soundstream

“Chattering, textural free jazz brings to mind a forest of animals slowly coming to life. – J.R. Nelson, Chicago Reader”

Mars Williams: Saxophones, Toys & Busted-up autoharp.
Rafael Toral: Feedback, Modified amplifiers, Electrode oscillator
Tim Daisy: Drums, Percussion, Radio

All compositions by Rafael Toral (SPA) Mars Williams – Music From Mars (BMI) And Tim Daisy (ASCAP)

Recorded on September 16th, 2017 at Experimental Sound Studio, Chicago, IL
Recorded by Alex Inglizian
Mixed, Edited and Mastered by Alex Inglizian, Tim Daisy and Rafael Toral
Artwork by Fede Peñalva

“The improvising trio Monopiece lists its instrumentation as guitar, percussion, and electronics, but electronics describes far more than one third of its texture, since both guitar and percussion are amplified and electronically processed. On this release they are joined by the Dutch vocal artist Jaap Blonk in recording spontaneously generated music, edited and subtly processed to reflect the communal nature of its creation without interrupting the strong, improvised narratives of each piece.
In improvised music, the interaction between musicians usually plays a primary role in the musical story that unfolds, made clear to listeners since each player is associated with the familiar sound of their instrument. Perhaps this is why electronics dominated improvising ensembles are so rare; and when there is an electronics player present they are often relegated to the role of creating novelty, rather than interacting within the vocabulary that more standard instruments share. Nevertheless, electronic ensembles have been active, if on the fringe of free improvised music since the 1960s, exemplified by groups like Electronica Musica Viva (MEV) and AMM, whose music favors long pieces with slowly evolving textures where the interaction between players is often obscured.
Monopiece’s music by contrast features much shorter pieces made up of clearly delineated conversations between sonic streams, sometimes identifiable with recognizable instruments but always relying on the ability to make quick changes of timbre and texture in shaping real-time compositions. Jaap Blonk’s contribution to this character is a perfect fit, bringing an embodied voice into the mix, but one which can leap quickly from tones and phonemes to noises of seemingly electro-mechanical inspiration. His voice provides the corporeal focus of these hallucinatory, electronic songs.” -Chris Brown

“If improvised music is about dialogue, then this is a great conversation; everybody talks, shuts up and responds and everybody leads as much as everybody waits.” -Vital Weekly

Nathan Corder – electronics
Matt Robidoux – guitar
Timothy Russell – percussion
Jaap Blonk – voice, electronics

“A Jack Spicer quote – “Get those words out of your mouth and into your heart” – may be useful when consuming this provocatively bare duo performance, which compels the listener to abandon any presumptions about improvised music. Switching between squeamish spurts of controlled trumpet exhalations and an intentionally hackneyed melodic line that grows more compelling with every repetition, Wick’s playing is obstinate, confusing, and deeply welcoming. rousay surrounds the trumpet’s pure and metallic tones with deft sonic movement and anti-ideas, oddly-placed drum rolls and rhythmically elusive brushed patterns. Recorded at Marigny Studios in New Orleans by Rick Nelson, this is music that is egoless, non-narrative, and without identity, and yet it is in fact emphatic and deeply felt. The duo insists on framing improvisation on their own terms, not so much ignoring chops and improv tropes, but playing as if they simply don’t exist, a brash surfacing of new paths forward.” – Notice Recordings

Jacob Wick – trumpet
claire rousay – percussion

Recorded June 14, 2019 by Rick Nelson at Marigny Studios, New Orleans, LA

Mastered by Andrew Weathers

Artwork by E. Lindorff-Ellery
Untitled, 2016 and 2020
Letterpress printed by Small Fires Press, New Orleans, LA

“This album requires active engagement on the part of the listener. It’ll push you through your confusion into a place satisfyingly close to enlightenment. High volume and good speakers are heavily recommended.” -David Menestres, Free Jazz Blog

Seven Storey Mountain V is the fifth of seven evening length works that began with a Festival of New Trumpet commission in 2007. Recorded live at Abrons Art Center in New York City as part of the 2015 Tectonics NY festival, SSMV continues Wooley’s idea of creating an ecstatic and communal music that is non-religious and non-genre based. The massive collective group includes international stars from the jazz, new music, electronic, and noise worlds–working together to realize Wooley’s singular musical vision. The group, which is the largest to date, features Wooley on amplified trumpet alongside C. Spencer Yeh and Samara Lubelski on amplified violins, Ben Vida on electronics, Ben Hall and Ryan Sawyer on percussion, Chris Dingman and Matt Moran on vibraphone, Colin Stetson, Josh Sinton, and Dan Peck on amplified reeds and brass, and the TILT Brass octet (Chris McIntyre, Gareth Flowers, Mike Gurfeld, Tim Leopold, Will Lang, Matt Melore, Jen Baker, and James Roger).

Recorded May 9, 2015 at Abrons Art Center, presented by Tectonics NY/Issue Project Room, NYC

Bass Saxophone – Colin Stetson
Bass Trombone – James Rogers
Contrabass Clarinet [Amplified] – Josh Sinton
Drums – Ben Hall, Ryan Sawyer
Trombone – Jen Baker, Matt Melore
Trombone [And Conductor] – Chris McIntyre
Trombone [Tenor] – William Lang
Trumpet – Mike Gurfield, Tim Leopold
Trumpet [And Amplifier], Tape – Nate Wooley
Trumpet [Piccolo] – Gareth Flowers
Tuba [Amplified] – Dan Peck
Vibraphone – Chris Dingman, Matt Moran
Violin [Amplified] – C. Spencer Yeh, Samara Lubelski

Mastered By, Mixed By – Bojan Vuletić
Recorded By – Bob Bellerue

Pleasure of the Text 1305

Released 2016

“Outside the Rain has Stopped is a collection of music that represents different phases of my long musical journey. Listening back I realized that these pieces, all together, represent the perspective I created out of my experiences in rock music, poetry, jazz, improvisation, colours, experimental and classical music: it’s my world.
“Galina U” is an ode to the Russian composer Galina Ustvolskaya, written as a foundation from which to improvise on her characteristic dynamic extremes and structural severity. “Solo Song for Cello –As if –” is inspired by the poem “I felt a Cleaving in my Mind” from Emily Dickinson. The poem is treated like a song, and there is room for guided improvisation. “February’s Turn” is a long languid investigation into the magnificent colours of the Verschueren organ, a Cavaillé-Coll type. The poem “Orgelend -een improvisatie voor ih” is my 75th birthday present from Anneke Brassinga. Anneke’s voice is also featured in her poem about loss “Heen”. She is reading as if her words are sounds. Duo Baars-Henneman’s improvisation complements Brassinga’s words. This is a collaboration that has taken place many times throughout the years. “Bow Valley” is an autobiographical soundscape featuring the Canadian Rocky Mountains; the field recordings in and around my studio form a layer on which the musicians find their way with both improvisation and a notated score. Lastly, the title track “Outside the Rain has Stopped” is a string quartet from which the pianist/improviser Cecil Taylor’s intuitive, energetic, loosely structured flow was an important source of inspiration. This is where I am.” -Ig Henneman

all compositions Ig Henneman
buma stemra
publishing house Donemus

musicians:
Ab Baars: tenorsax clarinet, shakuhachi
Anne La Berge: flutes
Lidy Blijdorp: cello
Anneke Brassinga: poems
Ig Henneman: compositions, viola
Annelie Koning: vocals
Gerrie Meijers: organ
Janneke van Prooijen: violin
Elisabeth Smalt: viola
Alistair Sung: cello
Jellantsje de Vries: violin
Ansgar Wallenhorst: organ

Mixing Micha de Kanter, Ig Henneman
Editing and mastering Niels Brouwer
Design & photography Francesca Patella
Cover art Ab Baars
Produced by Ig Henneman

with support of the Orgelpark Amsterdam, Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds, the Wig Foundation, and of Andrew Choate for reading along

“It is fascinating, bewildering, extraordinary. Even if Nate Wooley and Peter Evans are “jazz musicians”, there is no jazz to be heard here. This is ambient music, dark and horrifying, solemn, majestic and overpowering. And uncompromising.” -Stef, Free Jazz Blog

8 Channel installation prepared by Nate Wooley 2015 for Knockdown Center’s Auditorium Series

Performed live April 12, 2015

MNÓAD-20

Nate Wooley-trumpet
Peter Evans-trumpet

“By expanding his pool of collaborative constellations, Chicago reedist Dave Rempis has found a variety of contexts in which to explore his fiery improvisational aesthetic. And there’s no shortage of heat produced on The Early Bird Gets, his first recording with the trio of New York bassist Brandon Lopez and Chicago percussionist Ryan Packard.” -Peter Margasak, Down Beat

The Early Bird Gets is the debut album by this working trio, comprised of journeyman Chicago saxophonist Dave Rempis alongside two of the brightest talents in a younger generation of improvising musicians. Bassist Brandon Lopez is a musician whose virtuosity knows no bounds, currently one of the most in-demand bassists on the New York jazz and improvised music scene. Percussionist Ryan Packard counters that depth with his own breadth of interests, working in contemporary classical ensembles, indie rock bands, and jazz groups alike around Chicago, not to mention his doubling abilities on electronics. These two together provide a formidable rhythm section that can veer from hard-driving grooves to luscious soundscapes with total ease.

As a trio, these three have put forth a work that may be the “jazziest” project any of them are involved with; a result that even the band members found surprising. But after honing their sound through live gigs in 2017 and early 2018, it became apparent that their free-improvised conversation kept returning to a similar destination: a three-way exploration of rhythm and tempo that left them working solidly within the jazz tradition. Not the one fixed into predictable sylistic corners, but the one defined by a spirit of boundless curiosity and exploration. A tradition they stretched back and forth like so much taffy.

The way these three unite into a groove is truly remarkable. Not as something to be closely adhered to, but as something to turn upside down, inside out, and ass backwards, as they expose every last facet of it. At times this means slowing it down, speeding it up, or splitting those two approaches up amongst the band simultaneously. At other times it means jumping to another dimension on the turn of a dime. And while that methodology may feel counterintuitive to the end result, it’s not. The feel of this record is a classic one that has an inherent life and energy to it that dates back to the beginnings of jazz as an art form. It swings.

Dave Rempis – saxophones
Brandon Lopez – bass
Ryan Packard – drums and electronics

Tracks 1-6 recorded March 2nd, 2018
Track 7 recorded June 28th, 2018
@ Elastic Arts, Chicago
Recorded/mixed/mastered by Dave Zuchowski

Design by Johnathan Crawford
Produced by Dave Rempis

“Much of the credit is due to Joe McPhee’s exquisite sense of melody: even when intense, he infuses every note with thoughtful control. The results reflect the group’s natural reticence and attraction to nuance, something that is especially evident on “Journey.” Overall, though, this is not music for the fainthearted, as delicacy is juxtaposed with aggressive expression. On “Albert’s Alto,” for example, the ghost of Albert Ayler is resurrected but never cloned, and his spirit absorbed and reincarnated. The closing “Amazing Grace,” in memory of Dominic Duval’s late wife, is perhaps the highlight of the album, a lovely, even exquisitely executed reflection of deeply held sentiments.” -Steve Loewy, AllMusic

Recorded at The Spirit Room, Rossie, NY, Feb. 6 & 7, 2003

Joe McPhee: Alto and Tenor Saxophone
Dominic Duval: Double Bass
Jay Rosen: Drums

Recorded January 2, 2017 at Firehouse 12 studios, New Haven, Connecticut.
Engineered, mixed and mastered by Greg DeCrosta

Joe Morris – guitar
Brad Barrett – bass
Eric Stilwell – trombone

Propulsion is the debut album by a stellar quartet of journeymen Chicago improvisers assembled by saxophonist and Aerophonic Records founder Dave Rempis. Vibraphonist Jason Adasiewicz is known for his extensive work with the late Peter Brötzmann, Hamid Drake, Mike Reed, and his own trio Sun Rooms. Bassist Joshua Abrams is the leader of Natural Information Society, perhaps the best-known group internationally to emerge from Chicago over the last decade. He also maintains longstanding relationships with visionary musicians like Nicole Mitchell, Jeff Parker, and Hamid Drake. Drummer Tyler Damon, the youngest of the group, has put his name on the map in the trio Kuzu, with saxophonist Mars Williams, guitarist Tashi Dorji, and adventure seekers from later generations like Gerrit Hatcher and Eli Winter.

Despite those abundant street creds, the debut album by this quartet isn’t some sort of “all-star” outing. Rempis rarely organizes groups like that. Instead this band’s music is true to an antiquated aesthetic that he’s embraced for decades; one that’s wholly alien to the quick-paced social media driven environment of our time. He gives his groups the space to develop patiently and organically through long-term relationships and regular work.

In this case, some of that work stretches back for decades. Rempis and Abrams first met as students at the same Chicago university in the mid-90’s, and have maintained a working relationship since the early 2000’s; particularly through their longstanding quartet with Jim Baker and Avreeayl Ra, and their chamber trio with Tomeka Reid. The connections between Adasiewicz and Rempis have a similar tenure, especially through the trio Wheelhouse with bassist Nate McBride that started back in 2005. That relationship runs deep enough that during Adasiewicz’s long break from performing from roughly 2016-2022, Rempis was almost the only person who could coax him out in public for the occasional concert. (This album is also Adasiewicz’s first group recording made since 2017!) Rempis and Damon spent great swaths of time on tour together with the trio Kuzu between 2018 and 2021, further delving into their shared conception with a weekly outdoor duo concert in a Chicago park in their neighborhood during the warmer months of the pandemic in 2020 and 2021. It’s tough to overstate the musical bonds they developed on those gigs, working through the ongoing emotional catastrophe of the pandemic with that one regular outlet. Both Abrams and Adasiewicz individually made guest appearances on those concerts as well, laying the groundwork for this quartet formation. As Ornette spelled out so clearly, “friends and neighbors, that’s where it’s at,” something that the pandemic made even more clear.

As a quartet, these deep roots intertwined in almost total unity when the band first hit in summer 2022. But despite the urge, they didn’t rush to get this record out. They dug deeper to achieve an even more singular vision over the next year before this album was recorded. Propulsion documents a band that’s done the work.

This recording also catches them at a moment of major emotional impact. It documents the final concert of more than 900 that Rempis curated and produced as part of a weekly Thursday-night series of jazz and improvised music that stretched for more than twenty-one years from 2002-2023. There are far too many masters and greats who performed on that series to even begin to name, many of whom are no longer with us. And its impact on the Chicago scene during that time was significant to say the least. The last held notes on this record send an era of Chicago improvised music off into whispered tendrils of breath. Thankfully, in this case that ending brings a new beginning.

Dave Rempis – alto/tenor/baritone saxophone
Jason Adasiewicz – vibes
Joshua Abrams – bass
Tyler Damon – drums

Recorded August 31st, 2023 @ Elastic Arts in Chicago
Recorded, mixed and mastered by Dave Zuchowski

Artwork and cover design by Lasse Marhaug
Produced by Dave Rempis

“Another energy jump from the iconic noise trio New Monuments. Featuring Borbetomagus’s Don Dietrich on saxophone, violinist/vocalist C. Spencer Yeh, and Graveyards drummer Ben Hall. New Earth sounds like someone stepped on a copy of Mahavishnu Orchestra’s Birds of Fire, put it on the turntable, loved what they heard, and pressed it into a CD. Pure spontaneous music from three of the heaviest in contemporary music.” -Pleasure Of The Text

C. Spencer Yeh: Violin/Electronics
Ben Hall: Trapset
Don Dietrich: Tenor Sax/Electronics

Cover & Layout: Design & Grime

“claire and violinist Alex Cunningham make a formidable improvising duo, tactile and kinetic.” -Stewart Smith, The Wire

credits
released April 17, 2020

Alex Cunningham – Violin
claire rousay – Percussion

Recorded by Ryan Wasoba
Mastered by Alan Jones

Layout & Cover Art by Jaime Zuverza.

I first saw Heart of the Ghost in Ypsilanti, MI in July of 2018 having heard of them through mutual friend and percussionist Sam Lohman. Immediately, I was floored by their unapologetic, aggressive and bass heavy take on classic free jazz music.Their sound is challenging and cerebral yet contains distinct ebbs and flows of sound that is difficult to ignore.

Bassist Luke Stewart is ubiquitous on the Baltimore/DC improvised music scene both as a solo artist and as a member of Trio OOO (with my buddy Sam), New Artists Orchestra, Irreversible Entanglements and others. Luke has already done more in his short time as a performing bassist than most musicians do in entire lifetimes. His thoughtful and challenging approach to stand up bass playing is at once mesmerizing and overwhelming.

Multi-instrumentalist Ian McColm graduated from the Oberlin Music Conservatory and experiments with a wide variety of sounds both internationally and in and around the DC area and releases music under his IGM moniker. Ian brings a nuanced set of sounds into an otherwise hulking mountain of sonic chaos.

Alto saxophone player Jarrett Gilgore, though unassuming in person, takes a blistering approach to the sax, leaving audiences feeling as if they have been hit with a pot of boiling water. In addition to Heart of the Ghost, he plays in Triage with Noah Jarrett and Kevin Ripley, Anthony Pirog’s Body Puzzle, Xenga. Baltimore Afrobeat Society, Chris Pumphrey Sextet, Jaimie Branch’s Bombshelter. -Pete Larson (Dagoretti Records)

Jarrett Gilgore – alto saxophone and clarinet
Luke Stewart – upright bass
Ian McColm – drums

Recorded and Mixed by Craig Bowen at Tempo House, Baltimore MD on June 12 & 13, 2018

Thanks to Peter and our family at Rhizome

“On occasions, what we have is Brötzmann and Lonberg-Holm in the one corner, and a wave of percussion in the other; sometimes Lonberg-Holm supports the barrage with low regular throbs; sometimes he’s pitted against it. The result is two unnamed pieces, the first lasting almost forty minutes – epic in its emotional span – and a short coda of some five minutes.” -Collin Green, Free Jazz Blog

Recorded February 20, 2012, Café Oto, London, England

Peter Brötzmann-reeds,
Fred Lonberg-Holm-cello, electronics,
Paal Nilssen-Love-drums & Steve Noble-drums

“The quartet plays four untitled pieces, each of around ten minutes, and on the whole, it’s high-octane stuff.” -Collin Green, Free Jazz Blog

Recorded February 19, 2012, Café Oto, London, Britain

Peter Brötzmann: Reeds
Fred Longber-Holm: Cello
Paal Nilssen-Love: Drums
Pat Thomas: Piano

“You can feel the shared commitment to explore and push forward the musical envelope, and the joy when they lock into a new theme, as Gustafsson and Nilssen-Love do on their tight duel on the end of the first part, or the methodical building of a new theme by Flaten on the second part.It continues with lyrical playing from Vandermark on the third part and then transforms into a percolating saxophone duel between Gustafsson and Vandermark, where Vandermark injects some funky riffs. Then it all reaches its inevitable climax on the fourth and last part, where Vandermark and Gustafsson, together on baritone saxophones, begin with a busy and nervous dialogue, that becomes bluesy when Flaten and Nilssen-Love join in, but ultimately explodes into an electrifying and spirited maelstrom.” –All About Jazz

The Thing with Ken Vandermark is:

Mats Gustafsson – alto and baritone saxophones
Ken Vandermark – tenor saxophone
Ingebrigt Håker Flaten – bass
Paal Nilssen-Love – drums

All music by Gustafsson (STIM) / Håker Flaten (TONO) / Nilssen-Love (TONO) / Vandermark (ASCAP)

Recorded in concert at The Hideout, Chicago, April 21st 2007 by Amos Scattergood. Mixed June 2007 by ken Vandermark, Ingebrigt Håker Flaten and Amos Scattergood. Mastered July 2007 by Ausdun Strype at Strype Audio. Produced by The Thing and Ken Vandermark. Co-produced by Joakim Haugland. Photos by Ken Vandermark. Sleeve design by Rune Mortensen

Tracks 1 to 4 recorded 6th March 1990,
tracks 5 to 8 recorded 3rd March 1991
in concerts at Antikvariat Bla Tornet.

Paul Lovens: Drums, Cymbal, Saw
Mats Gustafsson: Sopranino Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone, Saxophone [Fluteophone], Flute

Photography – Edward Jarvis, Paul Lovens
Producer – Blue Tower Records, Harald Hult
Recorded By – Niklas Billström

“”Spolia” is a term that comes from architecture and refers to construction sites that are repurposed from previous buildings. Similarly, the Dutch violist borrows this term for a title on her sixth album and thus also describes one of her typical methods of working. Musical fragments, on the present album taken mostly from the Italian Renaissance and folklore, are processed into new pieces and serve as the basis for improvisational excursions. This approach pays off numerous times. The tension between composition and improvisation, and between tradition and innovation creates uncommon music in the world of contemporary jazz music.”
–Emanuel Wenger Jazz live – magazine for contemporary music February 2002

“Described — usually by classical music snobs — as the superlative medium for a composer’s thoughts in chamber music, the string quartet is often resistant to massive efforts to free it of ponderous 19th century memories and shove it into the modern era. Adding improvisation to the equation makes the situation even more difficult. This demands that the members of the traditional quartet — two violinists, one violist and a cellist — not only abandon comfortable romantic culture, but also spontaneously create as they play. Wazahugy and the Henneman String Quartet (HSQ) have resolved this conundrum by doing more than filling their books with certified contemporary music. Each formation consists of instrumentalists from jazz, improv and notated music backgrounds playing a combination of written and improvised sounds, further redefined by the group’s instrumentation.” –JazzWeek

all compositions Ig Henneman
except 1 and 10 van Geel/Henneman/Waterman/de Joode, 8

Oene van Geel – violin, viola
Ig Henneman – viola
Alex Waterman – cello
Wilbert de Joode – contrabass

B.Canfora/I.Henneman
BUMA | STEMRA

recorded by Dick Lucas DATA RECORDS 4 and 5 February 2002 Bethaniënklooster, Amsterdam
editing Dick Lucas & Ig Henneman
liner notes Emile Wennekes
cover photo by Ab Baars, quartet photo selftimer at Haaldersbroek
design and musician’s photos Francesca Patella
produced by Ig Henneman
thanks to: Fonds voor de Scheppende Toonkunst

“The melodies have an Ayler-esque flavor, particularly when Jim Hobbs is crying and murmuring to himself; Cancura is an even more forceful, blustery player, not ceding an inch to his new partner.” -Phil Freeman, AllMusic

Joe Morris – bass
Luther Gray – drums
Petr Cancura – tenor saxophone
Jim Hobbs – alto saxophone

Recorded in October 24, 2010, at Riti Studios, Guilford, Connecticut.

The Chicago Tribune wrote that the album “has an urban, sometimes bleak film noir undertow… the frenetic free jazz interplay between all members of the combo lifts this CD a notch above previous outings.”

Duane Denison: Guitar
James Kimball: Drums
Ken Vandermark: Reeds
(plus Tom Bickley on one track)

Recorded and mixed at Chicago Recording Company 3/97.

Artwork – Derek Besant
Layout – David Lambeth
Recorded & Mixed By Jeff Lane

“For anyone who witnessed the unrelenting earthquake of this pair’s dialogues at the Vortex earlier in the year, Woodcuts will be an absorbing reminder, and there’s a good deal of rough-hewn lyricism.” -John Fordham, Chicago Reader

Peter Brötzmann: B-Flat Clarinet, Clarinet (Bass),Sax (Alto), Sax (Tenor)
Paal Nilssen-Love: Drums, Percussion

Joakim Haugland: Producer
Thomas Hukkelberg: Engineer, Mastering, Mixing

“Ways Of My Hand suggests another side of Harnik. Her improvisations transform instantly into compositions that reflect her intimate and deep knowledge of the many histories of jazz, avant-garde, art rock and improvised music of the last century and distill her strong, idiosyncratic voice. The five compositions were recorded in September and December 2015.
The opening “Every Time He Punched A Hole [To Conlon Nancarrow]” refers to scholar Robert Wiley’s saying about the American composer (1912-1997). Every time that Nancarrow punched the notes for his player piano études “the world got more interesting”. Harnik plays her prepared piano and not the mechanical player piano but manages to create a similar, dramatic and quite enigmatic sense of hyper-kinetic energy. The short pieces “Ragged” and “From jaw to ear” suggest the bold and methodical manner in which Harnik reconstructs and re-invents the tonal range of the piano, exploring his wooden body timbral qualities as extending the percussive sounds of its strings.
“As The Crow Flies North [To Jeanne Lee]”, Harnik emotional homage to the American vocalist-poet-composer (1939-2000), is an almost silent meditation on fragile, transparent sounds and overtones. The four-parts suite “Flow And Construction [To Anthony Braxton]” is, naturally, the most complex composition here. The fractured, rhythmical and melodic elements of this suite may flow in an erratic, eccentric ways but do gravitate into delicate, arresting structures with their own, inner logic and fascinating architecture, expressing a myriad of sounds, feelings and textures, from soft and gentle to the rough and dense ones. A true, masterful work of art.”

Review by Eyal Hareuveni (The Free Jazz Collective)


Track 1/2/3/4 recorded at Reiterkaserne, Graz, Austria in September 2015
“Flow and construction” recorded in concert at CUBUS, Graz, Austria in December 2015

Artwork– Nicola Guazzaloca
Mastered – Iztok Zupan
Mixed – Heimo Puschnigg
Music – Elisabeth Harnik
Producer – Elisabeth Harnik
Recorded – Alexander Stankovski (tracks: 5 to 8), Heimo Puschnigg (tracks: 1 to 4)

Recorded by Michael Flanagan at the Lipinsky Studio, Asheville NC
October 2013.

A guitar that sounds like razor blades dragged across the face of impending doom. A guitar that sounds like Godzilla crashing an orchestral performance set in a warehouse stocked with pessimism and confidence. A guitar that sounds like a tree being felled by a fighter jet’s depression.
All in all, Tashi Dorji‘s Blue Twelve can only be summed up by actually listening to it. The beauty of the album lies in it’s desire to evoke fantastical melodies that avoid the expectations of normal guitar sounds.
-7BitArcade

Blue Twelve is the first electric guitar release by Tashi Dorji, whose acoustic recordings have gained praise from guitar avatars such as Sir Richard Bishop and Ben Chasny. While his approach is easily transferable from acoustic to electric, the decision to plug in has enriched his playing with depths of tone and dynamic possibility- all down to corona of reverb from his Fender Delux amp and overtones it sustains from hammering of harmonic intervals. Although slight effects,they furnish rich seams of enquiry for the North Carolina based guitarist`s crabwise improvisations.
…from punk rock to Baroque via Flamenco and Jazz. This synthesis reaches its apex on this tape, with two side-long improvisations that are as genre negating and sound – as- sound focused as anyone looking at the guitar after Derek Bailey. The opening piece begins with sustained chords ghosting in and out of focus through tightly controlled volume swells, creating an effect close to gamelan. It eventually decelerates into carousel arpeggios that sound momentarily like the intro to the existential doo-woop of The Ink Spots` “We Three (My Echo, My Shadow And Me)
-Alex Neilson, The Wire

Like his previous releases, Blue Twelve sounds like an alien landscape, full of clanging metal and vaguely familiar yet uncomfortable melodies. Dorji bends his steel strings to the point of breaking before rolling it back, settling down, and starting all over.
– FACT Magazine

“Daisy and Bishop eschew the groove-oriented nature of some of their larger groups, namely The Engines and Vandermark 5. Old Shoulders is heavy on smart and playful extended investigations of textures and tones, of atmosphere and mood more than rhythm, aggression or melody.” -Patrick Wall, freeTimes

Percussion – Tim Daisy
Trombone – Jeb Bishop

“In the first four tracks there are moments of respite and beauty amidst the chaos. After Pa, the sounds are harsher and it is a violent new landscape. There is a sense throughout the second half of desperately trying to get somewhere but being unable to do so. By transforming into this brutality, the album lives up to its name.” – Anna Heflin

Quoniam Facta Sum Vilis (for I have become vile in the eyes of the lord)” is the newest solo album of the award winning composer and virtuoso bassist, Brandon Lopez. Created, in part, as an answer to the musical “reason” of the Bach cello suites, Lopez seeks to create the inverse of what’s hailed as musical logic. To create something florid and beautiful from the violent and erratic and to deny the supremacy of the wrote in favor of the intuitive.

Recorded mostly in the May Funerary Chapel in Chicago’s Rosehill Cemetery, and partially in Brooklyn’s Issue Project Room.

All compositions by BRANDON LOPEZ.
Recording by DAVID ZUCHOWSKI & BOB BELLERUE.
Mixed diligently by FATHER JON LIPSCOMB.
Mastered by ALAN JONES at LAMINAL AUDIO.

Special thanks to Dave Rempis, Elastic Arts, Issue Project Room and SMR Double Basses.