---more swing and less wash of sound, which makes the album feel
|
||
|
somewhat more straight-ahead to me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Paul Motian Trio, "One Time Out", Soul Note 121 224-2, rec. 9/21-22/87
|
||
|
Joe Lovano (tenor sax), Bill Frisell (electric guitar), Paul Motian (drums)
|
||
|
|
||
|
More outside and more frenetic than "It Should Have Happened...", but with
|
||
|
its share of lush, loose, ambient tunes also.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Paul Motian, "On Broadway - Vol. 1", JMT 834 430-2, rec. November 1988
|
||
|
Paul Motian (drums), Joe Lovano (tenor sax), Bill Frisell (electric guitar),
|
||
|
Charlie Haden (bass).
|
||
|
|
||
|
An album of standards from Broadway musicals, like "Liza", "Somewhere Over
|
||
|
The Rainbow", "They Didn't Believe Me", etc. I think it's fantastic. A lot
|
||
|
of the color and freedom of the Paul Motian Trio albums, but Haden's bass
|
||
|
gives the music a much more definite form and pulse. This album has a
|
||
|
laid-back, sort of "competent", feel, which I guess means that they all know
|
||
|
the tunes so well and are so comfortable with each other that they sound
|
||
|
like they're having a great time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Paul Motian, "On Broadway - Vol. 2", JMT 834 440-2, rec. September 1989
|
||
|
(same musicians as above)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Same idea and same sound as volume 1; includes "I Got Rhythm", "All the
|
||
|
Things You Are", "Body and Soul". This album is generally slower and not so
|
||
|
swinging as volume 1, but more ambient and timbrally aware.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Paul Motian, "Bill Evans", JMT 834 445-2, rec. May 1990
|
||
|
(same musicians as above, but Marc Johnson instead of Charlie Haden on bass.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Similar in concept to the "On Broadway" records, but it's all Bill Evans
|
||
|
compositions. The sound is also similar to the "On Broadway" albums, more
|
||
|
like the first than the second.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Monk in Motian", JMT 834 421-2, rec March 1988.
|
||
|
Paul Motian (drums), Joe Lovano (tenor sax), Bill Frisell (guitar), with
|
||
|
Dewey Redman (tenor sax - 2 cuts) and Geri Allen (piano - 2 cuts).
|
||
|
|
||
|
This one's all Monk compositions. The trio format gives things a little
|
||
|
more edge and a little freer form, which I think fits Monk's music well.
|
||
|
Contains a great version of "Straight, No Chaser."
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Paul Motian, "On Broadway Vol. III", JMT 849 157-2, rec. 1991
|
||
|
Paul Motian (drums), Lee Konitz (soprano and alto sax), Joe Lovano (tenor
|
||
|
sax), Bill Frisell (guitar), Charlie Haden (bass)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Not available in the U.S. yet, so I don't have a copy.
|
||
|
wyllie@helios.physics.utoronto.ca (Andrew Wyllie) says
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I don't have Vol I, but Vol. III is more upbeat than Vol. II. It features a
|
||
|
number of duets Frisell/Konitz, Konitz/Motian and Lovano/Konitz. Some of
|
||
|
the other tracks are really tight, lots of amazing playing. This is
|
||
|
probably my favourite Motian album, lots of fun."
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Bill Frisell and Joe Lovano with Paul Motian in Tokyo", JMT 834 430-2, rec.
|
||
|
March 28-29, 1991.
|
||
|
(usual instruments)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Recorded live in concert, and fantastic. All the usual Motian trio
|
||
|
qualities, and really masterfully done.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Naked City", Elektra/Nonesuch 9 79238-2, copyright 1989
|
||
|
John Zorn (alto sax), Bill Frisell (guitar), Wayne Horvitz (keyboards), Fred
|
||
|
Frith (bass), Joey Baron (drums), "special guest" Yamatsuka Eye (vocals).
|
||
|
|
||
|
You gotta hear it to believe it. Incredible musicians playing incredibly
|
||
|
difficult music. The big thing is abrupt changes in style---3 seconds of
|
||
|
thrash guitar followed by 5 seconds of bebop, followed by 3 seconds of
|
||
|
reggae, etc. Very little improvisation, and within a very rigid structure.
|
||
|
It's very virtuosic, and I'm impressed, but I have to really be in the right
|
||
|
mood to listen to it or it's too intense. There's a little too much thrash
|
||
|
metal for my taste. My favorite cuts, "Latin Quarter", "N.Y. Flat Top Box",
|
||
|
"The James Bond Theme", and "Inside Straight" are all among the most inside
|
||
|
cuts on the album. Others love the middle 8 tracks, which are short, loud,
|
||
|
and very intense, featuring lots of screaming by Yamatsuka Eye. This is
|
||
|
probably a record that everybody should listen to, although not everybody
|
||
|
will want to buy it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Naked City, "Torture Garden", Toy's Factory TFCK 99557, rec. 1989-1990
|
||
|
(same musicians as above)
|
||
|
|
||
|
No need to buy this album; all the cuts on it are either on the first album
|
||
|
or "Grand Guignol". Naked City at its fastest, loudest, and most intense.
|
||
|
42 pieces averaging 37 seconds each, including "Perfume of a Critic's
|
||
|
Burning Flesh", "Jazz Snob Eat Shit", "Pigfucker", "Victims of Torture", and
|
||
|
the classic "Gob of Spit".
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Naked City, "Heretic: Jeux Des Dames Cruelles" (original motion picture
|
||
|
soundtrack), Avant 001, rec 1991.
|
||
|
(same musicians as above, but Yamatsuka Eye listed as a regular band member,
|
||
|
not a special guest.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Except for one track, this is all duets and trios from the pool of six
|
||
|
members. (Frisell plays on 12 of 24 tracks.) Longer pieces than usual for
|
||
|
Naked City, without many style changes. More improvised and free; less
|
||
|
overwhelming. I like it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Naked City, "Leng Tch'e", Toy's Factory TFCK 88604, rec 1/11/92 (?)
|
||
|
(same musicians as above)
|
||
|
|
||
|
A single 39 minute dirge-like piece. It starts with a sort of drone, and
|
||
|
builds in intensity. There's feedback by Frisell for nearly the whole piece.
|
||
|
Some have called it boring, which I can understand. It certainly lacks the
|
||
|
abrupt changes typical of the Naked City style. (And I find Eye's hysterics
|
||
|
to be a little comical if they last more than about 30 seconds.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Naked City, "Grand Guignol", Avant 002, copyright 1992
|
||
|
(same musicians as "Heretic", but add "special guest vocalist" Bob Dorough
|
||
|
(track 5).)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The title cut is a 19 minute piece, which goes from dirgelike to crazy
|
||
|
drumming. It's episodic, like "Spillane", but I can't quite understand the
|
||
|
plot. The next tracks are "covers" of classical music by Debussy,
|
||
|
Scriabin, Ives, and Messiaen, which I like a lot. Beautiful playing by
|
||
|
Frisell. It ends with about 40 "bonus tracks"---everything from "Torture
|
||
|
Garden" that wasn't on "Naked City".
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jim Pepper, "Comin' and Goin'", Antilles 7 90680, rec. 5/12/1983,
|
||
|
6/22/1983, 6/23/1983, 8/17/1983, vinyl only.
|
||
|
Jim Pepper (tenor sax, vocal chants), John Scofield (electric guitar - 4
|
||
|
cuts), Kenny Werner (piano - 5 cuts), Lester McFarland (electric bass - 5
|
||
|
cuts), Hamid Drake (drums - 4 cuts), Nana Vasconcelos (percussion, vocal
|
||
|
chants), Collin Walcott (tabla, sitar - 4 cuts), Don Cherry (trumpet - 1
|
||
|
cut), Mark Helias (acoustic bass - 3 cuts), Danny Gottlieb (drums - 3 cuts),
|
||
|
Caren Knight (lead vocal - 1 cut), Jane Lind (lead vocal - 1 cut), Bill
|
||
|
Frisell (guitar - 1 cut), Ed Schuller (acoustic bass - 1 cut)
|
||
|
|
||
|
I don't have this album and have never heard it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Power Tools, "Strange Meeting", Antilles 7 90627-2, rec. 1/8-10/87
|
||
|
Bill Frisell (electric guitar), Melvin Gibbs (electric bass), Roland Shannon
|
||
|
Jackson (drums)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Recorded live in the studio, and very rocking. All three play their butts
|
||
|
off. Fairly outside; they make a lot of noise. 3 tunes by Frisell, two of
|
||
|
which, "Strange Meeting" and "When We Go", remakes of tunes from Frisell's
|
||
|
"Rambler".
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bobby Previte, "Claude's Late Morning", Gramavision 18-8811-2, copyright 1988
|
||
|
Bobby Previte (drums, marimba, keyboards, drum machine, vocals), Wayne
|
||
|
Horvitz (hammond organ, piano, harmonica), Ray Anderson (tuba, trombone),
|
||
|
Bill Frisell (electric guitar, banjo), Josh Dubin (pedal steel guitar), Joey
|
||
|
Baron (drums), Carol Emanuel (harp), Guy Klucevsek (accordion), Jim Mussen
|
||
|
(electronic drums, sampling)
|
||
|
|
||
|
I like this album a lot. Energetic, with a lot of drive. Since basically
|
||
|
everyone on the album is a rhythm section player, a lot of the pieces really
|
||
|
groove.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hank Roberts, "Black Pastels", JMT 882 016, rec. 11-12/1987
|
||
|
Hank Roberts (cello, voices, classical 12-string guitar, jazz-a-phone
|
||
|
fiddle), Tim Berne (alto sax), Ran Anderson (trombine), Robin Eubanks
|
||
|
(trombone), Dave Taylor (bass trombone), Bill Frisell (guitar, acoustic
|
||
|
12-string guitar, banjo), Mark Dresser (bass - 1 cut), Joey Baron (drums,
|
||
|
percussion)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Quite a good album. Roberts' compositions are sort of "dark", but a lot of
|
||
|
them have a strong pulse. A little bit of country/folk/hoedown aesthetic, I
|
||
|
think.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
David Sanborn, "Another Hand", Elektra/Musician E2 61088, copyright 1991
|
||
|
David Sanborn (alto sax), Bill Frisell (electric and acoustic guitar - 5
|
||
|
cuts), Charlie Haden (bass - 4 cuts), Joey Baron (drums - 7 cuts), Leon
|
||
|
Pendarvis (organ - 1 cut), Don Alias (percussion - 7 cuts), Lenny Pickett
|
||
|
(tenor sax, clarinet - 2 cuts), Art Baron (trombone - 2 cuts), Marc Ribot
|
||
|
(guitar - 5 cuts), Terry Adams (piano - 4 cuts), Greg Cohen (bass - 5 cuts),
|
||
|
Syd Straw (vocals - 2 cuts), Al Anderson (guitar - 1 cut), Steve Jordan
|
||
|
(drums - 1 cut), Marcus Miller (bass guitar - 2 cuts), Jack DeJohnette
|
||
|
(drums - 2 cuts), Mulgrew Miller (piano - 2 cuts), Dave Tronzo (guitar - 3
|
||
|
cuts)
|
||
|
|
||
|
David Sanborn is a little "lite" for me, but this album has moments.
|
||
|
Sanborn doesn't impress me, but some of the sidemen have good performances.
|
||
|
It's nice to listen to from 10-second bit to 10-second bit, but it mostly
|
||
|
doesn't feel like it's going anywhere to me; my mother would probably like
|
||
|
it. Includes a remake of Frisell's "Monica Jane", first released on Paul
|
||
|
Bley's "Fragments", which is IMHO the best tune on the album.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
John Scofield, "Grace Under Pressure", Blue Note CDP 7 98167 2, rec. Dec 1991
|
||
|
John Scofield (electric guitar), Bill Frisell (electric and acoustic
|
||
|
guitar), Charlie Haden (bass), and Joey Baron (drums), with a horn section
|
||
|
on half the tracks: Randy Brecker (flugelhorn), John Clark (French horn),
|
||
|
Jim Pugh (trombone)
|
||
|
|
||
|
A great album. They swing pretty hard, but it also has the "contented" feel
|
||
|
I hear in Marc Johnson's "Bass Desires Second Sight". Both guitarists play
|
||
|
quite well, and Frisell *really* knows how to comp to Scofield's soloing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tony Scott, "Lush Life Volumes 1 and 2", Core Records COCD 9.00666 O and
|
||
|
9.00667 O, recorded 1981-1984.
|
||
|
Tony Scott (piano, vocals, clarinet, recitation, bari sax, electric piano,
|
||
|
tenor sax), Ed Schuller (bass - 5 cuts), Tony Arco (drums - 4 cuts), Bill
|
||
|
Frisell (guitar - 2 cuts), Monica Sciacca (Tony Scott's daughter, 11 years
|
||
|
old at the time. She sings one version), and Billy Strayhorn (a tape of
|
||
|
Strayhorn---"of documentary value")
|
||
|
|
||
|
A two-cd set containing 8 1/2 versions of Billy Strayhorn's song "Lush
|
||
|
Life", 3 1/2 versions of Scott's "Blues for a Lush", a blues version of the
|
||
|
tune, plus "Nightmare". It's a weird idea, but he pulls some of them off.
|
||
|
Others, however, are a little self-indulgent. Light on the Frisell.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Leni Stern, "Clairvovant", Passport PJ 88015, rec. 12/16-17/85
|
||
|
Leni Stern (guitar), Bill Frisell (guitar), Bob Berg (tenor sax), Larry
|
||
|
Wills (piano), Harvie Swartz (acoustic bass), Paul Motian (drums)
|
||
|
|
||
|
I haven't heard it in a while (my record player broke...) so I can't really
|
||
|
comment on it. As I recall, it was listenable but unadventurous.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Eberhard Weber, "Fluid Rustle", ECM 1137 (829 381-2), rec. January 1979
|
||
|
Bonnie Herman (voice), Norma Winstone (voice), Gary Burton (vibraharp,
|
||
|
marimba), Bill Frisell (guitar, balalaika), Eberhard Weber (bass, tarang)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Maybe Bill's first recording. ECMish sound---lots of ambience, and "wash
|
||
|
of sound". I really like this album. Beautiful, but it also grooves pretty
|
||
|
hard in parts. The instrumentation is wonderful; the two voices are used
|
||
|
atmospherically more than vocally, and everything blends well together.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Eberhard Weber, "Later That Evening", ECM 1231 (829 382-2), rec. March 82
|
||
|
Paul McCandless (soprano sax, oboe, English horn, bass clarinet), Bill
|
||
|
Frisell (guitar), Lyle Mays (piano), Michael DiPasqua (drums, percussion),
|
||
|
Eberhard Weber (bass)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Somewhat similar to "Fluid Rustle", but with more standard instruments. It
|
||
|
doesn't excite me nearly as much, though; I find it to be a little too
|
||
|
amorphous in parts, though still beautiful.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Stefan F. Winter, arr. Herb Robertson, "The Little Trumpet", JMT 860007,
|
||
|
rec. July 1986. Vinyl only. (Might be alphabetized under Herb Robertson)
|
||
|
Herb Robertson (pocket trumpet, fluegelhorn, cornet), Tim Berne (alto sax),
|
||
|
Robin Eubanks (trombone), Bob Stewart (tuba), Bill Frisell (electric and
|
||
|
acoustic guitar), Warren Smith (vibraphone and marimbaphone), Anthony Cox
|
||
|
(double-bass), eggie Nicholson (drums).
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Program music"---the liner notes come with a cute story about a little
|
||
|
trumpet, and each of the pieces sort of advances the plot a little. Sort of
|
||
|
a jazz Peter and the Wolf. Great playing, especially in the improvised
|
||
|
sections, with a couple of solos by Frisell.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
John Zorn, "The Big Gundown", Nonesuch/Icon 9 79139-2, rec 9/84-9/85
|
||
|
Luli Shioi (vocals - 1 cut), Jim Staley (trombone - 2 cuts), Bill Frisell
|
||
|
(electric guitar - 2 cuts), Anthony Coleman (piano, harpsichord, organ,
|
||
|
vocals - 1 cut), David Weinstein (mirage, microcomputer - 2 cuts), Bobby
|
||
|
Previte (percussion, tympani, vocals - 4 cuts), Jorge Silva, Claudio Silva,
|
||
|
Ciro Batistam Duduca Fonseca, Reinaldo Fernandes (surdo, pandeiro, cuica,
|
||
|
caixa, and repique respectively, only on one cut), Arto Lindsay (batucada
|
||
|
contractor, electric guitar, vocals - 4 cuts), John Zorn (alto sax, saw,
|
||
|
vocals, harpsichord, piano, game calls - 6 cuts), Orvin Aquart (harmonicas -
|
||
|
2 cuts), Tim Berne (alto sax - 1 cut), Wayne Horvitz (piano and keyboards -
|
||
|
5 cuts), Bob James (tapes - 4 cuts), Anton Fier (drums - 3 cuts), Toota
|
||
|
Thielmans (whistling and harmonica - 1 cut), Guy Klucevsek (accordion - 1
|
||
|
cut), Carol Emanuel (harp - 1 cut), Fred Frith (electric and acoustic guitar
|
||
|
- 3 cuts), Jody Harris (electric guitar - 2 cuts), Melvin Gibbs (electric
|
||
|
bass - 2 cuts), Big John Patton (organ - 1 cut), Shelley Hirsch (vocals),
|
||
|
Laura Biscotto (sexy Italian vocals - 1 cut), Vicki Bodner (oboe, English
|
||
|
horn - 2 cuts), Christian Marclay (turntables - 2 cuts), Ned Rothenberg
|
||
|
(shakuhachi, ocarina, jew's harp - 1 cut), Michihiro Sato (tsugaru shamisen
|
||
|
- 1 cut), Diamanda Galas (vocals - 1 cut), Vernon Reid (electric guitar - 1
|
||
|
cut), Polly Bradfield (violin - 1 cut), Mark Miller (drums, tympani - 1 cut),
|
||
|
Robert Quine (electric guitar - 1 cut).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Zorn-arranged music of Ennio Morricone, a movie scorer. These are all
|
||
|
interesting arrangements, each with fairly different orchestration (e.g.,
|
||
|
whistling/harmonica, accordion, and harp). Nothing too radical, for Zorn at
|
||
|
least, but a solid album.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
John Zorn, "Cobra", Hat Art CD 60401 (studio - rec 5/9/86) and 60402 (live -
|
||
|
rec 10/21/85).
|
||
|
Jim Staley (trombone - studio only), Carol Emanuel (harp - studio only),
|
||
|
Zeena Parkins (harp - studio only), J.A. Deane (trombone synthesizer,
|
||
|
electronics - live only), Bill Frisell (electric guitar), Elliot Sharp
|
||
|
(doubleneck guitar/bass, soprano guitar, voice), Anthony Coleman (piano and
|
||
|
keyboards), Wayne Horvitz (piano and keyboards), David Weinstein (mirage
|
||
|
sampling keyboards, celeste), Guy Klucevsek (accordion), Bob James (tapes),
|
||
|
Christian Marclay (turntables), Bobby Previte (percussion (studio) and drum
|
||
|
machine (live)), John Zorn (prompter).
|
||
|
|
||
|
These are "game theory" pieces---Zorn didn't actually write the music, but
|
||
|
instead devised a set of rules for a game that the performers play. They
|
||
|
form teams and get points and follow the rules and win or lose. The musical
|
||
|
result sounds chaotic and very weird. This album doesn't do much for me;
|
||
|
like lots of 20th century "classical" music, I like it better in theory than
|
||
|
in practice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
John Zorn, "Spillane", Elektra/Nonesuch 9 79172-2, rec 7-8/86
|
||
|
First track ("Spillane"): Anthony Coleman (piano, organ, celeste), Carol
|
||
|
Emanuel (harp), Bill Frisell (guitar), David Hofstra (tuba, bass), Bob James
|
||
|
(tapes), Bobby Previte (drums), Robert Quine (voice of mike hammer's
|
||
|
conscience), Jim Staley (trombone), David Weinstein (keyboards, celeste),
|
||
|
John Zorn (alto sax, clarinet), John Lurie (voice of mike hammer)
|
||
|
Second and third tracks ("Two-Lane Highway"): Albert Collins (guitar,
|
||
|
voice), Bobby Previte (drums), Robert Quine (guitar), Big John Patton
|
||
|
(organ), Wayne Horvitz (piano, keyboards), Melvin Gibbs (bass), Ronald
|
||
|
Shannon Jackson (drums)
|
||
|
Fourth track ("Forbidden Fruit"): Christian Marclay (turntables), Ohta
|
||
|
Hiromi (voice), David Harrington (violin), John Sherba (violin), Hank Dutt
|
||
|
(viola), Joan Jeanrenaud (cello)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Three long pieces of "cut up" music---lots of different styles
|
||
|
patched together. Very intense and very cool; I like the album a lot. The
|
||
|
first is based on the life of Mickey Spillane, and it's got a lot of jazz
|
||
|
and blues along with some more outside stuff. The second is a sort of
|
||
|
concerto for Albert Collins, going through different blues styles, but at a
|
||
|
slow pace for Zorn. The last is the least accessible, for the Kronos string
|
||
|
quartet. All in all, maybe my favorite Zorn album.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
John Zorn/George Lewis/Bill Frisell, "News For Lulu", Hat Art CD 6005, rec
|
||
|
8/28-30/87.
|
||
|
John Zorn (alto sax), George Lewis (trombone), Bill Frisell (guitar)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Remakes of second-rate bebop tunes by Kenny Dorham, Hank Mobley, Sonny Clark
|
||
|
and Freddie Reid. Very hard-swinging and intense.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
John Zorn/George Lewis/Bill Frisell, "More News For Lulu", Hat Art CD 6055,
|
||
|
rec 1/18-19/89
|
||
|
John Zorn (alto sax), George Lewis (trombone), Bill Frisell (guitar)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Like the first "News For Lulu", with many of the same songs, but with a
|
||
|
freer, more "live" feel. The pieces are longer on average, because the
|
||
|
soloists take a little more time. It features Frisell more than the first
|
||
|
and I think it's a little better.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
John Zorn, "Film Works 1986-1990", Elektra/Nonesuch 9 79270-2, rec 6/86,
|
||
|
5/90, 4/87, and 12/86
|
||
|
Tracks 1-6: Robert Quine (guitar), Arto Lindsay (guitar, vocals), Melvin
|
||
|
Gibbs (bass), Anton Fier (drums), Carol Emanuel (harp), David Weinstein
|
||
|
(keyboards), Ned Rothenberg (bass clarinet)
|
||
|
Tracks 7-17: Vicki Bodner (oboe), John Zorn (alto sax), Robert Quine
|
||
|
(guitar), Anthony Coleman (keyboards), Carol Emanuel (harp), David Shea
|
||
|
(turntable, vocals), Mark Dresser (bass), Ciro Baptista (Brazilian
|
||
|
percussion), Bobby Previte (drums, marimba)
|
||
|
Track 18: Robert Quine (guitar), Bill Frisell (guitar), Fred Frith (bass),
|
||
|
Wayne Horvitz (hammond organ), David Weinstein (keyboards), Carol Emanuel
|
||
|
(harp), Robert Previte (drums, percussion, vocal)
|
||
|
Tracks 19-32: Shelley Hirsch (voice), John Zorn (alto sax), Marty Ehrlich
|
||
|
(tenor sax, clarinet), Tom Varner (French horn), Jim Staley (trombone), Bill
|
||
|
Frisell (guitar), Carol Emanuel (harp), Anthony Coleman (keyboards), Wayne
|
||
|
Horvitz (keyboards), David Weinstein (keyboards), David Hofstra (bass), Nana
|
||
|
Vasconcelos (Brazilian percussion), Bobby Previte (drums, percussion, vibes,
|
||
|
timpani, orchestra bells).
|
||
|
|
||
|
A lot of rock- and blues-oriented stuff, including Robert Quine's punk
|
||
|
guitar work. This is among Zorn's most inside music, but I like it a lot.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
John Zorn, "Naked City"---Alphabetized in this discography under "Naked City"
|
||
|
(The first album was called "Naked City", with Zorn listed as the leader.
|
||
|
The rest of them have been listed as by the *band* Naked City.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
======================================================================
|
||
|
|
||
|
Section 3: Rock/Pop
|
||
|
(This section is arranged alphabetically, and then chronologically within
|
||
|
each artist.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ambitious Lovers, "Greed", Virgin 7 90903-2, copyright 1988
|
||
|
"The Ambitious Lovers are" Peter Scherer (keyboards, synth bass, drum
|
||
|
programming and sampling) and Arto Lindsay (vocal, guitar). With Nana
|
||
|
Vasconcelos (percussion and vocal - 3 cuts), Vernon Reid (rhythm guitar - 3
|
||
|
cuts), Melvin Gibbs (bass guitar - 1 cut), D.K. Dyson (background vocals - 4
|
||
|
cuts), John Zorn (sax - 2 cuts), Bill Frisell (guitar - 2 cuts), Joey Baron
|
||
|
(drums - 2 cuts), Bernard Fowler (background vocals - 1 cut), Marcal, Luna,
|
||
|
Eliseu, Trambique, Gordinho (various percussion - 2 cuts), Steve Horton
|
||
|
(rhythm guitar - 1 cut), Sergio Brandao (cavaquinho), John Lurie (sax - 1
|
||
|
cut), Gail Lou (background vocals - 3 cuts), Jill Jaffe (violin - 1 cut).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Brasilian-influenced synth pop. Not quite top 40 material but close.
|
||
|
Nothing very special on the whole album (especially considering the
|
||
|
musicians!), but I kind of like it. The first Frisell cut is weird and
|
||
|
sparse, sort of poetry recitation set to Frisell and Baron. The second is a
|
||
|
pretty standard Brasilian-sounding song. The Ambitious Lovers have some
|
||
|
other albums without Frisell.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Marianne Faithful, "Strange Weather", Island 422 842 593-2, copyright 1987
|
||
|
Marianne Faithful (vocals), Bill Frisell (guitars), Fernando Saunders
|
||
|
(bass), Michael Levine (violin - 1 cut), Sharon Freeman (piano - 2 cuts),
|
||
|
J.T. Lewis (drums - 4 cuts), Chris Hunter (flute, alto sax - 2 cuts), Garth
|
||
|
Hudson (accordions - 1 cut), Mac Rebennack (piano - 2 cuts), Robert Quine
|
||
|
(guitar - 2 cuts), Steve Slagle (alto sax - 1 cut), William Schimmel
|
||
|
(accordion - 1 cut), Lew Soloff (trumpet - 1 cut), plus a 10-person string
|
||
|
section and 11-person horn section.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Marianne Faithful sings "classic songs". I haven't heard Faithful's other
|
||
|
work, so I can't compare it, but I find this album to be very interesting.
|
||
|
They're great old songs, and Frisell has a prominent role as an
|
||
|
accompanist. (And he really does it well. The man can comp!) Marianne
|
||
|
Faithful's voice is quite unusual; some like it and some hate it. To me she
|
||
|
sounds a little bit like the voice of Greggery Peccary on Frank Zappa's
|
||
|
"Studio Tan"...
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gavin Friday and the Man Seezer, "Each Man Kills the Thing He Loves", Island
|
||
|
CID 9925, copyright 1989
|
||
|
Gavin Friday (vocals), Man Seezer (piano, keyboards, accordion, organ), Bill
|
||
|
Frisell (guitars), Marc Ribot (guitars, banjo), Fernando Saunders (bass,
|
||
|
guitar), Michael Blair (drums, percussion), Hank Roberts (celli and
|
||
|
electronics), Howard Kaylan and Mark Volman (backing vocals - 1 cut)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Kind of pretentious pop, sung in what sounds to me like an affected British
|
||
|
accent. Sounds like maybe he's trying to emulate early Peter Gabriel a
|
||
|
little, perhaps with a little Sid Vicious thrown in. Doesn't feature
|
||
|
Frisell, Ribot, or Roberts very much, although they're all great musicians.
|
||
|
A couple of brief guitar solos are the highlights of the album, but nothing
|
||
|
to write home about.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Robin Holcomb [self-titled], Elektra/Musician 9 60983-2, copyright 1990
|
||
|
Robin Holcomb (piano/vocals), Doug Wieselman (clarinet, tenor sax, electric
|
||
|
and acoustic guitars), Dave Hofstra (bass, tuba), Danny Frankel (drums,
|
||
|
percussion), Wayne Horvitz (keyboards, harmonica), Bill Frisell (guitars),
|
||
|
with John Caulfield (violin and mandolin - 2 cuts), Nica ("sings and tells
|
||
|
stories" - 1 cut).
|
||
|
|
||
|
I wasn't sure whether to put this in the rock category. It's basically
|
||
|
folk-rock, but with a jazzy cast. It's produced by Wayne Horvitz, so it has
|
||
|
some jazzy elements. She has an interesting voice, folkish with a little
|
||
|
twang. Frisell has one or two great solos.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Robin Holcomb, "Rockabye", Elektra/Musician 9 61289-2, copyright 1992
|
||
|
Robin Holcomb (piano, vocals), Stew Cutler (guitars - 6 cuts), Peter
|
||
|
Holsapple (guitars - 2 cuts), Wayne Horvitz (keyboards - 6 cuts), Dave
|
||
|
Hofstra (bass/tuba - 8 cuts), Alan Bezozi (drums - 2 cuts), Doug Wieselman
|
||
|
(sax, clarinet, guitar - 7 cuts), Danny Frankel (drums - 7 cuts), Mino
|
||
|
Cinelu (percussion - 1 cut), Peter Ostroushko (mandolin, violin - 2 cuts),
|
||
|
Guy Klucevsek (accordion - 1 cut), Art Baron (trombone - 2 cuts), Bruce
|
||
|
"Creeper" Kurnow (harmonica - 1 cut).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Not much Frisell, but he solos on one track. This is a little more produced
|
||
|
than Holcomb's first album, for what it's worth. A little less folk and a
|
||
|
little more country.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ryuchi Sakamoto, "Heart Beat", Virgin V2-86291, copyright 1991
|
||
|
"All songs programmed and performed by Ryuchi Sakamoto". With Dee Dee Brave
|
||
|
(vocals - 2 cuts), Steven Burnstein (trumpet - 3 cuts), Satoshi Tomiie
|
||
|
(additional percussion - 5 cuts), Super DJ Dmitry (Russian rap - 1 cut),
|
||
|
Magic Dick (harmonica - 1 cut), Marco Prince (French rap - 1 cut), Jungle DJ
|
||
|
Towa Towa (scratch - 1 cut), John Lurie (alto sax - 1 cut), Axel Nielhaus
|
||
|
("huh" - 1 cut), Arto Lindsay (lead vocals - 1 cut), Debra Barsha
|
||
|
(background vocal - 1 cut), Youssou N'Dour (lead vocal - 1 cut), David
|
||
|
Sylvian/Ingrid Chavez (vocals - 2 cuts), Bill Frisell (guitar - 2 cuts), John
|
||
|
Cage from Mureau (talking),
|
||
|
|
||
|
Probably the worst album I've ever heard with Frisell. Lame 80's disco
|
||
|
synth-drum machine dance pop. Imagine Madonna's worst songs, poorly
|
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|
produced and sung. Frisell solos briefly in one cut, but the backing drum
|
||
|
machine beat is so lame that it ruins it for me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Caetano Veloso, "Estrangiero", Elektra/Musician 9 60898-2, copyright 1989
|
||
|
Caetano Veloso (voice), Peter Scherer (keyboards), Arto Lindsay (guitar and
|
||
|
vocals), Bill Frisell (guitar - 2 cuts), Tony Lewis (drums - 1 cut), Nana
|
||
|
Vasconcelos (percussion and voice - 4 cuts), Toni Costa (guitar - 3 cuts),
|
||
|
Tavinho Fialho (bass - 2 cuts), Cesinha (drums - 3 cuts), Carlinhos Brown
|
||
|
(percussion)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Brazilian songs. I don't know much about this music, but I enjoy it.
|
||
|
Only two cuts with Frisell, and he doesn't really play in his style.
|
||
|
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||
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|
|
||
|
======================================================================
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||
|
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||
|
Section 4: Compilation albums with only a few cuts by Frisell
|
||
|
(This section is in no particular order.)
|
||
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|
||
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|
"Amarcord Nino Rota", Hannibal Records HNCD 9301, copyright 1981
|
||
|
|
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|
A tribute album, to Nino Rota, who wrote the soundtrack music to
|
||
|
many of Fellini's films. Frisell's one track is a multiply overdubbed
|
||
|
version of "Juliet of the Spirits", which is really beautiful. It's similar
|
||
|
in style to his work on "In Line". Other tracks include Jaki Byard, The
|
||
|
Carla Bley Band, and Steve Lacy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Stay Awake: Various Interpretations of Music from Vintage Disney Films",
|
||
|
A&M Records CD 3918 DX 003644, copyright 1988.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Another Hal Willner-produced tribute album, this time it's songs from Disney
|
||
|
movies like Dumbo, Pinocchio, and Mary Poppins. Frisell plays on two cuts
|
||
|
with Ken Nordine (who narrates in an amazing booming bass voice) and Wayne
|
||
|
Horvitz, two cuts with just Horvitz, and one cut as the guitarist in a huge
|
||
|
orchestra backing up Ringo Starr singing "When You Wish Upon a Star". I
|
||
|
really like this album a lot, both Frisell's stuff and the other tracks.
|
||
|
Other performers include Los Lobos, Bonnie Raitt, Tom Waits, Suzanne Vega,
|
||
|
Syd Straw, Aaron Neville/Dr. John (singing the song from the Mickey Mouse
|
||
|
Club), NRBQ, Betty Carter, Sun Ra and Arkestra, Sinead O'Connor, and James
|
||
|
Taylor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
"A Confederacy of Dances Vol I.: Live Recordings from the Roulette
|
||
|
Series New York", Einstein 001, copyright 1992.
|
||
|
1. Bill Frisell: April 16, 1988 (4:29)
|
||
|
2. Christian Marclay: Untitled (3:28)
|
||
|
3. Tohban Djan: Blue Seed (3:59)
|
||
|
4. Zeena Parkins: Scruples (8:23)
|
||
|
5. Billy Bang: One for Albert (3:23)
|
||
|
6. Anthony Coleman: Acid Jazz Burnout (8:09)
|
||
|
7. David Weinstein: Icetralia (1:09)
|
||
|
8. Chris Cochrane: To Disenfranchise (Repatriation (3:35)
|
||
|
9. Ron Kuivila: Canon Y (3:45)
|
||
|
10. John Zorn: Sebastopol (6:02)
|
||
|
11. Guy Klucevsek: Sylvan Steps (7:10)
|
||
|
12. David Weinstein: Poland (1:47)
|
||
|
13. Shelley Hirsch, Ikue Mori, David Shea, Jim Staley 4tet: Ulula
|
||
|
Zone (8:38)
|
||
|
14. Jeanne Lee & Wadada eo Smith: Beauty is a Rarity (9:29)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Frisell's one track is a solo electric guitar improvisation, with lots of
|
||
|
digital delay, used compositionally. The whole album is very outside, with
|
||
|
lots of solo stuff.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Gramavision 10th Anniversary Sampler" (2 discs), Gramavision R2 79461
|
||
|
|
||
|
Includes three Frisell tracks: one from Bob Moses' "When Elephants Dream of
|
||
|
Music", one from Billy Hart's "Rah", and one from Bobby Previte's "Claude's
|
||
|
Late Morning. I'd recommend getting the original albums, of course. Other
|
||
|
cuts include Scofield, Bernie Worrell, Pete Levin, Jamaaladeen Tacuma, Ray
|
||
|
Anderson, and the Kronos quartet.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rubaiyat: Elektra's 40th Anniversary
|
||
|
|
||
|
This album has a clever concept: songs originally released on Elektra
|
||
|
records, covered by bands that now record for Elektra. The Frisell track is
|
||
|
Bob Dylan's "Going Going Gone", with Bill Frisell (guitars), Robin Holcomb
|
||
|
(voice), Wayne Horvitz (keyboards), Dave Hofstra (bass), and Danny Frankel
|
||
|
(drums). I like this track a lot; it has interesting singing by Holcomb and
|
||
|
a very long and powerful guitar solo. The album also includes pieces by the
|
||
|
Kronos Quartet, Ambitious Lovers, and John Zorn, but it's mostly rockers
|
||
|
like The Cure, Metallica, Jackson Browne, Tracy Chapman, Linda Ronstadt,
|
||
|
10,000 Maniacs, Pixies, etc.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
======================================================================
|
||
|
|
||
|
Section 5: Rumors
|
||
|
Please send me mail if you know anything about any of these albums!
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Seigen Ono: "Comme Des Garcons", Vol 1, maybe Vol 2. Virgin CDVE 51 [CD] and
|
||
|
Virgin CDVE 52 [CD]
|
||
|
Jeff.Spirer@Corp.Sun.COM (Jeff Spirer) says it exists, as does
|
||
|
eprice@sybase.com
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Cynical Hysterie Hour (Japanese cartoon music)
|
||
|
Jeff.Spirer@Corp.Sun.COM (Jeff Spirer) says it exists. Also,
|
||
|
eprice@sybase.com says:
|
||
|
|
||
|
... "Cynical Hysterie Hours" is supposedly on Wave/Eva, but it's
|
||
|
virtually impossible to find outside of Japan apparently. ("CHH" is
|
||
|
cartoon music by Zorn. It's also available on laserdisc -- with the
|
||
|
cartoons of course, since it's video! -- from Japan. I ordered it a
|
||
|
while ago in that form and should be getting it soon. Film at 11...)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
John Oswald, "Plunderphonic"
|
||
|
From: md@sound.esm.rochester.edu (Mike DeMurga)
|
||
|
Frisell also plays on John Oswald's Plunderphonic (the one
|
||
|
destroyed for copyright reasons) on one track (an elvis "cover").
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tribe Called Quest
|
||
|
From: Marc Dionne <dionne@pop.cis.yale.edu>
|
||
|
In addition, strictly in the rumor pile, is the upcoming Tribe Called
|
||
|
Quest disc, which is supposed to feature (among many others) Bill Frisell
|
||
|
and Fred Frith, and to be produced by Bill Laswell.
|
||
|
Date of release unknown, but it want into production about a year ago...
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Henry Kaiser, "Same Old Thing"
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Herb Robertson, "Transparency", JMT 834402-1
|
||
|
I saw this in a record guide once but have never seen the album.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Michihiro Sato and Zorn: "Ganryu Island", Yukon 2101
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jim Staley and Ikue Mori, "Mumbo Jumbo", Rift 12 [LP]
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
John Zorn, "Tribute to Godard
|
||
|
eprice@sybase.com says:
|
||
|
John Zorn, "Godard ca vous chant?", Nato 634
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
gcf@spd.eee.strathclyde.ac.uk says:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Below is the Avant label's proposed releases for 1992/1993. The
|
||
|
three NEW COMPOSERS SERIES" titles should be released around
|
||
|
November. Unfortunately Harmonia Mundi U.K. have no further
|
||
|
details on the other titles however they will release them in the
|
||
|
U.K. as soon as they're available in Japan. The information appears
|
||
|
as received; I cannot be held responsible for their melodramatic turn
|
||
|
of phrase!
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
* AVAN-3: JOHN ZORN NAKED CITY / RADIO VOL. 1
|
||
|
|
||
|
Compositional experiments in popular music. 20 originals from the
|
||
|
NAKED CITY repertoire exploring Hardcore, Surf, Jazz, Classical,
|
||
|
R&B, Funk, Acid, House, Grunge Jazz, Movie Standards, Klezmer,
|
||
|
Heavy Metal, Ethno Pop, Cartoon Music and more...
|
||
|
[Usually in the same song]
|
||
|
|
||
|
* AVAN-4: JOHN ZORN NAKED CITY / ABSINTHE
|
||
|
|
||
|
New directions in ambient/industrial music. 7 evil, droneoriented
|
||
|
performances dedicated to the elusive green liquor that was the
|
||
|
psychedelic drug of choice to CHARLES BAUDELAIRE, PAUL VERLAINE,
|
||
|
and PABLO PICASSO in turn-of-the-century France.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* AVAN-5: JOHN ZORN NAKED CITY / RADIO VOL. 2
|
||
|
|
||
|
NAKED CITY'S "COVER" RECORD. An album of JOHN ZORN's eclectic
|
||
|
arrangements of some of the most important, and often overlooked
|
||
|
compositions of the 20th century.
|
||
|
JERRY GOLDSMITH, ORNETTE COLEMAN, BRIAN WILSON, IGOR STRAVINSKY,
|
||
|
DUKE ELLINGTON, TUSHIMA TOSHIAKI, WILLIAM ORBIT, GEORGE
|
||
|
CLINTON, and many more.
|