Showing posts with label Steve Jackson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Jackson. Show all posts

Monday, March 17, 2025

Chick Corea - The Sun (1971)

A 1970 session featuring sixty-seven percent of the Miles Davis sextet, which finally saw the light of day in 1978. These are the midnight perambulations of the extant Miles sextet (minus Moreira and Miles himself), congregated in some eternal kitchen of the soul where scraps of meat and melody are served to the insatiable jazzeaters who would have a bronze cast of Miles’ every footfall. Originally recorded in September 1970 (and purists will point out that Steve Grossman was technically out by then), the music on The Sun didn’t see the light of day for years, and only then appropriately in the land of the rising sun. It is, like much of the Miles Davis marginalia, worthy of time and note. You could see this as a semi-Circle: a quartet of bass, drums, piano and sax with Chick Corea, Dave Holland and the brilliant Jack DeJohnette at the core. The songs fit squarely into Corea’s avant-garde phase: dissonant with a very tactile and percussive quality that includes scratching, groaning and quick staccato clusters of keys jumbled together. Solos devolve (evolve?) into an orgy of frenetic notes, structure and chaos play an endless game of tug of war, and throughout you’ll find the occasional moments of calm that pierce through the stormclouds of fierce invention and remind you of the potency of melody. Now, nothing on The Sun could be called timeless music. Corea fans have likely had their fill of this stuff already; Grossman’s fans may be more inclined to make the effort, since he shines on this recording. It appears from the liner notes that a few guests (including Dave Liebman on some bagpipe-like instrument called the musette) joined the fun on the last three tracks, although their contributions are barely audible. ~ Kronomyth, progrography.com. 

Express Records [Far East], ETJ-60004, 1971
Recorded 14th September, 1970 at Up Surge Studio, New York City 

Musicians:
Chick Corea - Piano
Steve Grossman - Tenor Saxophone
Dave Holland - Bass
Jack DeJohnette - Drums
Steve Jackson - Percussion (#B1-B3)
Dave Liebman - Musette [Chinese] (#B1-B3)
Teruo Nakamura - Bells (#B1-B3) 

Tracks:
A1. Moon Dance {Steve Grossman} (6:46)
A2. Slumber {David Liebman} (11:23)
B1. The Sun, Part 1 {Chick Corea} (9:07)
B2. The Sun, Part 2 {Chick Corea} (2:37)
B3. The Moon {Chick Corea} (6:08) 

Total Time: 36:03 

Moon Dance

Thursday, October 7, 2021

Hidefumi Toki Quartet - Toki (1975) [vinyl]

Deeply personal work from Japanese saxophonist Hidefumi Toki - a player who manages accomplish a great deal in a fairly stripped-down setting - filling spare space with gentle notes on alto and soprano sax, often delivered with a nicely raspy tone! The group here is a quartet - with Kazumi Watanabe on guitar, Nobuyoshi Ino on bass, and Steve Jackson on drums - and the setting is laidback and mellow, often moving at a pace that's slow, but always flowing with a great gentle swing. Tracks are long, and titles include the great originals "Darkness", "Lullaby For The Girl" and "Old Song Blues" - plus nice takes "When Sunny Gets Blue" and Ornette Coleman's "Blues".  © Dusty Groove, Inc. 

Three Blind Mice, TBM-46, 1975
Recorded 17th May, 1975 at AOI Studio, Tokyo, Japan 

Musicians:
Hidefumi Toki - Alto Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone
Kazumi Watanabe - Guitar
Nobuyoshi Ino - Bass
Steve Jackson - Drums 

Tracks:
A1. Lullaby For The Girl {Hidefumi Toki} (11:09)
A2. Darkness {Hidefumi Toki} (10:03)
B1. Blues {Ornette Coleman} (8:17)
B2. When Sunny Gets Blue {Jack Segal, Marvin Fisher} (5:58)
B3. Old Song Blues {Hidefumi Toki} (5:40) 

Total Time: 41:07 

Credits:
Producer - Takeshi Fujii
Recording & Mixing Engineer - Yoshihiko Kannari
Recording Engineer [Assistant] - Masayoshi Ohkawa
Engineer [Cutting] - Makoto Nakamura
Art Direction - Ben Nishizawa
Liner Notes - Takeo Fujii 

Wonderful Record! Hidefumi Toki is a pure genius. His saxophone sound is so deep and intense, in the vein of Coltrane. Tremendous spiritual jazz reminding me sometimes the Joki Freund's Yogi Jazz. The rest of the lineup is killer. Gorgeous... ~ kestudy, discogs.com.