Showing posts with label Aki Takase. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aki Takase. Show all posts

Friday, March 3, 2017

Aki Takase & David Murray - Cherry - Sakura

Styles: Piano And Saxophone Jazz 
Year: 2017
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:48
Size: 117,0 MB
Art: Front

(9:20)  1. Cherry - Sakura
(5:44)  2. A Very Long Letter
(5:41)  3. Let's Cool One
(5:55)  4. To A.P. Kern
(6:27)  5. Stressology
(6:18)  6. Nobuko
(4:52)  7. Blues for David
(6:28)  8. A Long March to Freedom

While remaining steeped in the musical traditions of her native Japan, pianist and composer Aki Takase emerged as one of the most versatile figures in contemporary jazz, her work running the gamut from conventional structures and harmonies to complete abstraction. Born in Osaka on January 26, 1948, and raised in Tokyo, she received her first piano lessons at the age of three, going on to study at Tohogakuen Music University. Influenced by the work of Ornette Coleman, John Coltrane, and Charles Mingus, Takase soon turned to improvisation, and in 1971 was regularly performing professionally; by the age of 25, she was already leading her own groups. In 1978, she first traveled to the U.S., and later recorded with Dave Liebman; in 1981, she also journeyed to Europe, where she and her trio played the Berlin Jazz Festival. By 1982, Takase was regularly in the studio, leading such dates as A.B.C. and Perdido. In New York, she recorded with artists including Sheila Jordan, Cecil McBee, and Bob Moses, and also delivered a much-acclaimed performance at the East-West Festival in Nuremburg. From 1988 to 1994, Takase regularly played in a duo with Maria Joao and maintained her busy festival schedule; during the mid-'90s, she also toured with Coltrane alumni Rashied Ali and Reggie Workman, founded a septet comprised of other Japanese musicians, composed for a string quartet, and continued to work as a solo performer (at times playing the koto, a traditional Chinese 17-string zither). ~ Jason Ankeny https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/aki-takase/id27157926#fullText

Personnel:  Piano – Aki Takase;  Tenor Saxophone, Bass Clarinet – David Murray

Cherry - Sakura

Monday, February 20, 2017

Aki Takase, Silke Eberhard - Ornette Coleman Anthology (2-Disc Set)

Silke Eberhard: alto saxophone, clarinet, bass clarinet; Aki Takase: piano.

Is pianist Aki Takase making a point of releasing an outstanding duo CD every year? Spring In Bangkok (Intakt Records, 2006), in the company of vocalist Lauren Newton, was a model of in-the-moment creativity, and whilst the reasoning behind this latest release is radically different, the end result is equally stimulating.

Tackling a two-disc program of pieces by saxophonist Ornette Coleman might have been a challenge for both musicians present here, but the results suggest it was anything but. The downright tricky opening unison on "Cross Breeding" is handled with extraordinary aplomb and also serves notice that Silke Eberhard is a reed player to watch. Her bass clarinet playing is admirably self-contained in the sense that it shows little overt influence of either Eric Dolphy or David Murray, and she imbues the unwieldy horn with a certain grace even in its lower registers, as on "Free," where Takase makes the keys ring in a fashion some less open-minded pianists can only dream about. In places Eberhard's alto saxophone playing shows traces of Lee Konitz's deeply considered approach, but on "Mr. And Mrs. People" her own considerable musical personality on that horn comes to the fore, especially when it's spurred on by Takase's exercises in rhythmic displacement. The duo is acutely alert to the humour in Coleman's music, as per the clarinet-piano duo of the opening "Turnaround," where the ungainly elegance of the melody is allowed to ring through sheer simplicity of approach. This is one of those happily infrequent occasions over the course of the two discs where the two women assume the roles of soloist and accompanist, but when Takase steps out on her own she melds Coleman with pianist Thelonious Monk in a way which suggests this is music reinvestigated, as opposed to music subjected to the clinical reverence for the notes that the notion of repertory might imply.

Over the course of both discs no less than thirty two Coleman pieces are covered along with one by Takase ("Dedicated To OC-Doughnut"), and in a sense the lack of expansiveness that implies is one of the set's many strengths. Thus the one minute and twenty three seconds of "Round Trip" on the second disc is a model of concentrated communication, with Eberhard spinning out some coruscating phrases on alto before the theme reprise. "Peace" is taken at a slower tempo than the Coleman quartet's original reading; Takase's exercise in taking the thing apart and reconstructing it in a new way exemplifies how Coleman's music is individual enough to withstand such close scrutiny. The point is underscored by Eberhard when her turn comes, and the dry, slightly acerbic quality of her alto is both well suited to the music and a diametric opposite to Coleman's work on the same horn. At over seven minutes "Face Of The Bass" is given one of the lengthier treatments here and such is the duo's empathy, with each other and for the music, that not a second of the time is wasted. Eberhard explores the upper register of her bass clarinet in the wake of some ruminative low end variations, and in her solo Takase utilises her left hand in a manner so intriguing that the listener might rue the absence of a piano in those early Coleman groups. It's certainly the case that the depth of her musical intelligence is such that she can imply all sorts of harmonic variations.

All in all, those end-of-year polls have got themselves another entrant here. Regardless of its age, and some of the compositions here are almost half a century old, this is music worthy of the deep re-investigation going on here, and the listener reaps abundant rewards. ~Nic Jones

Album: Ornette Coleman Anthology (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:18
Size: 131.2 MB
Styles: Modern jazz
Year: 2014

[5:31] 1. Turnaround
[4:24] 2. Lonely Woman
[1:51] 3. Free
[4:02] 4. The Blessing
[3:15] 5. Folk Tale
[2:15] 6. Open To The Public-Check Out Time
[1:31] 7. Cross Breeding
[5:35] 8. The Sphinx
[2:32] 9. Dedicated To Oc-Doughnut
[3:02] 10. Revolving Door
[3:42] 11. Mr. And Mrs. People
[3:07] 12. Angel Voice
[2:34] 13. Motive For Its Use
[3:47] 14. The Disguise
[2:35] 15. Change Of The Century
[7:27] 16. Focus On Sanity

Ornette Coleman Anthology (Disc 1)

Album: Ornette Coleman Anthology (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:46
Size: 143.7 MB
Styles: Modern jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:20] 1. Congeniality
[3:07] 2. Airborne
[4:17] 3. Broadway Blues
[3:13] 4. Beauty Is A Rare Thing
[7:21] 5. The Face Of The Bass
[4:55] 6. Peace
[3:28] 7. Little Symphony
[1:11] 8. Eventually
[3:24] 9. Humpty Dumpty
[1:11] 10. Eos
[5:15] 11. W.R.U
[1:56] 12. Check Up-Enfant
[7:24] 13. I Heard It Over The Radio
[1:24] 14. Round Trip
[2:35] 15. Music Always
[2:50] 16. Love Call
[5:47] 17. Una Muy Bonita

Ornette Coleman Anthology (Disc 2)

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Aki Takase - Aki Takase Plays "Fats" Waller

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:36
Size: 115,9 MB
Art: Front

(2:49)  1. Lookin' Good, But Feelin Bad
(6:46)  2. Vipers Drag
(4:51)  3. Ain't Misbehavin
(4:46)  4. Handful Of Keys
(4:43)  5. Any Tune, But Fats Tune
(2:07)  6. Your Feet's Too Big Word And Music
(2:04)  7. Intermezzo 1.
(3:33)  8. Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans
(1:03)  9. Intermezzo 2.
(2:10) 10. Hold Tight
(3:00) 11. Kuroneko Yamato
(0:53) 12. Intermezzo 3.
(2:15) 13. I Have Got A Feeling I'm Falling
(4:05) 14. Tintenfisch In Wien
(4:25) 15. Kauf Dir Einen Bunten Luftballon

What the world does not need is yet another slavish tribute to the great Fats Waller, one in which his original arrangements are re-created and his personal style respectfully reproduced. Aki Takase, being the slightly slantwise genius that she is, conceived of something very different for this project: a tribute album that would incorporate some of Waller's compositions alongside pieces by other New Orleans composers and original pieces by Takase herself some of which would allude slyly to the great man's sound, and others which would bring a completely different flavor to the mix. Her helpers include bass clarinetist Rudi Mahall, trombonist Nils Wogram, and the even more slantwise genius Eugene Chadbourne, who contributes vocals, banjo, and guitar. Familiar tunes like "Viper Rag" and "Handful of Keys" are given slightly twisted but delightful arrangements, and other period pieces like "Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans" rub shoulders with Takase's own numbered intermezzi, which are often contemplative and harmonically spiky. The vocals tend to be a bit goofy, and some of the arrangements start out with long sections of skronky, atonal group improvisation. But the whole album hangs together surprisingly well and serves its purpose admirably: it celebrates the spirit of Waller's music without aping it thoughtlessly. ~ Rick Anderson  http://www.allmusic.com/album/plays-fats-waller-mw0000810088

Personnel: Aki Takase (piano, toy piano); Eugene Chadbourne (vocals, guitar, banjo); Rudi Mahall (bass clarinet); Thomas Heberer (trumpet); Nils Wogram (trombone); Paul Lovens (drums).

Aki Takase Plays "Fats" Waller

Monday, November 2, 2015

Aki Takase - My Ellington

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:08
Size: 140,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:37)  1. The Mooche
(2:38)  2. A Little Max (Parfait)
(6:26)  3. Solitude
(6:10)  4. In a Mellow Tone/ Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me
(7:10)  5. Caravan
(3:40)  6. Lotus Pond
(5:38)  7. Love You Madly/ I Let a Song
(5:15)  8. I Got It Bad and That Ain't Go
(2:57)  9. Take the Coltrane
(3:28) 10. It Don't Mean a Thing
(2:53) 11. Fleurette Africaine
(3:18) 12. Battle Royal
(4:51) 13. Ad Lib On Nippon

Aki Takase, the Berlin-resident Japanese pianist, combines some very attractive virtues: a fearless relish for treading close to the edge, formidable technique, deep jazz knowledge, a shrewd sense of how to balance abstract improv and song structure, as well as a sense of humour. This riveting Duke Ellington-dedicated solo set (only one of the 13 tracks is a Takase original) cherishes timeless tunes such as The Mooche or Caravan, but also illuminates the path that leads from Ellington to Thelonious Monk, and from Monk to Cecil Taylor. The Mooche is very Monkish, but is also shaped by Takase's dynamic vision: the countermelody is played as plunging loud chords resolved in tiptoeing figures; the improvisation is a flicker of flinty runs, clangs, sinister low chords and blues turns. 

Takase imperceptibly sketches the melody of the ballad Solitude within ebbs and swells of chords, joins In a Mellotone to Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me with bouncing stride piano that dissolves into scalding Taylorisms, and sets the tune of Caravan stalking peremptorily in and out of rumbling low ostinatos. Fleurette Africaine is played as romantically as Ellington himself might have done, and a wild I Hear Music barges into the left-hand walk and splintered dissonances of Battle Royal. Free-jazz fans and Ellington admirers may rarely have been brought so close together. http://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/jun/06/aki-takase-my-ellington-review

My Ellington