Counterparts (Revolutionary Ensemble album)

Last updated
Counterparts
Revolutionary Ensemble Counterparts.jpg
Live album by
Released2012
RecordedNovember 25, 2005
VenueTeatro Gustavo Modena, Genoa, Italy
Genre Free Jazz
Label Mutable Music
17549-2
Revolutionary Ensemble chronology
Beyond the Boundary of Time
(2008)
Counterparts
(2012)

Counterparts is a live album by the Revolutionary Ensemble, violinist Leroy Jenkins, bassist Sirone and drummer Jerome Cooper. It was recorded in November 2005 in Genoa, Italy, and was released in 2012 by Mutable Music. [1] It documents the group's last live performance, and is dedicated to the memory of artist Frederick J. Brown. [2]

Contents

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Tom Hull – on the Web A− [3]

Critic Tom Hull awarded the album a grade of "A−", and commented: "it's more than nostalgia that lifts this release of the group's last live performance." [3]

Writing in 2013, Francis Davis awarded the album a grade of "A", and stated: "it was released only this spring, and I swear it's more vital than almost anything else I've heard in 2013. An apt comparison might be the Modern Jazz Quartet, except that the instrumentation is sparser... and what was permissible in the name of either jazz or classical, or in the name of both, had changed drastically... Though recognizably jazz... this music is post-Webern as well as post-Parker, on the outskirts of microtonality when not forthrightly microtonal." Davis remarked that Jenkins was "in top form," and praised his "masterful display of extended techniques." He described Sirone as "propelling things forward with a low rumble or the barest semblance of a bass walk," and depicted Cooper as a "one-man-band," "not just supplying color on traps but greatly expanding the palette with bell-like balaphone, chirimia... and electric-keyboard washes that are never just backdrops." [4]

The editors of NPR Music included the album in their "Best Music of 2013" feature, and noted: "it's understood that by the time Sirone and Jenkins got together with percussionist Jerome Cooper in 1972, jazz no longer necessarily meant riffs and changes, and modern classical in no way still meant rondos and fugues." [5]

Track listing

  1. "Configuration" (Sirone) – 7:00
  2. "Rumi Tales" (Jenkins) – 5:41
  3. "Usami" (Jenkins) – 6:46
  4. "My Birds" (Cooper) – 16:06
  5. "Berlin Ertarhung" (Sirone) – 6:32
  6. "Fulfillment" (Cooper/Jenkins/Sirone) – 4:38

Personnel

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Leroy Jenkins (musician)</span> American composer and violinist (1932–2007)

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The Revolutionary Ensemble was a free jazz trio consisting of violinist Leroy Jenkins (1932–2007), bassist Sirone and percussionist/pianist Jerome Cooper (1946–2015). The group was active from 1970–1977, and reunited briefly in 2004. Musician George E. Lewis described the trio as "one of the signal groups of the period." Writer John Fordham stated that the group "was remarkable for its concentration on texture, tone colour and the then unclaimed territory between jazz and contemporary classical music." A DownBeat reviewer, writing in 1972, described them as "a unique, utterly contemporary unit of extraordinarily talented players who possess a world understanding of what 'organized sound' is all about."

Jerome Douglas Cooper was an American free jazz musician. In addition to trap drums, Cooper played balafon, chirimia and various electronic instruments, and referred to himself as a "multi-dimensional drummer," meaning that his playing involved "layers of sounds and rhythms". AllMusic reviewer Ron Wynn called him "A sparkling drummer and percussionist... An excellent accompanist". Another Allmusic reviewer stated that "in the truest sense this drummer is a magician, adept at transformation and the creation of sacred space".

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<i>Communications Network</i> (album) 1972 live album by Clifford Thornton

Communications Network is a live album by multi-instrumentalist and composer Clifford Thornton. The two-part composition titled "Communications Network" was recorded on January 22, 1972, at ABC Stage City in New York City, and features Thornton on electric piano and cornet, along with Lakshinarayana Shankar on violin, Sirone on bass, and Jerome Cooper on percussion. The remaining piece, "Festivals And Funerals," based on Jayne Cortez's poem of the same name, was recorded on April 17, 1972, at the Festival of African American Music at Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, and features Thornton on cornet, Cortez as reciter, Nathan Davis on soprano saxophone, Jay Hoggard on vibraphone, Andy González on bass, Jerry González and Vincent George on congas and percussion, and Nicky Marrero on timbales and percussion. The album was released by Third World Records later in 1972.

<i>Beyond the Boundary of Time</i> 2008 live album by Revolutionary Ensemble

Beyond the Boundary of Time is a live album by the Revolutionary Ensemble, violinist Leroy Jenkins, bassist Sirone and drummer Jerome Cooper. It was recorded in May 2005 in Warsaw, Poland, and was released in 2008 by Mutable Music. The album contains one composition by each group member, along with two collective improvisations. It captures one of the group's last performances, and is dedicated to Jenkins, who died in 2007.

<i>Configuration</i> (album) 2005 live album by Sirone and Billy Bang

Configuration is a live album by bassist Sirone and violinist Billy Bang, recorded in November, 2004, at CBGB's Gallery in New York City, and released in 2005 by Silkheart Records. On the album, the musicians are joined by the members of the Sirone Bang Ensemble: saxophonist Charles Gayle and drummer Tyshawn Sorey.

<i>In Concert: From There to Hear</i> 2001 live album by Jerome Cooper

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<i>A Magical Approach</i> 2010 live album by Jerome Cooper

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References

  1. "Revolutionary Ensemble: Counterparts". Mutable Music. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  2. Counterparts (PDF) (liner notes). Revolutionary Ensemble. Mutable Music. 2012. 17549-2.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  3. 1 2 Hull, Tom. "Jazz Prospecting: August 2013". Tom Hull – on the Web. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  4. Davis, Francis. "Black Friday Special: 2013". TomHull.com. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  5. "Wayne Shorter And The Year's Other Passing Scenery". NPR. December 18, 2013. Retrieved March 17, 2022.