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RED Trio & Celebration Band: Suite 10 Years Anniversary
By
Rodrigo Pinheiro
pianoHernâni Faustino
bass, acoustic
Gabriel Ferrandini
drumsb.1986

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980

Paul Bley
piano1932 - 2016

Howard Riley
pianob.1943
As a departure from the improvised norm, each member brought a chart for interpretation with a subset of the assembled company. Working with invited guests has been a fruitful tactic for the outfit, which maintains its identity while at the same time expanding its emotional reach, resulting in Empire (NoBusiness, 2011) and Summer Skyshift (Clean Feed, 2016) with British saxophonist

John Butcher
saxophoneb.1954

Mattias Ståhl
vibraphoneb.1971

Rodrigo Amado
saxophone, tenorb.1964

Luis Vicente
trumpetEach piece utilizes a different but overlapping cast, and each uses them in slightly different ways, revealing varying approaches to the conundrum of how to organize a large group of improvisers. While the numbers directed by Pinheiro and Faustino most resemble the RED Trio writ large, Ferrandini's contribution points more towards some of his solo dates, such as the sort of moody, carefully calibrated terrain investigated on Volupias (Clean Feed, 2019).
Pinheiro's half-hour opening, "Corrente," presents a seamless series of instrumental combinations in quick-witted interplay. It begins with tinnitus level electronics from Carlos Santos which develop into a tangle of string plucks, sorties and taps from the threesome of Faustino, violist

Ernesto Rodrigues
violab.1959
Faustino's 42-minute "Ditirambo" unfolds in an episodic succession of small group interactions, with the first nine minutes devoted to the RED Trio alone, albeit initially distributed in unusual formation. The cut opens with bass and piano strikes set amid space, inaugurating a drum solo which gradually gathers momentum and mass like a boulder tumbling down a hillside, demonstrating once again Ferrandini's tremendous talent as an improvising percussionist.
Pinheiro adds percussive dampened piano and, suddenly, the trio is in glorious spate before being augmented by Jacinto's wavering cello. Butcher is at the heart of several memorable moments, notably when his grasshopper chirping soprano saxophone is engaged in triple-pronged conversation by Fala Maram's trombone and
Sei Miguel
trumpetFerrandini's 28-minute "Mais Vale" provides a striking contrast to the other two works, drawing on his interest in electronics, composition and noise. The voice of electric bassist Miguel Abreu, a pronounced feature in a doomy atmospheric-laden dirge, will probably prove the litmus test for many listeners. After a terrific start comprising slowly modulating piano tolling, which brings to mind Morton Feldman, Ferrandini marshals his band at a controlled simmer. The slow procession unfolds for glinting vibraphone, flinty cello picking and a buzzy circular-breathed saxophone squawk. But even though he has considerable firepower at his disposal, in the form of the twin tenors of Amado and " data-original-title="" title="">José Pedro Sousa, he ensures that the needle never flickers into the red.
With such disparate centrifugal forces at play, there is no guarantee the band will continue as a unit but, while awaiting any further reunion, this winning set will more than suffice. ">
Track Listing
Corrente; Mais Vale; Ditirambo.
Personnel
Additional Instrumentation
Sei Miguel: trumpet (3); Luis Vicente: trumpet (1); Fala Mariam: trombone (3); John Butcher: tenor, soprano saxophones (1, 3); Pedro Sousa: tenor saxophone (2); Rodrigo Amado: tenor saxophone (2); Nuno Torres: alto saxophone (1); Ernesto Rodrigues: viola (1); Ricardo Jacinto: cello (3); Miguel Mira: cello (2); Mattias St?hl: vibraphone; Carlos Santos: electronics (1, 3); Miguel Abreu: voice, electric bass (2); David Maranha: percussion (2).
Album information
Title: Suite 10 Years Anniversary | Year Released: 2021 | Record Label: NoBusiness Records
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