Home » Jazz Articles » Liner Notes » Paul Bley: Floater & Syndrome The Upright Piano Sessions Revisited
Paul Bley: Floater & Syndrome The Upright Piano Sessions Revisited
By
Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Oded Tzur
saxophone, tenorBley was a complex character. His singularly Delphic pianism, caught in its formative glory on these fifteen 1962-63 tracks, existed alongside, and despite, a mercilessly competitive approach to his bandmates, and parallel to Bley's simultaneous desire for them to break free of the piano trio's conventional top-down hierarchy (something Evans was in his on the Savoy albums Footloose! and Floater, his trio music had come a long way. Eight years at finishing schools on the West and East coasts, including a spell in Los Angeles championing

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015
Chief among the developments was a change in the type of material Bley chose to record. On his two earlier trio albumsIntroducing Paul Bley and Paul Bleymost of the pieces are standards or familiar items from the Great American Songbook. For the Savoy sessions, the tunes are mainly originals, some written by Bley, most by

Carla Bley
piano1938 - 2023
The Savoy sessions provide the first recorded evidence of Carla's impact on Paul's music. Bley, usually an expansive raconteur, said little about this himself, or about the impact of

Annette Peacock
vocals
Ethan Iverson
pianob.1973

George Russell
composer / conductor1923 - 2009
In a 2006 interview with All About Jazz, Bley, referring to an upcoming series of duo concerts with

Frank Kimbrough
piano1956 - 2020
"Attack is my main frame of reference," said Bley. "I love attack. It's rare. It used to be normal in the '50s and '60s. Destruction was one of the key tools to improvisation. It keeps the blood flowing and the brain turning." Contacted for a response, Kimbrough said, "I think the destruction he's talking about is just to make someone realize something that they haven't realized before."
If Kimbrough was right, then Bley was employing the same technique, minus the aggression, that

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979
Liner Notes copyright ? 2025 Chris May.
Floater & Syndrome The Upright Piano Sessions Revisited can be purchased here.
Contact Chris May at All About Jazz.
Chris May is a senior editor of All About Jazz. He was previously the editor of the pioneering magazine Black Music & Jazz Review, and more recently editor of the style / culture / history magazine Jocks & Nerds.
Track Listing
When Will The Blues Leave; Floater; Stereophrenic; The Circle With The Hole In The Middle; Around Again; Syndrome; Cousins; King Korn; Vashkar; Ballad No. 1; Ballad No. 2; Ballad No. 4; Turns.
Personnel
Album information
Title: Floater & Syndrome The Upright Piano Sessions Revisited | Year Released: 2025 | Record Label: Ezz-thetics
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
