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Akira Sakata and the Ghost of Albert Ayler
ByAlbert Ayler
saxophone, tenor1936 - 1970
And for the last 40 years, Japanese saxophonist Akira Sakata has been a hero, and that's understood. His music has allowed listeners to, indeed, case the promised land.
Western audiences may have first noticed him playing in 1986 with Last Exit, the jazz/rock/noise/improv band that featured the fire-breathing saxophonist

Peter Brötzmann
woodwinds1941 - 2023

Sonny Sharrock
guitar, electric1940 - 1994

Ronald Shannon Jackson
drums1940 - 2013

Bill Laswell
bassb.1955
Saxophonists Brotzmann,

Joe McPhee
woodwindsb.1939

David Murray
saxophone, tenorb.1955
His recent reemergence has come thanks to guitarist/producer Jim O'Rourke, who has worked with everyone from Derek Bailey to Sonic Youth and Wilco. These two releases continue the brilliance that was heard on Friendly Pants (Family Vineyard, 2009).

Live At Hungry Brain
Family Vineyard Records 2011
In 2005, Sakata began working with the duo of drummer Chris Corsano and bassist Darin Gray, aka Chikamorachi. This trio has toured and built a dialogue that achieves an all too rare amalgam of pure improvisation, rhythmic propulsion and sonic poetry.
Live At Hungry Brain, recorded during the 2009 Umbrella Music Festival in Chicago, is available as a vinyl LP (and digital download) in a limited edition of just 700 copies. Its three tracks begin, appropriately enough, with the 18-minute "Friendly Pants," the consummate Ayler tribute. Burning from the drop of the needle, Sakata has the perfect partners here. Corsano, who is probably best known as saxophonist Paul Flaherty's duo partner, and bassist Gray (Loren MazzaCane Connors), elevate the room. Sakata, who can still deliver a blistering attack even though he is in his mid-sixties, requires collaborators who can raise the tent poles high enough for his fierce display. Here, Corsano packs an energized flow with Gray forcing the river of sound through wide expanses and tight rapids of nearly chaotic energy.
The mood doesn't flag when Sakata switches to clarinet for "Miwataseba (Look Around Look?)." The trio's outward energies turn inward, focusing on pocket-size music making. Corsano trades sticks for brushes and Gray favors his bow here. Sakata opts for melody over muscle. The elegance ends with Sakata first whispering then shouting some poetry. The set finishes with "Wild Chickens In The Lake M," that opens with nearly five minutes of bowed and plucked bass and processional drums, and builds an energy field as a preamble to the saxophonist who proceeds to deliver another barrage of sound. The trio has the constructive sense to fashion a pause from its energy jazz for the saxophonist to solo, exposing an uncontaminated and abstract sound that qualifies as a pure mantra.

And That's The Story Of Jazz...
Family Vineyard Records 2011
Adding guitarist
Jim O'Rourke
bass, acousticDisc one opens with the longest track "Kyoto," clocking in at more than 28 minutes. Sakata's solo saxophone invocation calls in rubbed strings and bowed bass, plenty of time to settle into the journey. As the track builds, each player flexes their musical muscle. Corsano, perhaps the modern

Rashied Ali
drums1935 - 2009
Corsano opens "Hanamaki," with a cacophony of noise that calls the others to follow his ferocity with their own fury. Sakata works the upper registers and O'Rourke the shredded guitar. This battle is not unlike that of Brotzmann or

David S. Ware
saxophone, tenor1949 - 2012
Disc two is culled from the band's performances in Nagoya, and its three tracks feature more of O'Rourke's guitar. The band plays with a savagery that appeals like boxing, except the punches are musical. Even so, the rounds can be exhausting.
Tracks and Personnel
Live At HungryBrain
Tracks: Friendly Pants; Miwataseba (Look Around Look?); Wild Chickens In The Lake M.
Personnel: Akira Sakata: alto saxophone, clarinet, voice; Chris Corsano: drums; Darin Gray: double bass.
And That's The Story Of Jazz...
Tracks: CD1: Kyoto; Hanamaki. CD2: Nagoya 1; Nagoya 2; Nagoya 3.
Personnel: Akira Sakata: alto saxophone, vocals; Jim O'Rourke: guitar, harmonica, electronics; Chris Corsano: drums; Darin Gray: double bass, percussion, bells.
Tags
Akira Sakata
Multiple Reviews
Mark Corroto
United States
Albert Ayler
Peter Brotzmann
Sonny Sharrock
Ronald Shannon Jackson
Bill Laswell
Joe McPhee
David Murray
Jim O'Rourke
Rashied Ali
David S. Ware
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