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The Fire, Regardless


Elton Dean
saxophone1945 - 2006

Mike Osborne
saxophone, alto1941 - 2007

Soft Machine
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1966
Alan Wakeman
saxophoneb.1947
After he left the band, Dean managed to maintain the punningly-named band Ninesensewhich, perhaps unsurprisingly, consisted of nine pieces. In a way not dissimilar to pianist
Chris McGregor
b.1936Brotherhood of Breath
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1969

Harry Beckett
flugelhorn1935 - 2010
Situated on Oxford Street in London, the 100 Club was a fixture on the circuit even back in 1979, and many of the names of the day worked there. On the night of March 5th of that year, Ninesense was captured for posterity on a cassette, and despite Reel supremo Michael King's audio restoration work, the set is marred a little by the fact that pianist

Keith Tippett
piano1947 - 2020
Such are the vagaries of making improvised music for a living that, at this time, musicians were relatively blessed in having, in Britain, a gig circuit which took in colleges and small clubsin short, small venues for essentially minority music. This was, of course, thanks in no small part to the work of a handful of committed individuals. This, in combination with a level of public funding for jazz above the negligible, made for a potent wider European scene which, with the release of both the Dean and the Osborne sets, becomes further enriched decades after the event.
One of those committed individuals is George West, the founder of Birmingham Jazz, an organization that started out in England's second city in 1976 and which is remarkably still fulfilling the same function, namely the promotion of live music. The Mike Osborne trio set we're now blessed with was the third concert the organization was responsible for setting up. Osborne, a man whose alto sax work can be nominally equated with that of both

Jackie McLean
saxophone, alto1932 - 2006

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

Louis Moholo-Moholo
drums1940 - 2025

Tony Levin
bassb.1946
Despite a vigorous albeit small live scene it was left to labels such as Ogun to document the music.

Graham Collier
composer / conductor1937 - 2011
The past, then, is a potent and inspiring place which, in defiance of the cliché, is not so much a foreign country as it is a place where a few individualspromoters, producers and others, as well as the musicians themselvescould wield power and have influence out of all proportion to their negligible numbers.
Tags
The Moment's Energy
Nic Jones
Elton Dean
Mike Osborne
Soft Machine
Alan Wakeman
Chris McGregor
Brotherhood of Breath
Harry Beckett
Keith Tippett
Jackie McLean
Ornette Coleman
Louis Moholo
Tony Levin
Graham Collier
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