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Inexhaustible Editions: The Little Label That Roars
ByFirst let’s credit Juhász for the vision, then applaud the fruits of this collaboration.

Metal Breath
Inexhaustible Editions
2018
The inquiry made in a game of 20 questions is quite often "is it animal, plant, or mineral?" While the duo of


Phil Minton
vocalsb.1940
The duo format may be the preferred setting to hear both of these artists. Hübsch's tuba, although heard in large ensembles like

Alexander von Schlippenbach
pianob.1938

Axel Dorner
trumpetb.1964

Peter Evans
trumpetThe pair find pleasant patterns with which to work in these two lengthy and one brief performances. Breathy horn sounds are matched by stuttering gargles, which are countered with percussive knocks on brass and plaintive exhalations. How is it that Minton has so many voices and modes of expression? He can whistle, hum, chortle, vocalize and vocal-ease. But then, so can Hübsch.

Put
Edition FriForma
2018
A terrific surprise is the recording Put by an assembled trio. It appears that label chief Lászlo Juhász had a hand in bringing together Austrian saxophonist Markus Krispel, Austrian with Slovenian roots bassist Matija Schellander, and Hungarian drummer Szilveszter Miklós for a series of performances under the Borderless Dissonance moniker in Budapest, Ljubljana and Vienna. First let's credit Juhász for the vision, then applaud the fruits of this collaboration.
Recorded live at Vodnikova Doma?ija ?i?ka in Ljubljana in May 2017, this single set of 41-minutes of music draws upon the same traditions as those early Workshop Freie Musik concerts in Berlin of the 1970s. But this music, in a more noisy way, calls to mind the manner in which the Australian trio The Necks builds a performance. That is, by way of momentum. Their stealthy entrance of quiet bowed bass, breath forward saxophone and stirred cymbal invites a closer, albeit quiet attentiveness. Maybe you're not familiar with Schellander's work in Bulbul (a noise rock band) and Krispel's gig in a metal band, because yes we are going to get loud here. Thunderous yes, but like the aforementioned The Necks, this trio keeps to the script. If there were such a thing as a script in free jazz. What we have here is coherence. They present logical and consistent improvisation throughout.

Irreversible Motions
Inexhaustible Editions
2018
Unpack your electron microscopes for this recording by saxophonist Jason Mears and percussionist Stephen Flinn, two musicians currently living in New York City. The microscope use is not so much because this music is quiet, it's that you might want to witness the subatomic particles revolving around the nucleus of sound they create. The five tracks evolve in an unhurried manner on Irreversible Motions with a progressive increase in tension and energy.
Mears' saxophone can be heard in

Harris Eisenstadt
drums
Anthony Braxton
woodwindsb.1945
David Rothenberg
clarinet, bass
Tulpe Schicht Brille
Inexhaustible Editions
2018
A practice often repeated in Buddhist meditation is to allow your visual field to open as wide as possible, taking in your surroundings as if looking at a two dimensional plane, such as a mirror. This exercise if repeated, begins to allow one to then turn attention around. Once aimed at oneself, you might find there is no one looking. In effect, no self. That same operation can applied to the other senses. Tulpe Schicht Brille by the German duo of

Birgit Ulher
trumpetb.1961
Their minimalist free improvisation interaction involves some unique instruments and some traditional instruments applied in unique ways. Ulher's trumpet, like that of fellow countryman

Axel Dorner
trumpetb.1964

Five Arias For Nalca
Inexhaustible Editions
2018
This set of five free improvisations recorded at Elastic performance space in Chicago offers a well balanced soundstage. This affords the three musicians, Benjamín Vergara (trumpet),

Fred Lonberg-Holm
cellob.1962
Veteran of free improvisation, Lonberg-Holm is joined by two new names in improvisation, the Chilean Vergara and Chicagoan Zarzutzki. Zarzutzki can be heard on sessions with

Tim Daisy
drumsb.1976

Dave Rempis
saxophoneb.1975
The sounds are built mostly upon cautious advancements. Each "Aria" is constructed of tactile bowing, staccato plucks, slurred trumpet, electro colour splashes and more importantly interactions. "Aria V" is wound around Lonberg-Holm's bowing which chases butterflies and Zarzutzki's (seemingly) random generated synthesizer hiccups. It is Vergara's trumpet that keeps some semblance of time here with popping pursed trumpet notes. "Aria III" stretches lengthy notes by all three musicians before the trio each heads in a different direction. Not that the wanderings don't fit together, it is just another way for the players to expand the auditory landscape they are mining.

Avis Aux Réacteurs
Inexhaustible Editions
2018
Xavier Charles / ?ric Normand Avis Aux Réacteurs
Entrée............. Compresseur............. Combustion............. Turbine............. Réducteur............. Tuyère............. Poussée.
Xavier Charles and ?ric Normand practice the art of the parboil, not as in cooking, but the craft of free improvisation crescendo. This single 35-minute track has in fact several boiling points. In the hands of lesser talents well, the banquet of sound might be overcooked. Charles' clarinet has been heard solo, in duo settings with Terrie Ex and Otomo Yoshihide, in the super group Contest of Pleasures (with

Axel Dorner
trumpetb.1964

John Butcher
saxophoneb.1954
Normand's main instrument is a modified bass which (it appears) he augments with objects. His sound eschews pulse for textures commonly associated with percussionists. The pair thread a continual tension between themselves. Twittered notes are countered with scrubbing clangs and Charles' overblown clarinet finds itself accompanied by some shredded bass lines. The advance and retreat of these processes throughout act as short respites from the duos encounters. It is only when they have exhausted all avenues do they sever the sound with an abrupt stop.
Tracks and Personnel
Metal Breath
Tracks: Copper; Zinc And Blood; Flesh.
Personnel: Carl Ludwig Hübsch: tuba; Phil Minton: voice.
Put
Tracks: Put.
Personnel: Markus Krispel: alto saxophone, baritone saxophone; Matija Schellander: double bass; Szilveszter Miklós: drums.
Irreversible Motions
Tracks: Atomists; Looping Through Time; Truth; Real Legacy; The Works.
Personnel: Jason Mears: saxophones; Stephen Flinn: percussion.
Tulpe Schicht Brille
Tracks: Pollergebiet; Tulpe Schicht Brille; Hohltier; Licht Pilot; Teich Tisch Leib.
Personnel: Birgit Ulher: trumpet, radio, speaker, objects; Chistoph Schiller: spinet, electronics, objects.
Five Arias For Nalca
Tracks: Aria I; Aria II; Aria III; Aria IV; Aria V.
Personnel: Benjamín Vergara: trumpet; Fred Lonberg-Holm: cello; Aaron Zarzutzki: synthesizer, objects.
Avis Aux Réacteurs
Tracks: Entrée............. Compresseur............. Combustion............. Turbine............. Réducteur............. Tuyère............. Poussée.
Personnel: Xavier Charles: clarinet; ?ric Normand: electric bass, objects.
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