This trio date is dedicated to the music of Annette Peacock, former wife
of both pianist Paul Bley and bassist Gary Peacock. While Bley is the
undisputed leader on this date (as he has recorded many of these pieces
before), it is flügelhorn and trumpet player Franz Koglmann who arranged
them in such an exquisite manner. The majority of the pieces included
here were originally composed as songs. They were vehicles for
expressing the interior, haunted world that Ms. Peacock inhabits and
featured her lilting, edgy voice, which slips and slithers through her
deceptively simple melodies before erupting into a shriek of ecstasy or
pain. Her music is the undercarriage -- the skeletal structure-- for her
poetry to hang itself on. This trio treats these 12 compositions in
much the same way. The music is so sparse, so lacking in adornment, that
at times, tension replaces the subtle dynamic shifts in Ms. Peacock's
compositions. The harmonic construction employed by Bley on this
recording is used nowhere else in his vast oeuvre. The set begins with a
solo piano rendering of "Touching." An open minor chord (strung with
spare notes for accent) gives way to more modal chords, creating a sonic
architecture that doesn't reach, but burrows deeply into itself. (It's
also interesting to note that the record ends with the same tune, but
played with Peacock's bass as a foundation for the terse improvisation.)
Next is Koglmann's opportunity to reveal his ability for understatement
with "El Cordobes." The trumpet comes off playing a tango line joined
note for note by Bley, stating a theme evoking distance and melancholy
before melding fully into Ms. Peacock's sad song. Koglmann also briefly
quotes several selections from Miles Davis' Sketches of Spain before
allowing Peacock's bass to lead him back toward the original melody.
Bley shades each of the trumpet lines almost imperceptibly as Peacock
takes the trio down the labyrinth of this song's subtle complexity. Bley
enters fully about midway through, changing tempo and mode to carry the
improvisation off into yet another songlike structure before the trio
fades into silence. "Kid Dynamite" is an example of Ms. Peacock's humor
and interest in cultural Americana. The opening theme stated by Bley
comes straight out of Copland filtered through Fats Waller. The blues
are jubilant here, spiked and adorned with all manner of swing and
flourish. Each chorus pushes the threshold a bit until "Kid Dynamite"
concludes with a collage of smattered notes and chords from the entire
trio. But perhaps "Albert's Love Theme" best defines the lyrical and
emotional concerns that Ms. Peacock's songs deal with. Here, Koglmann's
lonely flügelhorn introduces a lyric phrase so fraught with melancholy
and tenderness that it nearly disintegrates as Peacock's bass enters the
tune. Breadth, range, and harmony are all contained in these simple
lines. The tension held between both Koglmann and Peacock is nearly
unbearable before the track whispers to a close, completely unresolved.
As the record closes with the second take of "Touching" (this time with
just Koglmann and Peacock), the listener has encountered a world of
musical sound so completely focused within that, for a few moments, it
is difficult to hear or see anything outside of its muted colors and
textures. There isn't anything else to play after Annette that wouldn't
seem superfluous or bombastic. With this album, the trio of Bley,
Peacock, and Koglmann has created more than just a tribute to a great
artist -- it has offered a look deep inside the musical psyche of a true
original. by Thom Jurek
Tracklist:
1 Touching 5:52
Annette Peacock
2 El Cordobes 8:30
Annette Peacock
3 Cartoon 6:26
Annette Peacock
4 Albert's Love Theme 3:46
Annette Peacock
5 Kid Dynamite 4:26
Annette Peacock
6 Miracles 6:47
Annette Peacock
7 Blood 5:03
Annette Peacock
8 Annette 6:26
Paul Bley / Franz Koglmann / Gary Peacock
9 Both 4:26
Annette Peacock
10 Blood 2:46
Annette Peacock
11 Mister Joy 8:37
Paul Bley / Annette Peacock
12 Touching 1:45
Annette Peacock
Credits:
Double Bass – Gary Peacock
Piano – Paul Bley
Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Franz Koglmann
Written-By – Annette Peacock (tracks: 1 to 7, 9 to 12)
https://nitroflare.com/view/92699EDB3C46C6E/Paul_Bley_%E2%80%A2_Annette__1992-2001__FLAC.rar
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