And
skips and leaps and broods. But what really distinguishes this duet
session isn't legs as much as ears. Listeners interested in the
art of subtlety should run, sprint, dash to get this human and humane
date.
-
John Chaocna in
signal
to noise
Patrick Brennan
and Lisle Ellis strike me as purists in their musical pursuits,
and to that point, from what I can tell, live their lives around
their artistic needs. One senses that at this point in their lives
they never seriously consider approaching their artistic work in
any other manner than what their art suggests to them. The result
of such a path is music which is both naturally matter of fact and
richly invested with invention and surprise. The music here seems
as natural as the flow of breath and conversation.
- From Producer's
Notes by Robert Rusch
Crepuscule
with Nellie
/ bucket-a-blood / Misterioso (solo)
saunter,
walk, amble: 1.
elsewise / 2. far elseway / 3. blootzway / 4. sweet flat
Misterioso
/ ornithine / teletropic
/ Expression
/ Nonaah
precipining
/ Chronology / backAtchya
This
is a different kind of recording for me because it is the first
time I've gone into a studio to record something other than my own
compositions, Monk and Ornette, Coltrane and Roscoe (Mitchell) have
each made some of the sounds that initially pullled me into music.
When I began playing solo concerts a few years ago, I started thinking
some of their music out loud. Compositions of theirs became terrains
I'd be walking around in.
It's
important for me that each of these musicians have invented music
from a perspective that's more fundemental than style or idiom,
but from where sound and people first meet, before it gets constellated
as music. This is why their music is affecting, and also
why it's a challenge to musicians. It might seem paradoxical that
some music can get more personal, even idiosyncratic, when it's
coming from closer to the root.
If
a musician can get to know a music's character to the point that
one's able to actually think it as it's being created, that music
also becomes one's own, and one begins playing it one's own way.
It's a give and take participation, and there's freedom here. Dialogues
are music's invisible connective tisue.
Lisle
Ellis hears this way too. When Bob (Rusch) suggested recording this
project with a bassist, I immediately thought of him. I knew his
instincts. The acquaintance and trust were already there. We went
over these compositions together, and we invented some of our own.
What we played for this recording arrived as we listened for it.
- patrick brennan, artist notes
Creative
Improvised Music Projects
CIMP: The Cadence
Building, Redwood, New York 13679 Phone:(315)287-2852 Fax:(315)287-2860
www.cadencebuilding.com/Cadence/C.I.M.P.html
CIMP records are produced
to provide music that rewards repeated and in-depth listenings.
These records are not intended to be backround music; they present
some of the best creative improvised music available, captured as
accurately and honestly as possible. CIMP records are digitally
recorded live to two tracks, allowing for a vanishingly low noise
floor and tremendous dynamic range. There is no compression, homogenization,
eq-ing, post recording splicing, or other electronic fiddling with
CIMP performances in any way. Our recordings capture the full dynamic
range one would experience in a live concert. This method is demanding
not only for listeners, but for the performers as well, Listeners
will hear exactly what was played: real musicians in a real space,
interacting musically in real time. |