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Gary Burton: Seven Songs for Quartet and Chamber Orchestra
By
Michael Gibbs
tromboneb.1937
The result is an album unlike any other in Burton's recorded work, and that includes everything that's followed, right up to Guided Tour (Mack Avenue, 2013). Amidst Burton's lengthy discography (nearly sixty as a leader/co-leader and literally hundreds as a guest) his tenure with ECMfrom his 1972 debut with

Chick Corea
piano1941 - 2021

Carla Bley
piano1938 - 2023
Seven Songs' overdue first-time CD release as part of ECM's seven-disc Re:solutions series, on CDfour for the first time and one previously only available for a limited time in Japanvinyl and high resolution digital formats, only serves to emphasize just how unorthodox Burton had become by that time. A staggering instrumentalist with a reputation for solos of instant perfection and stunning construction, he may not have been a prolific writer, but he always chose his source material well. Some of Seven Songs' compositions, all by Gibbs with the exception of bassist

Steve Swallow
bassb.1940
Placed in the collaborative context of a quartet and chamber orchestraBurton's group also including Swallow, perennially underappreciated guitarist

Mick Goodrick
guitar1945 - 2022
The opening "Nocturne Vulgaire is more contemporary classicism than jazzthe entire album an early example of the label's aversion to stylistic pigeonholing. Acting as an abstruse fanfare, Burton finally enters two minutes in, at first with the orchestra, but gradually going a cappella, his dark-hued and spare segue into "Arise, Her Eyes" so subtle as to be almost imperceptible; by the time Swallow engages and the strings re-enter, acting largely as response to Burton's call, the bassist's familiar theme seems suddenly just there.
Elsewhere, the entire quartet integrates with the orchestra more fully. On the appropriately pulsing "Throb," Swallow and Seibs keep things subtle until Burton begins his solo. Still, even as it evolves, with Goodrick's bright-edged chordal support turning to contrapuntal linear foil for Burton when the orchestra reenters, the quartet's restraint is both admirable and exactly what's required. It's a quality that not only defines the quartet's work throughout the set, but the recording as a whole, even though there are plenty of notable solos from Burton, Swallow and Goodrick, while Seibs' delicate but ideal support makes his ultimate disappearance from the scene a real curiosity.
Burton would continue to source Gibbs' music on subsequent recordingsin particular on 1974's Ring (ECM), which includes two tunes ("Tunnel of Love" and "Unfinished Sympathy") that Gibbs would subsequently release under his own name on his superb 1975 recording, The Only Chrome Waterfall Orchestra (Bronze, 1975). But Seven Songs for Quartet and Chamber Orchestra remains a captivating anomaly in both Burton and Gibbs' careers, and its release as part of ECM's Re:solutions series only serves to highlight why. ">
Track Listing
Nocturne Vulgaire / Arise, Her Eyes; Throb; By Way of a Preface; Phases; The Rain Before It Falls; Three.
Personnel
Gary Burton
vibraphoneGary Burton: vibraharp; Michael Goodrick: guitar; Steve Swallow: bass; Ted Seibs: drums; members of the NDR-Symphony Orchestra, Hamburg, conducted by Michael Gibbs.
Album information
Title: Seven Songs for Quartet and Chamber Orchestra | Year Released: 2014 | Record Label: ECM Records
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