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Decoy and Joe McPhee: Decoy and Joe McPhee: Oto
By
Oto
Bo'Weavil
2010
The existence of a free-improvising organ trio, though uncommon even in 2010, shouldn't be all that surprising and, indeed, you might be prompted to ask what took so long. Certainly, figures like

Larry Young
organ, Hammond B31940 - 1978

Big John Patton
organ, Hammond B31935 - 2002

Sun Ra
piano1914 - 1993

Jimmy Smith
organ, Hammond B31925 - 2005

Richard "Groove" Holmes
organ, Hammond B31931 - 1991
Freddie Roach
b.1931
Baby Face Willette
organ, Hammond B3b.1933
Enter Decoy, a British trio consisting of organist

Alexander Hawkins
pianob.1981

Steve Noble
drumsb.1960

Ike Quebec
saxophone, tenor1918 - 1963
The first, 39-minute, improvisation, "Opening Might," naturally moves through an extraordinary range of colors and instrumental / textural combinations and serves to cement not only McPhee's soulful versatility but also that Decoy does not exist to "deconstruct" a form, but rather breathe an unexpected kind of energy into this instrumental setting. The piece begins as a trio, pointillistic organ jabs approximating electronic music or a Moog (shades of Ra or a particularly excited and plugged-in

Paul Bley
piano1932 - 2016
McPhee enters on soprano with bent, piercing cascades that ride continual crests of fuzz and supple metronomes. It's no secret that Hawkins is an appreciative Ra listener, and like Ra he takes hackneyed saccharine tones and combines them into an inter- associative wonderland before threading events into a canvas of agitated angles and sanctified emphasiz. Clanging gongs, matte skins and bull fiddle conspire in a brief duet before McPhee comments with gooey trills. The saxophonist's second soprano solo finds him approximating something North African in its pinched tonality, wailing and chanting over a slink that threatens to melt before Hawkins explodes into a terse, inflamed minimalism equal parts Young,

Mal Waldron
piano1925 - 2002

Horace Tapscott
piano1934 - 1999
A short breakdown later, McPhee reenters on tenor, at first in small clipped phrases until he begins to tease out a burnished 1940s ballad signification, and Decoy is right alongside him. Hawkins and Edwards temper their rattle into a
Freddie Roach
b.1931
Albert Ayler
saxophone, tenor1936 - 1970

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
Wrenched soprano particulates, dialogued with low organ burbles, begin "Breakout," a somewhat less kaleidoscopic piece that keeps closer to the hedgerow of contemporary free improvisation. Noble's ringing copper and Edwards' horsehairs and gut signal an improvisational yen for brutish physicality, but Hawkins' ornery burble is the main element that keeps Decoy from entirely following free music-tropes. He climbs upward, feeding sputtering aggregations and wet, syrupy runs to a barrage of snare rattle and meaty pizzicato, a merger of clanging time and transcendent grit. As McPhee digs his heels, Noble and Edwards create a tightly woven gallop, the latter's relentless callus- busting pluck impressive as it's buoyed by jaunty B3 comping. The trio has a way of seamlessly working density into quiet meditation, as in the closing minutes of "Breakout" Hawkins' organ is somewhere between Ra's wistfulness and the cool obtuse sound of Gerd Zacher, glinting off short percussive volleys and a pathos-laden tenor declamation.
While at first you might be startled by the amount of music being played here (and there are a lot of statements and forms to take in, from all-stops-out freedom to a revelatory calypso), Hawkins, Edwards, Noble and McPhee have created a performanceand a recordfor the ages. It will take a number of listens for the music on Oto to sink in, but once it does, it won't be forgotten.
Tracks: Opening Might; Breakout; Dancing on the Wolf Road.
Personnel: Alexander Hawkins: Hammond B3 Organ; John Edwards: bass; Steve Noble: percussion; Joe McPhee: tenor and soprano saxophones. ">
Personnel
Joe McPhee
woodwindsAlbum information
Title: Decoy and Joe McPhee: Oto | Year Released: 2010 | Record Label: Unknown label
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