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Loose Tubes: Loose Tubes: Sad Afrika
By
S?d Afrika
Lost Marble
2012
With virtually none of its discography available on CDand the only one, Open Letter (EG, 1988), shamefully out-of-printit's no mean accomplishment that Britain's Loose Tubes has remained, if not exactly legendary, then at least firmly etched into the minds of those aware of them. Of course, any group that was the breeding ground for a number of now-significant British jazzstersnot limited to, but including keyboardist

Django Bates
pianob.1960

Iain Ballamy
saxophone, tenorb.1964

Mark Lockheart
saxophone
John Parricelli
guitar, electric
Martin France
drumsb.1964
Given Dancing on Frith Street's vinyl-styled length (just shy of 47 minutes), there were hopes that more from this three-night run would ultimately make it into the world. There's good news and there's good news: not only does S?d Afrika add another nearly 48 minutes to the amount of music easily available, but de facto Loose Tubes keeper-of-the-archives Bates (never leader; Loose Tubes was, indeed, an egalitarian group, all the more remarkable for its size) suggested, earlier this year at the 2012 Trondheim Jazz Festival, that there could well be more to come.
In the meantime, between Frith Street and S?d Afrika, a good chunk of material from its studio releases can be heard in the live setting that was clearly the best way to experience Loose Tubes, but there's some precious new material to be found as well, though the preponderance of S?d Afrika comes from Delightful Precipice (four tracks) and Open Letter (two). Only flautist

Eddie Parker
b.1959
Steve Watts
bass, acousticb.1961

Martin France
drumsb.1964

Bill Bruford
drumsb.1949
Elsewhere, the title track is a statement about the apartheid regime of South Africa which was still four years from falling in 1990, though there's nothing sad about Bates' set-opener. Instead, not unlike Norway's

Farmers Market
band / ensemble / orchestraThat Loose Tubes live is a greater experience than Loose Tubes in the studio is not because the group stretches the music out; surprisingly, given there are potentially 23 fine soloists to draw on for any tune, only Open Letter's "Sweet William" significantly exceeds the length of its studio counterpartand, even then, only by a couple more minutes. Instead, with dense, knotty and downright idiosyncratic charts that rock, swing, elegantly waltz and much, much moreall the while sounding effortlessly playfulit's clear that solo space is kept well within the music's defined contexts.
Still, interpretive freedom means plenty of boisterous interplay and fun being had throughout; even the between-song patter suggests a group having exactly as much fun as they should be entitled. At the conclusion of trumpeter

Chris Batchelor
trumpetLike its immediate predecessor, S?d Afrika is programmed, in length, for vinyl, even if it's not actually being offered in that format. A confluence of everything from

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Gil Evans
composer / conductor1912 - 1988

Carla Bley
piano1938 - 2023

Hermeto Pascoal
multi-instrumentalist1936 - 2025
Tracks: S?d Afrika; Exeter, King of Cities; Sunny; Mo Mhúirnín Bán; Delightful Precipice; Sosbun Brakk; Sweet Williams.
Personnel: Eddie Parker: flutes, voice (1, 5); Dai Pritchard: clarinets, voice (1, 5); Steve Buckley: saxophone, voice (1, 5); Iain Ballamy: saxophone, voice (1, 5); Mark Lockheart: saxophone, voice (1, 5); Julian Nicholas: saxophone, voice (1, 5); Kenn Stubbs: saxophone, voice (1, 5); Lance Kelly: trumpet, voice (1, 5); Chris Batchelor: trumpet, voice (1, 5); Ted Emmett: trumpet, voice (1, 5); Paul Edmonds: trumpet, voice (1, 5); Noel Langley: trumpet, voice (1, 5); John Harborne: trombone, voice (1, 5); Steve Day: trombone, voice (1, 5); Paul Taylor: trombone, voice (1, 5); Richard Pywell: trombone, voice (1, 5); Ashley Slater: bass trombone, voice (1, 5); Dave Powell: tuba, voice (1, 5); Django Bates: keyboards, voice (1, 5); John Parricelli: guitar, voice (1, 5); Steve Watts: bass, voice (1, 5); Martin France: drums, voice (1, 5); Thebe Lipere: percussion, voice (1, 5). ">
Track Listing
S?d Afrika; Exeter, King of Cities; Sunny; Mo Mhúirnín Bán; Delightful Precipice; Sosbun Brakk; Sweet Williams.
Personnel
Eddie Parker: flutes, voice (1, 5); Dai Pritchard: clarinets, voice (1, 5); Steve Buckley: saxophone, voice (1, 5); Iain Ballamy: saxophone, voice (1, 5); Mark Lockheart: saxophone, voice (1, 5); Julian Nicholas: saxophone, voice (1, 5); Kenn Stubbs: saxophone, voice (1, 5); Lance Kelly: trumpet, voice (1, 5); Chris Batchelor: trumpet, voice (1, 5); Ted Emmett: trumpet, voice (1, 5); Paul Edmonds: trumpet, voice (1, 5); Noel Langley: trumpet, voice (1, 5); John Harborne: trombone, voice (1, 5); Steve Day: trombone, voice (1, 5); Paul Taylor: trombone, voice (1, 5); Richard Pywell: trombone, voice (1, 5); Ashley Slater: bass trombone, voice (1, 5); Dave Powell: tuba, voice (1, 5); Django Bates: keyboards, voice (1, 5); John Parricelli: guitar, voice (1, 5); Steve Watts: bass, voice (1, 5); Martin France: drums, voice (1, 5); Thebe Lipere: percussion, voice (1, 5).
Album information
Title: Loose Tubes: Sad Afrika | Year Released: 2012 | Record Label: Lost Marble
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