Home » Jazz Articles » Multiple Reviews » From John Butcher’s Collection
From John Butcher’s Collection
ByOne such is saxophonist John Butcher who went through his collection of previously unreleased concert material and selected seven albums which he released digitally, on his own Weight of Wax label, at monthly intervals, the earliest recording dating from May 1999, the most recent from March 2019. The seven feature Butcher solo, in three different duos (one of them twice), in a trio and a quintet. The series is poignantly entitled 'The Memory of Live Music.' Three of the seven are reviewed below, but the entire series is unconditionally recommended. Butcher is not sure if he will continue to issue more, but says it was intriguing going through his collection. So, the ill wind of the pandemic has already blown plenty of good in the direction of Butcher aficionados.

On Being Observed
Weight of Wax
2020
Butcher's discography is already peppered with excellent solo albums; with On Being Observed, he has compiled a compelling album of previously unreleased solo tracks dating from the years 2000 to 2011. The album's six tracks are bookended by two, "The Glad Road" and "The Steam Fact," which were recorded in September 2006 inside the huge cylindrical gasometer at Oberhausen, Germany, at the same concert where "Tr?gerfrequenz," on Butcher's The Geometry of Sentiment (Emanem, 2007), was recorded, that album also consisting of recordings from several locations. As with countless other Butcher recordings made inside resonant spaces, the two here are fascinating as Butcher listens and reacts to the resounding echoes of his own playing, effectively playing a duo with himself or with the gasometer itself; music which can be listened to repeatedly, always coming up trumps.
Another link to The Geometry of Sentiment comes with "For Derek at 70," which was recorded in London in 2000, for a

Derek Bailey
guitar1932 - 2005
The remaining three tracks on On Being Observed give further insight into the life of a globetrotting improvising musician, "Loose in the Night" having been recorded live in March 2001 outside the "Bop Shop," Village Gate Square, Rochester, New York, "Phantasmagoria" (the only one of the six to feature Butcher on soprano sax not tenor) live at the Glasgow International Jazz Festival, in July 2006, and "Cut me in on the Juicy Stuff" live in February 2011, inside the chilly twelfth century Castle Vault, Southampton, UK, sharing the bill with a realisation of Alvin Lucier's "I Am Sitting In A Room." Together with the rest of the album, these tracks demonstrate that, whatever the environment or location, Butcher always delivers a performance that is impossible to mistake for any other player, and is engrossing from first note to last. For newcomers to Butcher's music, On Being Observed is recommended as an ideal introduction to his solo playing. Long-standing Butcher followers will need no such recommendation; for them, Butcher's name on a recording is recommendation enough...

Stovelit Lines
Weight of Wax
2020
In complete contrast to On Being Observed, this quintet album features music from just one evening. Recorded live at Iklectik, London, on November 20th 2017, the album's three tracks, totalling forty-five minutes, feature a one-off collaboration between Butcher, three other regulars on the London improv scene

Steve Beresford
piano
John Edwards
bass, acoustic
Thurston Moore
guitarThe sound of a sustained note from Butcher opens the album amid an assortment of sounds from the other players, notably electronics from Beresford and percussion support from Day. However, it soon becomes difficult (and irrelevant) to distinguish individual contributions as all five contribute to the construction of an amorphous, ever-shifting soundscape from which an occasional sound bubbles to the surface before being subsumed back into the collective collage. Moore's improv credentials are on display as he adds his own high, metallic notes to the brew without looking to be spotlighted, just one of the guys. Although Butcher is not audible for considerable periods of "Part 1," he surfaces for its closing minutes, producing a subdued but lively solo which finishes the piece on a high.
" Part 2" opens with some emphatic notes from Beresford's piano, which sound as if they might have been intended to steer the piece; whether or not that was the case, they have that effect and the piece displays more structure than the opener. Throughout, Butcher and Moore trade phrases, with Beresford's electronics adding coloration, while Edwards and Day provide punctuation and support, without ever falling into the role of rhythm section. A barnstorming ending closes out a very satisfying piece from all five players.
After an opening exchange between Moore and Butcher, "Part 3" features the saxophonist prominently throughout; with trademark contributions from everyone concerned, the piece acts as a satisfying finale to a richly varied album which makes an excellent advertisement for the attractions of free improvisation.

Live in Italy
Weight of Wax
2020
It is no surprise that four of this batch of seven releases are duo recordings, as duos dominate Butcher's discography. Of the four, one is with John Edwards, recorded at two London concerts in 1999 and 2009, bracketing the 2001 and 2002 Butcher-Edwards duo recordings on their album Optic (Emanem, 2003); two are with harpist

Rhodri Davies
harpb.1971
The fourth duo of this batch breaks new ground, but joins an impressive list of duos pairing Butcher with drummers, including

Gerry Hemingway
drumsb.1955

Paal Nilssen-Love
drumsb.1974

Steve Noble
drumsb.1960

Eddie Prevost
drumsb.1942

Gino Robair
percussion
Dylan van der Schyff
drums
Riccardo La Foresta
percussionTracks and Personnel
On Being ObservedTracks: The Glad Roar; Loose in the Night; Phantasmagoria; For Derek at 70; Cut me in on the Juicy Stuff; The Steam Factory.
Personnel: John Butcher: tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone.
Stovelit Lines
Tracks: Part 1; Part 2; Part 3.
Personnel: Thurston Moore: guitar; John Edwards: double bass; Terry Day: drums; John Butcher: saxophones; Steve Beresford: piano, electronics.
Live in Italy
Tracks: Padova I; Padova II; Dobbia.
Personnel: John Butcher: saxophones; Riccardo La Foresta: drummophone, percussion.
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
