Triloque (Remastered) Albert Mangelsdorff with Alphonse Mouzon & Jaco Pastorius
Album Info
Album Veröffentlichung:
1977
HRA-Veröffentlichung:
27.08.2015
Label: MPS
Genre: Jazz
Subgenre: Fusion
Interpret: Albert Mangelsdorff with Alphonse Mouzon & Jaco Pastorius
Das Album enthält Albumcover
- 1 Trilogue 06:02
- 2 Zores Mores 08:42
- 3 Foreign Fun 07:57
- 4 Accidental Meeting 09:36
- 5 Ant Step On an Elephant Toe 10:46
Info zu Triloque (Remastered)
Legendary Weather Report electric bassist Jaco Pastorius and quintessential jazz-fusion drummer Alphonse Mouzon join Mangelsdorff at the 1976 Berlin Jazz Days for a combustion of creativity. Trilogue starts off solo with a multiphonic melody line and then opens up with free-wheeling give-and-take between the three. Zores Mores is straight ahead swing with Mangelsdorf’s masterful oblique phrasing and the pyrotechnical playing of Pastorious and Mouzon. There’s a bit of Spain and Flamenco in Foreign Fun with Mouzon laying down a complex carpet of sound and Pastorious setting up drone-like riffs. Accidental Meeting doesn’t seem to be so accidental after all. Albert writes three musical phrases, each composed in a different city, and then three separate musical beings converge as if predestined. Ant Steps On An Elephant’s Toe has a mix of the quick and the ponderous as Albert prances, plunger mute in hand, to a funky fusion rhythm. Multiphonics galore.
„For those of you looking for some funky, chunky, Jaco Pastorius jams, this isn't the place. For those looking for extremely free playing where Mangelsdorff's trombone runs wild and chaotic, this isn't it either. For the fusion freaks entranced by Alphonse Mouzon's skittering drum work that stops and starts on a sliver of light, best look elsewhere. For the rest, who are seeking great jazz in any configuration, this just might be your ticket. Recorded at the Berlin Jazz Days in 1976 and originally issued on LP while Pastorius was at the height of his tenure with Weather Report and playing an all-Mangelsdorff selection, this trio delivers an inspired performance that relies on timing, virtuosity, and a little humor for its bread and butter. The title track is the opener, and its slight abstraction is quickly replaced by Pastorius suggesting the frame of the melody to his counterparts, who pick it up and glide. On 'Zores Mores,' knotty little post-bop lines are woven into an easy framework of Mouzon's dancing hands and a solid yet very flexible interplay between the trombonist and Pastorius' ever-inquisitive basslines. The shimmering tension between the trio's members is all heat on 'Accidental Meeting,' the closest piece to pure abstraction here, but Mangelsdorff insists on, at the very least, the articulation of jazz formalism. 'Foreign Fun' starts out like surreal circus music, but quickly walks the razor's edge between Weather Report's more adventurous material and noirish jazz. The set closes with the groaning humor of 'Ant Steps on Elephant's Toe,' a bumping, bubbling, dub-style cut that features Mangelsdorff blowing fully out of the blues and Pastorius playing the very best Aston Barrett he can. The dub effect gives way to funk about halfway through, and Mouzon becomes animated, doubling and tripling his cohorts in a joyful dance of curiosity and discovery. This cut is street-tough, plenty nasty, and leaves the audience -- and listeners too, no doubt -- begging for more.“ (Thom Jurek, AMG)
Albert Mangelsdorff, trombone
Jaco Pastorius, bass
Alphonse Mouzon, drums
Recorded live at the Berlin Jazz Days, 6 November 1976 at the Berlin Philharmonic
Engineered by Carlos Albrecht at Tonstudio Bauer, Ludwigsburg, Germany
Produced by Joachim E. Berendt
Digitally remastered
Albert Mangelsdorff
was a major innovator, one of only a few Europeans who has had an influence on jazz instrumentalists worldwide. He refined multiphonics, a technique utilizing vocalizing into the horn to produce chords and overtone effects. Often performing as a soloist, he also played/recorded with Elvin Jones, John Lewis, Wolfgang Dauner, and Lee Konitz. Trilogue, Live in Montreux, and Triple Entente are all played in trio with Albert’s amazing technique and multiphonics in full display
Dieses Album enthält kein Booklet