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Ivo Perelman: Reed Rapture in Brooklyn
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Ivo Perelman
saxophone, tenorb.1961
Perelman's story is one of immersion in the creative process, one that begins in his native Brazil's folk music, where he studied classical guitar before turning to the saxophone. Moving to the United States, he briefly attended the Berklee College of Music before blazing his own path. His investigations led him to the music of

Albert Ayler
saxophone, tenor1936 - 1970

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

William Parker
bassb.1952

Matthew Shipp
pianob.1960

Mat Maneri
violab.1969

Hank Roberts
cellob.1954

Mark Feldman
violinWith Reed Rapture in Brooklyn, he invites twelve reed musicians (various saxophones and clarinets) from different generations

Joe Lovano
drumsb.1952

Tim Berne
saxophone, altob.1954

David Murray
saxophone, tenorb.1955

Lotte Anker
saxophoneb.1958

James Carter
multi-instrumentalistb.1969

Vinny Golia
woodwindsb.1946

Jon Irabagon
saxophone
Joe McPhee
woodwindsb.1939

Roscoe Mitchell
saxophoneb.1940

Colin Stetson
woodwinds
Dave Liebman
saxophoneb.1946

Ken Vandermark
saxophoneb.1964
Perelman's meeting with Joe Lovano, who is perhaps the most traditional of the players in this collection, results in fourteen relatively short performances. Joe, son of bebop legend Tony "Big T" Lovano in Cleveland, Ohio is currently an ECM Records artist. His sound today is eternally sweet-toned. If, though, one is to follow his career back to its early days and his work with

Paul Motian
drums1931 - 2011

John Scofield
guitarb.1951
The alto saxophonist Tim Berne maintains an air of intransigency here, and Perelman is fine with it. Almost pleased. Berne, an avowed disciple of

Henry Threadgill
woodwindsb.1944
The early careers of both Perelman and David Murray were almost interchangeable. Both found their footing in the music of Albert Ayler. Like Perelman this century, Murray's recording output was prolific and overflowing in the late 1980s and 90s. He was a founding member of the World Saxophone Quartet and has since become an elder statesman of jazz. Here he sets aside his tenor saxophone for a bass clarinet. The sounds alternate between moody and exuberant. Murray's sound mostly maintains the bottom with rousing post-

Eric Dolphy
woodwinds1928 - 1964
Danish saxophonist Lotte Anker might be Perelman's doppelg?nger. A master of multiple saxophones, including the tenor, she sticks to alto and soprano here. Maybe the reason being a desire not to replicate Perelman's tenor. The saxophonists engage in a continuous intertwining of sound, wrapping lines around lines. This creates frayed edges that are themselves crisscrossed and woven back into this dialogue.
Ken Vandermark, like Murray, is another tenor saxophonist that sets aside his main instrument for a clarinet. While also proficient with the larger bass clarinet, he sticks to the straight black stick here. His sound calls to mind the abstractions of

Jimmy Giuffre
clarinet1921 - 2008
Unlike all the music recorded in Brooklyn, Perelman traveled to Wisconsin to capture this duo with Roscoe Mitchell. The legendary saxophonist was a cofounder of both the Art Ensemble of Chicago and the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM). His early explorations in solo performance and his expansion of singular expression laid the foundation for the acceptance of Perelman's sound and career. Mitchell chose to stick with just one horn here, the bass saxophone, and his choice controls the affair. Perelman's usual rapid delivery is restricted by Mitchell's deliberate approach. The space opened up between players and between notes is in itself entrancing.
Outside of

Anthony Braxton
woodwindsb.1945

Vinny Golia
woodwindsb.1946
If backyard baseball is a sport of fathers and sons, football is all about brothers. Ivo Perelman and Jon Irabagon play down after down of football in their encounter. Their seven tracks are an exploration of the limits and capabilities of the saxophone. Irabagon chooses two, the sopranino and slide soprano. These atypical saxophones make unconventional sounds and inspire both musicians to explore new and often dizzying heights. The strange and unusual blossoms into the beautiful here.
The calling card for Joe McPhee should read, "plays well with others." The octogenarian multi-instrumentalist has an immense discography performing with everyone from

Evan Parker
saxophone, sopranob.1944

Steve Lacy
saxophone, soprano1934 - 2004
Colin Stetson's contrabass saxophone sound is analogous to an eighteen-wheeler truck. It is big, no it is a huge rig. With it, the saxophonist has been creating fascinating soundscapes, oftentimes solo. He can conjure textures other musicians require a small cadre of partners and engineers to fabricate. Stetson brings these sounds into Perelman's orbit, generating thunderous reverberating tones, growls, clicks and pops. The gravity of Stetson inspires Perelman to both take flight in the upper registers of his tenor and mine its bottom.
The eternally underrated saxophonist Vinny Golia arrives at this session with the tiny soprillo saxophone, plus a clarinet and a basset horn, which is also in the clarinet family. Had this recording been near his West Coast home, he might have brought another thirty or so instruments. He prefers to rotate horns frequently, yet here Golia settles for changing approach. There are call-and-response passages, high intensity sprints, bluesy interludes, chirping birds, and the musical equivalent of haiku poems.
The encounter with Dave Liebman, who sticks with soprano saxophone, is the most structured of the meetings collected here. The saxophonist has an inherent way of organizing sounds, even in a purely improvised setting. That is not to say Liebman relies on a chestful of musical tropes, more like he is fluent in multiple languages and can switch comfortably into any vernacular he selects. New listeners to the world of Ivo Perelman might want to begin here as the eleven shortish tracks with Liebman are the most accessible. ">
Track Listing
Ivo - Lovano - 01; Ivo - Lovano - 02; Ivo - Lovano - 03; Ivo - Lovano - 04; Ivo - Lovano - 05; Ivo - Lovano - 06; Ivo - Lovano - 07; Ivo - Lovano - 08; Ivo - Lovano - 09; Ivo - Lovano - 10; Ivo - Lovano - 11; Ivo - Lovano - 12; Ivo - Lovano - 13; Ivo - Lovano - 14; Ivo - Berne - 01; Ivo - Berne - 02; Ivo - Berne - 03; Ivo - Berne - 04; Ivo - Berne - 05; Ivo - Murray - 01; Ivo - Murray - 02; Ivo - Murray - 03; Ivo - Murray - 04; Ivo - Murray - 05; Ivo - Murray - 06; Ivo - Murray - 07; Ivo - Murray - 08; Ivo - Murray - 09; Ivo - Murray - 10; Ivo - Anker - 01; Ivo - Anker - 02; Ivo - Anker - 03; Ivo - Anker - 04; Ivo - Anker - 05; Ivo - Anker - 06; Ivo - Anker - 07; Ivo - Anker - 08; Ivo - Vandermark - 01; Ivo - Vandermark - 02; Ivo - Vandermark - 03; Ivo - Vandermark - 04; Ivo - Vandermark - 05; Ivo - Vandermark - 06; Ivo - Vandermark - 07; Ivo - Vandermark - 08; Ivo - Vandermark - 09; Ivo - Vandermark - 10; Ivo - Vandermark - 11; Ivo - Vandermark - 12; Ivo - Mitchell - 01; Ivo - Mitchell - 02; Ivo - Mitchell - 03; Ivo - Carter- 01; Ivo - Carter- 02; Ivo - Carter- 03; Ivo - Carter- 04; Ivo - Carter - 05; Ivo - Carter - 06; Ivo - Carter - 07; Ivo - Carter - 08; Ivo - Carter - 09; Ivo - Irabagon - 01; Ivo - Irabagon - 02; Ivo - Irabagon - 03; Ivo - Irabagon - 04; Ivo - Irabagon - 05; Ivo - Irabagon - 06; Ivo - Irabagon - 07; Ivo - McPhee - 01; Ivo - McPhee - 02; Ivo - McPhee - 03; Ivo - McPhee - 04; Ivo - McPhee - 05; Ivo - McPhee - 06; Ivo - McPhee - 07; Ivo - Stetson - 01; Ivo - Stetson - 02; Ivo - Stetson - 03; Ivo - Stetson - 04; Ivo - Stetson - 05; Ivo - Stetson - 06; Ivo - Golia - 01; Ivo - Golia - 02; Ivo - Golia - 03; Ivo - Golia - 04; Ivo - Golia - 05; Ivo - Golia - 06; Ivo - Golia - 07; Ivo - Golia - 09; Ivo - Golia - 09; Ivo - Golia - 10; Ivo - Golia - 11; Ivo - Liebman - 01; Ivo - Liebman - 02; Ivo - Liebman - 03; Ivo - Liebman - 04; Ivo - Liebman - 05; Ivo - Liebman - 06; Ivo - Liebman - 07; Ivo - Liebman - 08; Ivo - Liebman - 09; Ivo - Liebman - 10; Ivo - Liebman - 11.
Personnel
Ivo Perelman
saxophone, tenorDavid Murray
saxophone, tenorJoe Lovano
drumsJames Carter
multi-instrumentalistTim Berne
saxophone, altoRoscoe Mitchell
saxophoneJoe McPhee
woodwindsVinny Golia
woodwindsJon Irabagon
saxophoneKen Vandermark
saxophoneColin Stetson
woodwindsLotte Anker
saxophoneAlbum information
Title: Reed Rapture in Brooklyn | Year Released: 2022 | Record Label: Mahakala Music
Tags
Parker Matthew Shipp Mat Maneri Hank Roberts Mark Feldman joe lovano Tim Berne David Murray Lotte Anker James Carter Vinny Golia Jon
Irabagon Joe McPhee Roscoe Mitchell Colin Stetson Dave Liebman Ken Vandermark Paul Motian John Scofield Henry Threadgill Eric Dolphy Jimmy Giuffre anthony braxton evan parker Steve Lacy
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