Search - Paul Bley :: Fragments

Fragments
Paul Bley
Fragments
Genres: Jazz, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1

One of Paul Bley's most beautiful group recordings, Fragments has a band designed by ECM producer Manfred Eicher, rather than by the pianist himself. Clearly, Eicher was thinking about sonority, as well as sympathy, when h...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Paul Bley
Title: Fragments
Members Wishing: 5
Total Copies: 0
Label: ECM Records
Release Date: 6/14/1994
Genres: Jazz, Pop
Styles: Avant Garde & Free Jazz, Modern Postbebop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 042282928023, 0042282928023, 042282918017, 042282928047, 781182132023

Synopsis

Amazon.com
One of Paul Bley's most beautiful group recordings, Fragments has a band designed by ECM producer Manfred Eicher, rather than by the pianist himself. Clearly, Eicher was thinking about sonority, as well as sympathy, when he created this quartet with John Surman on soprano and baritone saxophones and bass clarinet, Bill Frisell on guitar, and Paul Motian on drums. Surman and Frisell have varied palettes, and each can bring the kind of sonic focus to a note that is the hallmark of Bley's own spare lyricism. Bley introduces the group to some of the strongest tunes in his repertoire, including melodies that had been with him since the 1960s, Carla Bley's "Seven" and "Closer" and Annette Peacock's "Nothing Ever Was, Anyway." The resulting layered sonorities are striking. Piano, guitar, cymbals, and reeds seem to resonate within one another and mingle in the air, living in the overtones. While each player contributes notable solos, it's often the blending on heads and backdrops that stands out, as when Bley and Frisell support Surman on Motian's "Once Around the Park." Surman and Frisell have an uncanny way of coming together on each other's difficult tunes--soprano and guitar sounding like a single, highly complex voice on Frisell's "Monica Jane"--and they get baritone and guitar almost as close on Surman's "Line Down." Motian, who has worked extensively with Bley and Frisell during his career, plays sparingly, adding melodic detail and occasional animation. This is collectively realized music, but it expands on Bley's solo ballad playing in ways that few groups could. --Stuart Broomer

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