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Unconventional Instruments


Carla Bley
piano1938 - 2023

Egberto Gismonti
guitarb.1947

Nils Petter Molvaer
trumpetb.1960
Looking at the presence of unusual instruments in jazz requires that we either significantly limit the body of existing work or break with the arbitrary "jazz" label. The latter is a complicated and sometimes controversial topic. Alto saxophonist

Gary Bartz
saxophone, altob.1940

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
Instrumental staples of early jazz, such as the banjo, violin, tuba, woodblock, and pedal cymbal, became rarities when modern jazz was still in its infancy. Relatively early in contemporary jazz, regardless of the sub-genre, one could safely expect to see reeds, brass, guitar, piano, bass, and percussion in varying combinations. But even from the relatively early days of jazz, some artists swam against the current. As a child,

Fats Waller
piano1904 - 1943

Jimmy Smith
organ, Hammond B31925 - 2005

Rahsaan Roland Kirk
woodwinds1935 - 1977

Sun Ra
piano1914 - 1993

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

A Monastic Trio
(Impulse!, 1968)
After

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Pharoah Sanders
saxophone, tenor1940 - 2022

Rashied Ali
drums1935 - 2009

Jimmy Garrison
bass, acoustic1934 - 1976

Alice Coltrane
piano1937 - 2007

Dorothy Ashby
harp1932 - 1996

The Hermetic Organ
(Tzadik Records, 2012)
The Hermetic Organ is a single live improvisation on the Aeolian-Skinner pipe organ at St. Paul's Chapel at Columbia University. This type of organ was primarily built for cathedrals and university chapels like those of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine and Cornell University's Sage Chapel.

John Zorn
saxophone, altob.1953

Nate Wooley
trumpetb.1974

Courage: The Atlantic Recordings
(Rhino, 2006)
As unlikely as it would seem for a bagpipe player, the late

Rufus Harley
woodwinds1936 - 2006

Eric Gale
guitar, electric1938 - 1994

Richard Tee
keyboards1943 - 1993

Sonny Stitt
saxophone1924 - 1982

William Parker
bassb.1952

Carve
(Innova Records, 2017)
The bassoon rarely makes an appearance outside of the orchestral setting though it has found a place in jazz recordings dating back to

Paul Whiteman
composer / conductor1890 - 1967

Chick Corea
piano1941 - 2021

Dana Jessen
bassoonb.1983
Jessen is the founder of Splinter Reeds, a reed quintet, and has performed with

Anthony Braxton
woodwindsb.1945

Peter Brötzmann
woodwinds1941 - 2023

Duo
(ILK Music, 2016)
The kora is the traditional instrument of griots in West Africa. As part of the centuries-old oral tradition of the region, music for the instrument was not written until the twentieth century. The twenty-one-string lute/harp doesn't neatly fit in a single instrument category, sometimes sounding like a harp, sometimes like a guitar. Despite coming to the difficult instrument later in life, Dawda Jobareth is considered one of the best kora players in the world. On Duo he is paired with Danish percussionist

Stefan Pasborg
drumsb.1974
Pasborg's jazz bona fides are impressive. He counts projects with

Miroslav Vitous
bassb.1947

Ellery Eskelin
saxophone, tenorb.1959

Tim Berne
saxophone, altob.1954

Palle Danielsson
bass, acoustic1946 - 2024

Michael Formanek
bass, acousticb.1958

Tomasz Stańko
trumpet1942 - 2018

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979

Don Cherry
trumpet1936 - 1995

Albert Ayler
saxophone, tenor1936 - 1970

Kj?lvatn
(ECM, 2016)
The significance of the Hardanger Fiddlea homespun Norwegian variation of the violinis that while it is played on four strings, as a similar string instrument would be, it has four or five additional strings under the fingerboard, which vibrate during playing. Though its use has been limited in modern music,
Nils Økland
violinDespite a crafty groove, "Mali" opens the collection in a Celtic vein, and while not a reel, it is up-tempo and infectious. "Undergrunn," in sharp contrast, is a beautifully melancholy piece, as is the title track with Mats Eilertsen's bass dictating the mood. Darker still is the ominous "Drev," where Rolf-Erik Nylstr?m's saxophone rumbles and the ominous "Puls" with H?kon M?rch Stene's undercurrent of booming percussion joining Eilertsen. "Bl? Harding" evokes the Scottish Highlands thanks to Sigbjorn Apeland's harmonium and ?kland on the fiddle.

Hawniyaz
(Harmonia Mundi, 2016)
Hawniyaz runs just under one hour with five long compositions in the vein of improvised Islamic music known as "mugham." The pieces blend this tradition and its fusion alternative, mugham jazz (Azerbaijani jazz). " data-original-title="" title="">Kayhan Kalhor is best known as a member of Yo-Yo Ma's Silk Road Ensemble and has had a number of his compositions for that group nominated for Grammy Awards. Kalhor is also a co-founder of the ensembles Dastan and Ghazal, the latter specializing in a blend of Persian and Indian improvisations. His instrument, the kamancheh, is sometimes referred to as a "spiked fiddle." It is common in Central Asia and dates back to the eleventh century. With three stringstwo steel and one brassthe wood-body instrument pivots on a spike to meet the bow and mimic a range of sounds from that of the human voice to the viola.
A global cadre of improvisers surrounds Kalhor. Azerbaijani jazz pianist and composer Salman Gambarov has played jazz clubs and festivals throughout the world and has the most solidly defined background in the jazz genre. However, he experiments with numerous less-identifiable hybrids. German-born, of Kurdish descent, Cem?l Qo?gir? plays the tenb?r, a long-necked member of the lute family and he is renowned for his experimental approach to the instrument. "Malan Barkir-Bêr?vanê" comes close to jazz improvisation, while "Xidire min" and the closing piece, "Ehmedo-Ez reben Im" are uncategorizable amalgams of classical, folk, and jazz elements. Hawniyaz is a striking album with a very different approach; it is intelligent, accessible, and compelling.

Accordion & Voice
(Important Records, 2014)
The late composer and multi-instrumentalist

Pauline Oliveros
accordion1932 - 2016

Roscoe Mitchell
saxophoneb.1940

Susie Ibarra
percussionb.1970

Connie Crothers
piano1941 - 2016

Wadada Leo Smith
trumpetb.1941
Accordion & Voice consists of two extended compositions, "Horse Sings from Cloud" and "Rattlesnake Mountain," each clocking in at slightly over twenty-two minutes. Oliveros described these pieces as musical proxies for meditation, but that may imply that they are principally drone-based. While that is a dominant component of these works, Oliveros' accordion adds layers of complexity and texture that push these compositions beyond any singular effect. A mash-up of

Brian Eno
synthesizerb.1948

Nils Petter Molvaer
trumpetb.1960
"Horse Sings from Cloud" opens Accordion & Voice with an amalgamation of acoustic playing and electronic processing; it's a technique that cultivates Oliveros' unique vision. She uses a customized accordion of her conception with a large sound chamber, multiple processors, pitch-blending pedals, and an extended bass range. In Oliveros' hands, the mammoth instrument can create acoustic effects beyond the instrument's normal expectations and mutually exclusive of the accompanying electronics where that is her desired effect. The result is a work of surprising harmonic richness and texture. "Rattlesnake Mountain" is a more spartan piece, but Oliveros precisely plots movement and density around a structured core. Her construction results in plush patterns and alternating rhythms.

Domains
(Evil Clown, 2017)
The AquaSonic waterphone is a type of dissonant acoustic tuned idiophone consisting of a stainless steel resonator bowl with a cylindrical neck and bronze rods of different lengths and diameters around the bowl's rim. The resonator often contains a small amount of water, giving the waterphone an otherworldly sound. Invented in the 1960s, it most often appears in soundtrack recordings such as Poltergeist, The Matrix, and Star Trek: The Motion Picture.
David Peck (aka PEK) founded the Leap of Faith collective twenty years ago in Cambridge, MA. Ranging from trio to full orchestra, Leap of Faith is known for including both conventional jazz instruments and those such as the tarota, sheng, chau gong, plate gong; daiko, depending on the project dan-mo, englephone, tank bells; glockenspiel, and many other objects. In all the dozens of Leap of Faith releases, the one constant is

Glynis Lomon
cello
Bill Dixon
trumpet1925 - 2010

Jimmy Lyons
saxophone, alto1933 - 1986

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018

Lawrence "Butch" Morris
cornet1947 - 2013

William Parker
bassb.1952

Joe Morris
bass, acousticb.1955
Like all Leap of Faith recordings, Domains challenges orthodox beliefs and preconceived ideas about composing and performing. Equal parts noise and melody, the album furthers the process of collective improvisation, or as PEK prefers to call it, pure improvisation. By the leader's admission, Domains is ..." demanding music with a limited total audience...."

Exosphere
(Creative Sources Recordings, 2017)
That most popular of instruments lumped in with the daxophone, rachet, and serpent? In the hands and mind of Portuguese native

Abdul Moimême
guitar, electricb.1959
Exosphere was recorded live at The Church of Santa Engrácianow the Pante?o Nacionala 17th-century monument in Lisbon. The music can't be described in literal terms, nor is it meant to be. Moimême has developed a method of making reverberation into an instrument that can stand alone. As a narrative Exosphere is allegorical and conversant, always leading to another destination but never being obvious about where Moimême intends to set down. The artist travels through backdrops that are only familiar enough to invite a double-take, a bit of misperception about the source of a sound or the direction it is coming from. There is some intangible quality to Moimême's composition that makes one want to listen repeatedly. Exosphere is an extraordinarily unique and highly enjoyable album.
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