Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:27
Size: 116,9 MB
Art: Front
( 9:14) 1. Get Out Of Town
( 5:14) 2. I Love Paris
( 8:17) 3. Love For Sale
( 9:07) 4. Little Lees (Louise)
(10:16) 5. Motystrophe
( 8:16) 6. Carol/Three Points
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:27
Size: 116,9 MB
Art: Front
( 9:14) 1. Get Out Of Town
( 5:14) 2. I Love Paris
( 8:17) 3. Love For Sale
( 9:07) 4. Little Lees (Louise)
(10:16) 5. Motystrophe
( 8:16) 6. Carol/Three Points
This may be the straightest record Cecil Taylor ever recorded, but it is far from uninspiring. Despite its hopelessly gauche cover one can only presume Taylor had no say-so in the choice of artwork used Taylor's approach to three Cole Porter tunes with a trio and three of his own with a quintet is a lively combination, and one which, in lieu of his later work, reveals the construction of his system of improvisation better than his later records do when he is playing from the middle of it. Accompanied by Dennis Charles on drums and Buell Neidlinger on bass, Taylor dives deep into Porter's "I Love Paris," a shifty little pop song. Taylor goes head to head with Neidlinger in a contrapuntal statement of the melody illustrated by chord changes which are extrapolated from the melodic sequence against harmony before actually flowing into the main theme of the tune for a moment before kicking the rhythm section loose and treating the tune percussively, almost as if it were a series of rhythm changes instead of harmonic ones.
On the title track it's much the same, except Taylor's tenderness shines through in his lilting right hand in the middle as he trades fours with Charles. There's a wonderful cut-time tempo here, and Taylor starts building scales harmonically in his solo only to answer them with the melody and original harmony. With his own three tunes, with trumpeter Ted Curson and saxophonist Bill Barron added to the fray, Taylor takes more chances. On "Little Lees (Louise)," he scores in an elaborate melody that is played without dissonance by the horn section as he and Neidlinger play entirely in counterpoint. But here, too, there is a sublime lyricism at work; there are no extra notes or chords, and everything falls in line with the chromatic architecture Taylor composes with. "Maities Trophie" is Taylor ringing in a blues jam à la Ellington or at least his version of Ellington. The solos by Curson and Barron are tight, narrative, and bordering on swing, but all that's taken care of by Taylor's solo. Love for Sale is a delightful anomaly in Cecil Taylor's long career. ~ Thom Jurek http://www.allmusic.com/album/love-for-sale-mw0000038935
Personnel: Cecil Taylor (piano); Bill Barron (tenor saxophone); Ted Curson (trumpet); Buell Neidlinger (bass); Dennis Charles (drums).
Personnel: Cecil Taylor (piano); Bill Barron (tenor saxophone); Ted Curson (trumpet); Buell Neidlinger (bass); Dennis Charles (drums).
Love For Sale
Thanks! A very interesting and obscure album
ReplyDeleteof the great CT to add to my collection!
Cheers Daniel, from Spain...
Yes Daniel, It's a obscure album of CT!!!
ReplyDeleteThank You and Cheers too!
As always Giullia many thanks.
ReplyDeleteHey Newlyner, Thank You as always too....
DeleteHi Giullia. Please reupload this album when you get the chance. Many thanks in advance.
ReplyDeleteNew link posted!
Delete09-04-2019