Showing posts with label Charles Gayle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charles Gayle. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 3, 2019

Charles Gayle Quartet - Always Born (feat. John Tchicai)

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:51
Size: 131,1 MB
Art: Front

( 9:48)  1. Always Born
(11:52)  2. Needs
(12:58)  3. Solid Clouds
( 5:22)  4. Coming Together
( 6:17)  5. Rainbow's Praise
(10:31)  6. Then Offer All

"Charles Gayle is carving out a free jazz that is muscular, impassioned, clearly structured, and wonderfully volatile." 
~ Jon Pareles, New York Times https://silkheart.bandcamp.com/album/always-born

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone, Composed By, Producer - Charles Gayle;  Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone - John Tchicai; Bass - Sirone; Drums - Reggie Nicholson

Always Born (feat. John Tchicai)

Monday, June 24, 2019

Charles Gayle - Kingdom Come

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:14
Size: 171,2 MB
Art: Front

( 4:09)  1. Seven Days
(21:17)  2. Lord Lord
( 9:03)  3. Beset Souls
(13:00)  4. His Crowning Grace
( 5:17)  5. Redeemed
(11:24)  6. Anthem To Eternity
(10:02)  7. Yokes

This is possibly Charles Gayle's weakest recording. Drummer Sunny Murray seems out of place here; the powerful blowing by Gayle on "His Crowning Grace" is offset by Murray's soft drumming and his attempts to play free and in time simultaneously. Kingdom Come marks the recorded debut of Gayle as a pianist (on "Seven Days," "Beset Souls" and "Redeemed"). His piano playing resembles the style of Cecil Taylor, but it is not nearly as dynamic. ~ Brian Flota https://www.allmusic.com/album/kingdom-come-mw0000122863

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone – Charles Gayle;  Double Bass [Uncredited] – William Parker;  Drums  – Sunny Murray

Kingdom Come

Friday, June 21, 2019

Charles Gayle - Jazz Solo Piano

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:12
Size: 128,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:29)  1. 1939
(2:58)  2. I'll Remember April
(6:16)  3. Round Midnite
(5:21)  4. Countdown
(4:37)  5. Bucket Blues
(3:06)  6. Nadoshe
(4:12)  7. Afternoon In Paris
(4:39)  8. All The Things You Are
(2:32)  9. Cherokee
(4:13) 10. What's New
(2:38) 11. Softly As In A Morning Sunrise
(6:39) 12. Body & Soul
(3:29) 13. I'll Remember Aprill II
(0:57) 14. Chapter Green

Charles Gayle has gained fame as a very passionate avant-garde tenor saxophonist, but this CD is something much different. The set is dedicated to the music of his youth, the songs from the 1930s and '40s that he heard at home. Gayle is reborn, temporarily, as a surprisingly effective pianist. Most of the selections he performs are standards and, although his improvisations are abstract, he does pay respect to the melodies and keeps the themes in mind. Gayle does not strictly follow the chord structures and his soloing is often thoughtful and out of time, even including some atonal striding. This is about as accessible a recording as Charles Gayle will ever make and it is generally both surprising and successful in its own way. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/jazz-solo-piano-mw0000116122

Personnel: Charles Gayle - Piano.

Jazz Solo Piano

Wednesday, June 19, 2019

Charles Gayle - Touchin' on Trane

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:39
Size: 152,9 MB
Art: Front

(14:39)  1. Touchin' on Trane: Part A
( 7:02)   2. Touchin' on Trane: Part B
(12:26)  3. Touchin' on Trane: Part C
(27:42)  4. Touchin' on Trane: Part D
( 4:48)   5. Touchin' on Trane: Part E

A long time ago, there was an advertising line: "The Rolling Stones are not just a band; they are a way of life." That ad man was of course tapping into the old adage of jazz: if you don't live it, it won't come through your music. In the '90s, The New Thing of the '60s came back with tremendous energy and no one embodied that energy better than Charles Gayle. At almost 70 years old, he still plays with the conviction and strength of a Coltrane or Rollins in their twenties and thirties. This CD, one of the strongest of the '90s, was out of print from Germany's FMP label and very difficult if not impossible to find, so this reissue is a cause for celebration. The music on Touchin' On Trane is for those who thought the avant-garde was the wrong direction of the '60s, even though the same musician who created "Giant Steps" was also one of its most important proponents with works inluding Meditations (Impulse!, 1965) and Interstellar Space (Impulse!, 1967). Starting off with "Part A," Coltrane alum/drummer Rashied Ali sets up a fast tempo, Gayle's soaring tenor voice moving quickly from rapid-fire mid-register lines to higher, long notes that fly over the bass and drums, sinking to occasionally deeper honks. The focus is on the leader's relentless energy for the next seven minutes, until he drops out, placing the spotlight on bassist William Parker. Even with Ali moving to brushes, the tumultuous energy continues through the bassist's solo, which precedes Ali's Max Roach-esque lead, concentrating on the foot-controlled opening and closing of the hi-hat cymbals. When moving to the rest of his kit there is a near-bebop approach to the rhythms, snappy snare and melodies emerging from tom-toms. "Part B" changes the sonic scenery. Gayle and Parker melodically weave between each other's lines, and Ali's active yet dynamically sensitive brushes urge lyrical ideas forward. At one point, both saxophonist and bassist play in the upper-most registers of their instruments, producing a very striking sound. And, as with many of the great composing improvisers, they bring that sound back at the end of this beautiful, balladic piece. Once it gets rolling, the energy of "Part D" proves perhaps more intense than anything played prior, and the stamina holds forth for over 27 minutes. It's as if the musicians are transported to a place beyond human limits. Parker's open G-string is tamboura-like in its drone, from which all three musicians spiral. Here Gayle's spirit is unshakable; when it appears that he can't possibly go on, he does. Even as he drops out to Ali's brushes accompanying Parker's arco bass solo, the energy and focus doesn't drop for a moment. "Part E" is a concise summary of the entire set: the slinky counterpoint, the Ben Webster/Sonny Rollins-like tenor tone, Ali's swing, and the powerful compositional/improvisational approach of Parker all contained here in a powerful five minutes. For the believer and non-believer, Gayle's honest, powerful approach is undeniable. ~ Francis Lo Kee https://www.allaboutjazz.com/touchin-on-trane-charles-gayle-jazzwerkstatt-berlin-brandenburg-ev-review-by-francis-lo-kee.php

Personnel: Charles Gayle: tenor saxophone; William Parker: bass; Rashied Ali: drums.

Touchin' on Trane