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Joe McPhee: A Band Apart
By
Joe McPhee
woodwindsb.1939
McPhee's cultish free-funk sides of the early 1970s included electric piano, dual drummers and another saxophonist but eschewed the bass, and his take on the "power trio" at that time often employed tenor, drums and piano or synthesizer. Later groups like his Po Music quartet combined McPhee with a second saxophonist, guitar and bass. Even Trio X, which joins him with bassist
Dominic Duval
bass1945 - 2016

Jay Rosen
drumsb.1961
Three recent recordings capture the multi-instrumentalist and improvising composer in three very diverse settings, all of which speak to his soloistic power and broad group concept.

Blue Chicago Blues
Not Two
2010
Diversity aside, Blue Chicago Blues does catch McPhee in what appears to be a favorite formatthe saxophone and bass duo. He's recorded in like configurations with Duval and even an expanded bass quartet, but this is his first such collaboration with Norwegian bassist

Ingebrigt Håker Flaten
bassb.1971
With Blue Chicago Blues dedicated to

Fred Anderson
saxophone1929 - 2010
Perhaps it's the influence of Flaten, who sails along a la both

Gary Peacock
bass, acoustic1935 - 2020

Sunny Murray
drums1937 - 2017

Synchronicity
Harmonic Convergence
2010
Back in 1970, the Survival Unit was McPhee's taped sound-field accompaniment on otherwise solo performances. Its second iteration kept the pre-recorded sounds, but added musicians like pianist Mike Kull, drummer Harold E. Smith, saxophonist

Clifford Thornton
cornetb.1936

Fred Lonberg-Holm
cellob.1962

Peter Brötzmann
woodwinds1941 - 2023
The lengthy "Waiting for the Other Shoe to Drop" finds McPhee intermingling his alto wail with Lonberg-Holm's lacquered glissandi and grainy chunks, buoyed by stuttering time. A few flatted remarks later and the trio has entered a more spacious realm that is no less high-octane, subtonal scrapes and metal-against-membrane a raucous commentary on McPhee's sweetly keening alto. Metronomic toms offer close-knit support for multiphonics and droning sinews in one of the piece's most compelling sections, Zerang expounding on Middle Eastern and martial statements in an unaccompanied spot that stands in robust relief against the trio's down-and-dirty energy. Selected and unselected cymbal clatter flash throughout much of "The Why Knot" as the trio imbibes in glitchy, skronking motion. Scraped metal, ponticello bowing and seasick knob-twisting make up the canvas of "Hmmm (for Maryanne Amacher)," as McPhee's alto organically snakes through the proceedings.
The contrast between electro-acoustic noise and the steeped traditionalism of McPhee's arsenal makes for a fascinating approachthat said, Zerang and Lonberg-Holm have a knack for imparting personality to even the most abstract sound construction.

Lark Uprising
Multi-Kulti
2010
Polish reedman Mikolaj Trzaska has drawn an American connection for many years, working with figures like trumpeter

Lester Bowie
trumpet1941 - 1999

Ken Vandermark
saxophoneb.1964
While all of the players here are extremely well-respected improvisers in Europe and elsewhere, it would be a stretch to call Ircha a vehicle for soloists in the traditional, jazz-based sense. The music is far more textural in its import, as the finely orchestrated opener, "Ant-Hill Builder," testifies in somber, dusky tones that join in tight dissonance and Bill Dixon-like sway. Deep and burnished bass clarinet unfurls in popped accents, granting a jovial bounce to reverent grays and browns before merging into polyphonic varied moods. Zimpel's taragato is anthemic and wistful duetting with harsher bass clarinet warble, and the contrast in character is striking.
The pieces segue as a suite from "City Shepherds" onward, clattering pads dawning in a multiplicity of purred breath and ebbing, choppy beats. "Sleeping Deep in the Moss" is a filmic vignette, sparse, high and lonesome and calling to mind the wail of an English folksong, from which a collective banshee cry arises in the closing minute. A loping head-bob characterizes "Swampquake," becoming ever more fractured until the quintet splays out into a landscape of high and low harmonics.
Lark Uprising is a beautiful record and a unique onethough it centers on the reed family, Ircha is far more textural and ceases to be a mere "reed quintet" rather quickly. In this regard, the music is akin to the best work of Rova or the

World Saxophone Quartet
band / ensemble / orchestraTracks and Personnel
Blue Chicago Blues
Tracks: Truth in the Abstract Blues; Cerulean Mood Swing; Requiem for an Empty Heart; I Love You Too Little Baby; The Shape of Blues To Come; Legend of the Three Blind Moose.
Personnel: Ingebrigt Haker Flaten, bass; Joe McPhee, tenor saxophone.
Synchronicity
Tracks: Waiting for the Other Shoe to Fall; The Why Not; Hmmm (for Maryanne Amacher); Hndrx 9-18-70.
Personnel: Joe McPhee: alto saxophone and alto clarinet; Fred Lonberg-Holm, cello and electronics; Michael Zerang: percussion.
Lark Uprising
Tracks: Ant-Hill Builder; City Shepherds; Sleeping deep in the Moss; Swampquake; Sparrows in Pentagon.
Personnel: Mikolaj Trzaska: alto and bass clarinet; Joe McPhee: alto clarinet; Michal Gorczynski: bass clarinet; Pawel Szamburski: clarinet and bass clarinet; Waclaw Zimpel: clarinet, bass clarinet and tarogato.
Tags
Joe McPhee
Multiple Reviews
Clifford Allen
United States
dominic duval
Jay Rosen
Ingebrigt Haker Flaten
Fred Anderson
Gary Peacock
Sunny Murray
Byron Morris
Clifford Thornton
Fred Lonberg-Holm
Peter Brotzmann
Lester Bowie
Ken Vandermark
World Saxophone Quartet
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