recordings |
>Pandelis Karayorgis/Ken Vandermark:
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Reviews
Even without reading the notes, it's clear from the start of Karayorgis' "Lifgatowy," as Vandermark's quirky clarinet joins with the pianist's fractured opening, that there is something special going on here. Playing with, at, and around one another, as the songs demand, the two are equally matched and each is sensitively attuned to the nuances and directions of the other's solo flights. The pianist's other compositions range from the blues-based "Betwixt," with a brooding, Mal Waldron-flavored attack by Karayorgis (dynamite solo!) and relaxed, behind the beat saxophone playing, a pair of steady swingers designed for improvisation ("United Forces of One" and "The Clincher"), and "Of Two Minds," described by its composer as "an 11-bar theme with shifting meters and a fleeting reference to Lennie Tristano in the last four bars." Vandermark cites the Lee Konitz/Sal Mosca album Spirits as the "inception" to this project, and the first of his pieces here, the knotty “ICT,” is dedicated to the late Mosca. Improvising pioneer Derek Bailey passed away around the time this music was being prepared, and "Dreamless" is dedicated to him. Vandermark is hyperaware of the irony of writing a tune for the guitarist, and the tension of that dichotomy informs and fuels his music, as it does so many other composer/improvisers around the globe. The thoughtful and spacious "Title Without Year," dominated by Vandermark's clarinet, is dedicated to painter and art theoretician Josef Albers. "Absolute Camel," Vandermark's piece for Misha Mengelberg, ends the disc in rousing fashion in a tenor and piano excursion that visits a considerable amount of musical territory in less than 6 minutes. One rehearsal, one gig, and one quick session were all they needed to create this gem. In typically exploratory fashion, Vandermark ends his notes with a series of questions, ending with "Where does it go from here?" I can't wait to find out either; meanwhile, there's this keeper to keep coming back to.
In the Daniel Kraus documentary on Ken Vandermark, the saxophonist is shown writing music, organizing tours, traveling to and playing gigs, the typical life of the titular Musician. What comes out of the film is some insight into a player who is known mainly through his numerous projects and prolific album output. Sometimes Vandermark can seem like the kid in high school who stayed at home working while everyone else was out on the golf course drinking beer. Perhaps he even was that kid but the results speak for themselves. He is so dynamic an organizer and writes so much music that often his actual playing gets overshadowed. Certainly his style is unmistakable. Three albums though find him out of the role of a leader and playing music other than his own [Rebus, Foreground Music, Bridge 61]. Listeners will come away from the discs appreciating Vandermark the player and teammate and also gain increased appreciation on his own composing when contrasted against that of others. (...) On the same disc with the song in tribute of Joe Morris, another piece was for pianist Pandelis Karayorgis. The pair had recorded once before in a 1999 trio with bassist Nate McBride. On Foreground Music they are found in the intimacy of a duo, sharing song-writing responsibilities. Vandermark wrote all new music for the collaboration and sticks to tenor saxophone and clarinet. The opportunity to hear him in subtle dialogue with a pianist is intriguing. None of the usual bombast is here and even Vandermark’s pieces seem geared towards the understated (though some of them are ripe for reworking for the Vandermark 5). And on the Karayorgis pieces, Vandermark is almost sedate, with little overblowing or punctuation. If Rebus is afternoon music, Foreground Music is there for settling in before bed. *** If, on his last duet offering with Paal NilssenLove, Vandermark was unleashed, now he is reined in. In the previous instance the pieces felt too long because there were too many moments of stasis whereas here they are so well conceived and executed in places they could have done with being longer. In his sleeve notes Vandermark mentions Jimmy Giuffre as a point of departure for the project given the mutual interest that he and Karayorgis have in the somewhat neglected clarinettist. It's an interesting reference but while the echoes of Giuffre's evanescent classically inflected work are clear enough, the fiery formstretching impulses that have defined Vandermark's aesthetic are by no means negated. Many pieces are constructed without set harmonic guidelines and the players provide I changes' in ways that are less direct but no less effective: an aggressive sharpening of a chord; a heated punctuation of a phrase; a stark jump in volume that doesn't shatter the decibel range laid down for a given piece. The harnessing of the energy as well as the energy itself makes this music work. And it's done well enough to suggest that a second volume of this partnership would be very welcome. Lo malo de los artistas que trabajan con muchos planteamientos, formaciones e ideas musicales es que no siempre tienen éxito en sus proyectos. Por otro lado, lo bueno es que, en muchas ocasiones, el mero experimento ya es suficientemente enriquecedor, aunque en definitiva sea fallido.
Liner notes by Ken Vandermark and Pandelis Karayorgis -Ken Vandermark, Stockholm, October 29, 2006. It's been over seven years since Ken Vandermark and I worked on our trio CD "No Such Thing" with bassist Nate McBride. During this time we only occasionally had a chance to play together again?either as a trio with Nate or as a quartet with the addition of drummer Curt Newton?although I heard Ken numerous times during stops through Boston and on the few occasions I visited Chicago. -Pandelis Karayorgis
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