Ljubljana | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Live album by | ||||
Released | 2017 | |||
Recorded | July 3, 2015 | |||
Venue | Cankerjev Dom, Ljubljana, Slovenia | |||
Genre | Jazz | |||
Length | 38:04 | |||
Label | Clean Feed | |||
Producer | Mats Gustafsson and Craig Taborn | |||
Craig Taborn chronology | ||||
|
Ljubljana is an album by saxophonist Mats Gustafsson and pianist Craig Taborn. It was recorded in concert in 2015 and released two years later by Clean Feed Records.
The album was recorded in concert at Cankerjev Dom, Ljubljana, as part of the Ljubljana Jazz Festival, on July 3, 2015. [1] The two tracks, improvised, were credited to the two musicians. [1] On the first track, "The Eyes Moving. Slowly.", Gustafsson employs slap-tonguing and vocalizations. [2] "The Ears Facing The Fantasies. Again.", the second track, builds as "Taborn's percussive left hand churns the improvisation as he brings the piece to a boil, pressing Gustafsson to push his accelerator", then has a quieter section. [2]
Ljubljana was released by Clean Feed Records in 2017. [1] They released it as an LP and as a digital download. [1]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
All About Jazz | [2] |
The Free Jazz Collective | [3] |
In a review for All About Jazz , Mark Corroto wrote: "Congratulations to whomever conceived of this pairing of two improvised music giants... Pairing these seemingly disparate instruments and performers yields an amazing cooperation... The wow factor is quite high for this performance." [2]
Martin Selkelsky of The Free Jazz Collective included the album in his list of 2017's top 10 releases. [4] FJC reviewer Eyal Hareuveni described the album as "a meeting where some mean blows and kicks were exchanged," and "a muscular wrestling of heavy-weight champions of spontaneous improvisations, both as serious as their lives." He noted that both musicians "correspond immediately to each other's gestures," while at the same time "neither Gustafsson or Taborn feel any need to compromise or blur their distinct, strong-minded personalities." [3]
The Downtown Music Gallery's Bruce Lee Gallanter commented: "in what concerns improvisation, if the protagonists are committed explorers of spontaneity anything can happen, even the most extraordinary music... these two fantastic improvisers created music with their differences, entering each other's territory. Who said art is a question of compromise? It isn't. This may well be the jazz album of the year and a landmark on the label." [5]
Writing for Stereogum , Phil Freeman stated that while Gustafsson "pops the valves... screeches, [and] bellows from the very bottom of the horn's range," Taborn, "no matter how much he's playing, always comes across unperturbed." He remarked: "The two of them rarely seem to lock in — they're playing simultaneously, rather than together, but the results are still exciting." [6]
Mat Maneri is an American composer, violin, and viola player. He is the son of the saxophonist Joe Maneri and Sonja Maneri.
Tim Berne is an American avant-garde jazz saxophonist and record label owner. His primary instruments are the alto and baritone saxophones.
Mats Olof Gustafsson is a Swedish free jazz saxophone player.
Craig Marvin Taborn is an American pianist, organist, keyboardist and composer. He works solo and in bands, mostly playing various forms of jazz. He started playing piano and Moog synthesizer as an adolescent and was influenced at an early stage by a wide range of music, including by the freedom expressed in recordings of free jazz and contemporary classical music.
Gerald Cleaver is a jazz drummer from Detroit, Michigan.
Christian Skår Winther is a Norwegian musician (guitar) and the older brother of jazz drummer Andreas Skår Winther, known from bands like Monkey Plot, Listen to Girl, Ich Bin N!ntendo and Torg.
Magnus Skavhaug Nergaard is a Norwegian Jazz musician, known from bands like Monkey Plot, Mummu, Ronja and Ich Bin N!ntendo.
Eivind Opsvik is a Norwegian jazz musician and composer, the son of the Norwegian interior and furniture designer Peter Opsvik.
Rocket Science is the eponymous debut album by the collaborative quartet assembled by trumpeter Peter Evans and featuring British saxophonist Evan Parker, pianist Craig Taborn and computer musician Sam Pluta. It was recorded live at the Vortex in London, at the start of the quartet's first tour which then visited the Bimhuis in Amsterdam and the Moers Festival in Germany. Evans recorded Scenes in the House of Music with the Parker-Guy-Lytton trio, and is a member of Parker's Electro-Acoustic Ensemble. Taborn played piano in Parker's Transatlantic Art Ensemble which recorded Boustrophedon. Pluta is a member of the Peter Evans Quintet that recorded Ghosts.
Boot! is an album by The Thing, the trio of saxophonist Mats Gustafsson, bassist Ingebrigt Håker Flaten and drummer Paal Nilssen-Love. The album was recorded in February 2013 and released that year by the band's new, eponymous, label.
Junk Magic is an album by Craig Taborn, with Aaron Stewart, Mat Maneri (viola), and Dave King (drums). It was released in 2004 by Thirsty Ear Recordings.
Shadow Plays is a live solo piano album by Craig Taborn recorded at the Konzerthaus, Vienna, on March 2, 2020, and released on ECM in October the following year.
Live in New York, 2010 is a live album by the David S. Ware Trio, featuring Ware on stritch and tenor saxophone, William Parker on bass, and Warren Smith on drums. It was recorded in October 2010 at the Blue Note Jazz Club in New York City, and was released as a double CD by AUM Fidelity in 2017.
The Catch of a Ghost is a live album by German saxophonist Peter Brötzmann, Moroccan guembri player Moukhtar Gania, and American drummer Hamid Drake. It was recorded in May 2019 at the Centro di Ricerca Musicale / Teatro San Leonardo in Bologna, Italy, during AngelicA, Festival Internazionale di Musica, and was released in 2020 by I Dischi Di Angelica. Brötzmann and Drake had previously recorded the album The Wels Concert (1997) with Gania's brother Mahmoud Gania, who died in 2015.
Unreleased is a live album by the Philadelphia-based jazz collective Sounds of Liberation. It was recorded during 1973 at Columbia University in New York City, and was initially released in 2018 in very limited quantities by Dogtown Records in conjunction with the Brewerytown Beats record store, after which it was made available with broader distribution the following year by both Dogtown and the Corbett vs. Dempsey label. The recording, which was thought to have been lost, features vibraphonist and band leader Khan Jamal, saxophonist Byard Lancaster, guitarist Monnette Sudler, electric bassist Billy Mills, drummer Dwight James, conga player Rashid Salim, and percussionist Omar Hill.
American Landscapes, volumes 1 and 2, is a pair of live albums by the Peter Brötzmann Chicago Tentet, led by saxophonist Brötzmann, and featuring an ten-piece ensemble. Documenting performances of two large-scale works, they were recorded on May 28, 2006, at Le Weekend in the Tolbooth at Stirling, Scotland, and were released on CD in 2007 by Okka Disk. On the albums, Brötzmann is joined by saxophonists Mats Gustafsson and Ken Vandermark, trumpeter and saxophonist Joe McPhee, trombonist Johannes Bauer, tubist Per-Ake Holmlander, cellist Fred Lonberg-Holm, double bassists Kent Kessler and William Parker, and drummers Paal Nilssen-Love and Michael Zerang.
I Surrender Dear is a solo album by Peter Brötzmann. Featuring a blend of jazz standards and original compositions and improvisations performed on tenor saxophone, it was recorded during July 16–18, 2018, at the Vienna studio of recording engineer Martin Siewert, and was released in 2019 by Trost Records.
Memories of a Tunicate is an album by saxophonist Peter Brötzmann and cellist and electronic musician Fred Lonberg-Holm. Featuring seven free improvisations named after various types of tunicate, it was recorded on June 12, 2019, at GSI Studios in New York City, and was released in 2020 by Relative Pitch Records.
The intellect given birth to here (eternity) is too young is a four-disc box set live album of music by saxophonist and clarinetist Peter Brötzmann and electric guitarist, percussionist, and vocalist Keiji Haino. Discs one and two were recorded on August 4, 2018, at Zebulon in Los Angeles, while discs three and four were recorded on August 8, 2018, at The Chapel in San Francisco. The album was released on vinyl in limited quantities in a box set containing color prints of art by both musicians in 2022 by Black Editions and Haino's Purple Trap label, and is also available as a digital download.
Compass Confusion is an album by the band Junk Magic, led by keyboardist Craig Taborn, and featuring saxophonist and clarinetist Chris Speed, violist Mat Maneri, electric bassist Erik Fratzke, and drummer David King. It was issued by Pyroclastic Records in 2020, 16 years after the group's initial release.