soundstream

Composer/Performer Zeena Parkins announces the release of two multi-part compositions, inspired by discoveries she made combing through the Walter Benjamin archives in Berlin. “Past Turned Space” features virtuoso players William Winant/percussion and Brett Carson/keyboards navigating a set of vignettes, flickering in response to Benjamin’s intimate descriptions of childhood memories. “Dam Against the Spring Tide” is graced with an all-star band of composer/performers, including: Zeena Parkins/acoustic harp and electronics, Magda Mayas/prepared keyboards, Tony Buck/percussion, Laurent Bruttin/clarinets, Christian Kesten/voice, Matty Ostrowski/electronics, and special guest, Sebastian Roux/processing. All of these pieces reveal how colors, shapes, codes, scribbles, erasures, puzzles, wordplay, graphology, and imitation as a way of knowing, can be used to initiate musical processes, playing strategies, conversations and ultimately scores.

past turned space in 5 parts (1-5)
William Winant – vibraphone, crotales, harmonica
Brett Carson – piano, organ
Joan La Barbara – voice
Zeena Parkins – elbows on piano, field recordings

dam against the spring (6-10)
Laurent Bruttin – clarinets
Tony Buck – drums, orchestral percussion, objects
Christian Kesten – voice
Magda Mayas – piano, clavinet, objects
Matthew Ostrowski – electronics, processing
Zeena Parkins – acoustic harp
Sebastian Roux – electronic processing

We hear harp, electronics, piano, cello and percussion convene in clash and collusion, setting forth a dazzling array of sound and expression. Plains of disarticulation and misdirection are cut by moments of inextricable entanglement, where we hear discrete sounds fuse, instruments bleeding into one another, at times taking on the warp and weft of a companion. The recording is of an extraordinary performance of improvisational prowess by four musicians working at the very limits of their technical and expressive capacities.

Zeena Parkins: harp
Chris Brown: piano/electronics
William Winant: percussion
Ben Davis: cello

Triplicates is a series of improvisations between Zeena Parkins, playing her singular electric harp, and Jon Leidecker, aka Wobbly, playing an instrument that generates electrical feedback. Their outputs are routed to a series of simple listening devices, machines designed to sing along with the melodies they believe themselves to be hearing, although they are often fascinatingly wrong. It quickly becomes difficult to determine the boundaries of each participant’s contribution: acoustic source, electronic conductor, or triplicate.

“Not too long ago, harpist Zeena Parkins, alto-saxophonist Mette Rasmussen and drummer Ryan Sawyer gathered at a studio in Brooklyn to record their second record as Glass Triangle. Parkins describes the scenario as strange, a three-hour, early-morning session during which they had to work around another band’s recording set-up. “It shouldn’t have yielded results,” she says. “But magically it did!”
Granted, they had just spent three evenings sharpening their connection with a run at the Stone. If Blue and Sun-Lights is infused with magic – in this case, magic flows from a combination of skill, chemistry, luck and the x-factor of cosmic inspiration – it comes as no surprise.
Glass Triangle borrows its name from the work of sculptor Josiah McElheny and is fittingly sparklingly tactile. Blue and Sun-Lights refers to a hallucinogenic film by McElheny and Jeff Preiss, and like the first record, it is richly textured.The listener might feel an impossible urge to reach out and touch, to drag fingers through dense ripples of sound, or run hands over sharp, shining edges.
Where Glass Triangle immediately tossed the listener into the free jazz deep-end, Blue and Sun-Lights takes a moment to draw a few slow, percussive breaths. On opener “Earth O,” Sawyer’s snare shudders and Rasmussen’s sax sighs, as Parkins’ electric harp (which can sound like so many things) begins to interject, weaving voltaic jabs into a staticky futuristic landscape.
From there, these three very different voices push and pull at one-another, moving from lively, good natured argument to harmonious agreement and back again. In their own far-out, forward-facing way, they build a narrative tension that evokes the most thrilling mid-century film composers.
The pleasures here are myriad, sometimes clear and prismatic, sometimes heavily, bruisingly physical. Each listen, like magic, reveals something beautiful, surprising and new.” -Margaret Welsh

Zeena Parkins – electric harp/objects
Mette Rasmussen – sax/objects/voice
Ryan Sawyer – drums/objects

Recorded at Figure 8 Recording by Vishal Nyak
Mixed and mastered by Kato Hideki
Produced by Zeena Parkins
Cover photograph – Jeff Preiss
Book photograph – Image from the film “Portrait of a Library” by Jeff Preiss and Josiah McElheny
Design by William Schmiechen

What is Glass Triangle?

“A new formation voicing string, breath and bell, harp, horn and drum speaking sparkling messages and hand-written letters of a Chain of New Hopes, back and forth, from the past and future dreams of a world in which efficiency would not be and will not be, the way to justice. Read closely the new language in the titles of this first movement of Glass Triangle, utter them, enunciate them, out loud. Tickle the tongue, hear the rhythmic tone of your throat echoes: these will introduce you then to the way angles, lines, turns, returns, all crystalline, all vibrating, quiet sometimes, soft never, sharp and sweet, build a mountaintop of sun, ice, fog, rain, snow, sky, light, transmission and cosmic rays.” -Josiah McElheny, artist NYC, summer 2020

Zeena Parkins: electric harp
Mette Rasmussen : alto saxophone
Ryan Sawyer: percussion

Recorded at Thump Recording Studios June 19, 2019
Recorded by John Thayer
art:/photos/liners: Josiah McElheny

From the opener, “Hurricane Point,” you’re reminded of the Betty Davis quote from the 1950s movie All About Eve, “Fasten your seatbelts. It’s going to be a bumpy night.” Morris’ guitar shreds notes against the wall of rumbling bass and crush of battered drums. This opening salvo signals a take-no-prisoners session, or what Myles Boisen of Splatter Trio used to call, “club clearing music.”
As intense as it is, the inner workings retain the undiluted Joe Morris guitar sound. His unique “language” persists here, it’s just that he has turned his amp knob to max. The tracks remind us of Derek Bailey’s experiments with drum ‘n’ bass. Like Bailey, the hardcore aspects may draw you in, but if you stay, it’s for the musicianship.
Imagine Joe Morris playing with Napalm Death and you get an idea where we are. Morris fevered guitar on “Red Vision” invites Cretella to pattern his notes on the same pursuit and Parmelee’s drums give chase, too. This version of fast and furious leads to an exhausting endpoint. Finally, after six exhausting tracks and nearly one hour of music, “Lift” opens with a quiet drum solo and some intricate scattered bass (with thunder intact), then Morris perambulates his guitar over the lumpy terrain, precipitating sparks of energy and inciting his trio into a tsunami of sound. Glorious sound. – Mark Corroto

Drums – Dave Parmelee
Electric Bass – Chris Cretella
Guitar – Joe Morris

Recorded June 27, 2015 at Dimension Studios, Jamaica Plains, MA.

Produced by Joe Morris
Engineered and mixed by Joe Stewart
Mastered by Nick Lloyd
Photo Illustration by Dylan Morris

(…) This intersection of the newer Dutch swing and post- Downtown New York sound evidences a newly refreshed improvised music. Not free jazz, nor exactly free improvisation, the five pieces make mannerly and urbane connections. It’s difficult to define a leader for this quartet, maybe because so much is shared. “Brock” opens with Laubrock and Baars trading saxophone notes from the upper and lower registers until Rainey pushes the “go” button with his drumming. After a pause at the midway point, Henneman’s viola signals a slower tempo and an abandonment of all aggression. She opens “Rain” with a high-wire performance that calls for the dancing sticks of Rainey, Baars’ clarinet, and the bird-like calls of Laubrock’s soprano saxophone. The music develops as a piece of chamber music albeit never abandoning the heated flames of improvisation. Baars’ shakuhachi playing is mystical on “Tampere” and “Hen,” both pieces that gather momentum as improvised music, but coalesce as seemingly composed music. Such prestidigitation is evidence of music making at the highest levels.” –Mark Corroto **** allaboutjazz.com

Drums – Tom Rainey
Tenor Saxophone, Clarinet, Shakuhachi – Ab Baars
Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Ingrid Laubrock
Viola – Ig Henneman

Relative Pitch Records ‎– RPR1051, Wig ‎– 26
Produced in collaboration with Wig Records.
Recorded November 2, 2014 at Tampere Jazz Happening, Finland.

“The image on the cover says it all, a blast furnace exploding with elemental energy and heat. And it doesn’t take long for the music on Old Smoke, a live release that represents the first recorded collaboration between saxophonist Steve Baczkowski, bassist Brandon Lopez and drummer Chris Corsano, to reach astonishing peaks of fiery intensity. This is a trio not to be trifled with, on a single=minded pursuit of powerful free improvisation in its most uncompromising form.

Of the three musicians, Corsano is the unquestioned veteran, having released dozens of albums just since 2010, although his recording career began in earnest in the 1990s with frequent collaborations with saxophonist Paul Flaherty. He represents a bridge of sorts between the free jazz tradition and avant=garde and experimental rock, being just as comfortable working with Thurston Moore or Bill Orcutt as he is playing alongside Joe McPhee or Evan Parker. His partners on this release are quickly establishing their own reputations; Lopez has teamed with musicians such as Ivo Perelman, Dave Rempis and Peter Evans, while Baczkowski is a Buffalo-based multi-instrumentalist whose specialty is the baritone sax and whose previous work with Corsano has often included the like on minded iconoclastic guitarist Bill Nace.

As for the music here: it’s definitely not for the faint-hearted. With seemingly limitless stamina, Baczkowski is intent on extracting every available ounce of energy from each note he plays, and on tracks like “Steel Wind” and “Smoke Creek” he pushes his torrid phrases to the brink with manic abandon. He will take a fragment of an idea, or even a single note, and attack it repeatedly, eventually breaking it down to its core before seizing on another one and doing the same all over again. Sometimes he takes a drone-like approach, as on “Blast Furnace,” where he merges with Lopez’s swelling arco and Corsano’s steady pulse to create a hypnotic wall of sound. He uses a number of saxophones on the album, with his pile-driving baritone on “Iron Ore” and “Blast Furnace,” his keening soprano on “Open Hearth,” and what sounds to be his formidable tenor on “Steel Wind” and “Smoke Creek.” Regardless of the particular horn, however, Baczkowski wrestles mightily with his demons on each, looking for some possibility of redemption, or at least release, by the end of each cut.

Lopez and Corsano certainly keep pace with and complement Baczkowski’s relentless ferocity. Lopez’s deep, thunderous sound fuses well with Corsano’s waves of percussive power, providing the inexorable momentum needed to sustain Baczkowski’s most tempestuous bursts. There are brief respites here and there where things settle into temporary calm, before once again reaching incendiary fervor. It’s during these moments, interestingly, that Lopez and Corsano coax Baczkowski into a somewhat more jazz-inflected spirit. The tail end of “Bend in the Shore” is a case in point, with some soft-hued bluesy licks emerging from Baczkowski’s baritone; and “Steel Wind” allows Baczkowski to go into bop mode for a minute while Lopez and Corsano tease out a swinging rhythm behind him. But fleeting moments of tranquility are not what will draw fans of this music to this record. Unbridled, unyielding fury is what matters here; and there is more than enough of it to satisfy even the most demanding free-music enthusiasts.” -Troy Dostert, All About Jazz

Contrabass – Brandon Lopez
Drums – Chris Corsano
Saxophone – Steve Baczkowski

Recorded live at Hallwalls, in Buffalo, New York, on March 7th, 2018, by Bill Sack.
Mastered by Weasel Walter.
Executive producer: Kevin Reilly

“The record also makes plenty of room for each of the musicians’ individual strengths to emerge: Bynum is in especially fine form, with movement from lyrical beauty to pure abstraction and noise (just listen to his menacing growls on “Glowworm” as evidence); but Morris is also characteristically exceptional, whether offering prickly fragments or his patented scrapes, as he’s continually seeking ways to advance the dialogue. Reid’s relentless imagination leads her from chamber-like passages to motion-filled ostinato phrases that always possess compelling rhythmic energy; and Kitamura will be a revelation to those who haven’t yet encountered her unique brand of vocal improvisation, turning in an instant from subtle to spasmodic.” – Troy Dostert “All About Jazz”

Kyoko Kitamura – voice
Joe Morris – guitar
Tomeka Reid – cello
Taylor Ho Bynum – cornet, piccolo and bass trumpets

Recorded in December 22, 2016, at Firehouse 12 Studios, New Haven, Connecticut.

“Being perfectly aware that a trio featuring Joe Morris on guitar, Agustí Fernández on piano and Nate Wooley on trumpet can’t be, for an immanent reason connected to the mastery of the musicians, less than rewarding, my attention has instead been caught by the title of the album. Echoing and mixing several philosophical and scientific subjects it is, in my opinion, a brief and inspired description of some tendencies and paths sketched out in the compositions.” – Paolo Casertano “Free Jazz Blog”

Executive-Producer – Kevin Reilly & Mike Panico
Layout, Design – Anne Marcotty

Piano – Agustí Fernández
Guitar, Artwork – Joe Morris
Trumpet – Nate Wooley

Recorded, Mixed & Mastered By Nick Lloyd

Recorded July 14, 2011 at Firehouse 12, New Haven, Connecticut

‘Not’ finds the group beginning slowly, with Nelson creating aural knots via slow multi-phonic trilling while the rest of the group rustles and comes to life underneath. Lopez and Cleaver provide a busy linear pulse over which the increasingly intense sax passages and ringing vibe tones hover. The album’s centerpiece is the excellent ‘Now’ which builds from a near whisper. Cleaver’s percussive rustling and chimes engage in dialogue with Nicodemou’s vibes until Nelson and Lopez enter into the fray simultaneously with flat sax tones and arco glissandos.

All of this gradually increases in intensity with Cleaver building layers of percussion around Lopez’s sturdy bass thrum whilst Nicodemou lays down fantastically sympathetic patterns that linger somewhere between percussion and melody, opting for neither exclusively but filling in the open spaces in the music as necessitated. Nelson plays with a very muscular Evan Parker-esque character on this recording, producing his phrases in a variety of timbres. At around the 14 minute mark he discharges a roar that sends the dynamic of the group into another direction. The rhythm quickens and the playing increases in intensity.

Nicodemou’s vibes take on a pointillistic quality, racing with the drums as Cleaver goes into full octopus mode and Lopez keeps the monstrosity grounded with his gradually evolving repetition. The track winds down in intensity over the last several minutes before reducing down to a simmer, again driven by the Lopez’s grunting bass bow. ‘Again’ is an understated affair of low intensity aural potpourri. The quartet is fantastic here, listening and responding to each other’s playing, like a conversation where everyone is heard without anyone raising their voice. ‘Yet’ begins with a thumping pizzicato bass line accompanied by Lopez’s barely audible vocalizations which give the piece a dark ambience before the rest of the quartet joins in. Again, a fantastically understated piece that rewards close listening as the engagement and interplay between the performers is as good as it gets.” – Nicholas Metzger

Brandon Lopez: double bass
Matt Nelson: tenor saxophone
Andria Nicodemou: vibraphone
Gerald Cleaver: drums

“After listening to the album I was interested to find out that the improvised pieces were actually open compositions, with each piece seemingly providing a sonic structure or context for the players to explore, whilst apparently providing enough ‘instructions’ (however the ‘composed’ element was written) to keep the group sound wedded to a particular idea.” -Chris Haines, Free Jazz Blog

Out and unusual compositions from drummer Ben Hall and his sextet with Mick Dobday on electric piano & organ, Anthony Levin DEcanini on electronics, Ronnie Zawadi on percussion, John Dierker on reeds, Mike Khoury on viola & violin, and joined by Joe Morris on guitar, for 6 “Spines”, free compositions using odd compositional structures leading to superb solo and group playing. Each Spine presents a unique sonic world, from aggressive playing to abstract and sonically fascinating interludes, with performers extending their instruments or taking non-traditional approaches to each. The pacing of these Racehorses is unpredictable and inspired, leading the listener on a wild and unexpected journey, presenting a great cross-section of modern creative improv and territory uniquely belonging to Hall.

Electric Guitar – Joe Morris
Electric Piano, Organ – Mick Dobday
Electronics – Anthony Levin-Decanini
Executive-Producer – Kevin Reilly (4), Mike Panico
Percussion – Ronnie Zawadi
Percussion, Percussion [Trapset] – Ben Hall
Reeds – John Dierker
Viola, Violin – Mike Khoury

“”Below The Hull” pairs moisture and thumps, and “The Mended Lid” displays Morse code wind and head-high squeal in high speed discourse. When the pair do eventually resort to more “normal” sounding sax/drum interplay (“Sitting Still While the House Next Door Burns”), it comes as a surprise, another facet of their constructions. Turn the diamond in your fingers and listen to the the light dance.” – Jeph Jerman, Squid’s Ear

Recorded at AudioCue, in Berlin, Germany, on August 5th, 2017, by robin Robben.

Christine Abdelnour-alto saxophone
Chris Corsano-drums, slide clarinet

This recording follows their debut album, Geometry of Caves, released in 2018 from Relative Pitch Records. Seth Colter Walls of The New York Times called the quartet’s first album a “vibrant new recording”, Stereo Gum’s Phil Freeman described it as “hardcore improvised music” and Dusted Magazine wrote, “The foursome behind the fifty-minutes of freely improvised music is resolute in its acceptance of communal responsibility and creation…the work of four aces in the demanding craft of collective, instinctual improvisation.”

The same spirit of communal improvisation is apparent in the sophomore release, along with an added sense of space and maturity. The musicians delve deeper into the exploration of the sonic complexities of their respective instruments while remaining ever attuned to the others. The lines between noise, language and music are blurred. Silence plays a major role. The four musicians compose as one, weaving a kaleidoscope of unconventional textures and contrapuntal melodies, opening the door to a new sonic universe which only exists in real time composition.

Joe Morris: guitar
Tomeka Reid: cello
Taylor Ho Bynum: cornet
Kyoko Kitamura: voice

All music by Joe Morris, Tomeka Reid, Taylor Ho Bynum, Kyoko Kitamura
Recorded Dec. 19, 2018 at Firehouse 12 Studios, New Haven CT
Engineered, mixed, and mastered by Nick Lloyd
Design and layout by Anne Marcotty
Excecutive producers: Kevin Reilly
Produced by Bynum, Morris, Kitamura, and Reid

The 12 tracks are structured in such a way that the first two thirds of the recording last as long as the last third, with the earlier vignettes having only enough time to explore one thread though they navigate few thematic changes in the longer tracks too. Despite the tracks’ structural monotony, each one is timbrally rich. Gregorio cuts up mellifluous lines with overblown distorted tones, circularly breathes furiously flurried flights, and utilizes key clicks, air notes, tongue clicks, and perhaps some light voicing.

Lopez switches up his typical, physical arco by tapping the strings with the bow, sawing below the bridge, tapping and rubbing the body, preparing the bass by threading something through the strings, plucking the strings so hard they buzz against the neck, rubbing the strings so hard the flayed sound is almost like a chair creaking (think Raging Bull), and splaying out bowed tones’ chroma like a prism disperses a ray of light. And though there aren’t many thematic changes to listen to each other for, the communication between the two is present and prompt, with each player matching the cadences and complimenting the textures of the other. – Keith Prosk

“The inventive trio wisely plays with textural agitations and composures, arranging them with freedom, responsibility, and an evident musical insight that makes them first-rate avant-gardists.” -Jazz Trail

Chris Corsano – drums
Sylvie Courvoisier – piano
Nate Wooley – Trumpet

Recorded at Studio LULU Brooklyn, NY, September, 2015

Mixed and Mastered by Chris Corsano, August, 2016
Executive Producers: Kevin Reilly and Mike Panico/Photo by Veronique Hoegger & Bruno Conti Wuilloud