Sunday, December 2, 2012

AUS - JOHANNES BAUER, CLAYTON THOMAS, TONY BUCK – Live in Nickelsdorf 2007 (2009)






Label: Jazzwerkstatt; Catalog#: jw051
Country: Germany; Format: CD, Album - Released: 2009
Style: avant-garde, free improvisation, Contemporary Jazz, Free Jazz 
Recorded live at Jazzgalerie Nickelsdorf 2007 by SWR Baden Baden, July 14 2007
New Design (pages 2,3,4,5) by ART&JAZZ Studio - 2012
Photography By – Elvira Faltermeier
Producer – Reinhard Kager; Recorded By, Mixed By, Mastered By – Alfred Habelitz


Review:

Musicians of all stripes frequently relocate to make a better living and find a more sympathetic playing situation. But few literally travel as far as bassist Clayton Thomas, who a couple of years ago traded his home in Sydney, Australia for one in Berlin. It ’ s a testament to improvised music ’ s contemporary universality that Thomas ’ trek was to Europe rather than the United States and a tribute to the German capital ’ s burgeoning improv scene that the bassist from Oz is constantly busy in his adopted city.

Das Treffen (Axel Dörner, John Schröder, Clayton Thomas, Oliver Steidle – DPIMR, post Sept.11.2012) was recorded in Berlin, while AUS dates from a triumphant performance during 2007 ’ s Konfrontationen in Nickelsdof, Austria. Besides Thomas ’ slap bass thumps and staccato string-slices, the personnel on each CD are different as well. Peripatetic trombonist Johannes Bauer, who has played with everyone from bassist Barry Guy to saxophonist Peter Brötzmann is another-third of the Aus trio, while drummer Tony Buck – another Australian turned Berliner, best-known for his membership in The Necks, completes the triangle. Thomas ’ cohorts on the other CD are all German. Trumpeter Axel Dörner balances reductionism with straight-ahead jazz in bands like Monk ’ s Casino; while percussionist Oliver Steidle in the band Soko Steidle with two of Dörner ’ s colleagues from Monk ’ s Casino.

Evolving their interaction over the course of seven live performances, each AUS-er contributes his share to the outstanding performances. Polyphonic and polyrhythmic all the pieces connect instantly and remain sutured throughout each musical twist, turn and wiggle. Bauer, for instance, slurs in the bass clef, quivers higher-pitched timbres and is snakily discursive most of the time, slipping from one tone to another with a full complement of grace notes. Buck clips, clops, rumbles and cymbal squeals when necessary, but also bears down on the beat with bass drum pops. Furthermore, Bauer ’ s command of the ‘ bone is such that at times it appears as if he ’ s constructing palindromes that are both allegro and moderato.

Drawing out capillary lines in an elastic fashion, Bauer brays one minute and evacuates plunger textures from deep within his horn ’ s body tube the next. Sometimes he verbalizes at the same time as he blows, creating a secondary sound stream. Bauer ’ s grace notes can be so silvery and speedy that they ’ re almost as weightless as bell pings; at other points his triple tonguing and gutbucket smears wildly vibrate up to the stratosphere. While all this is happening Buck rolls his cymbals and uses opposite sticking on his drum tops, while his pacing encompasses drags, ruffs and scatter-shot pumps. Available with muscular slaps and string ratcheting from sharp objects, Thomas also doesn ’ t neglect walking when it ’ s needed to move the piece forward. Finally, when each improvisation decelerates to diminuendo, clockwork pacing falls into place as each player follows the other in timbral downsizing......

Overall these two CDs demonstrate not only the many unique tonal properties being explored on the Berlin scene, but also the improvisational skills of the six musicians featured. Considering these are only two of the many aggregations to which bassist Thomas lends his skills, his decision to trade shrimp on the barbie for curry wurst on the bun appears to have been a wise one.

-- By Ken Waxman (Review Archives)



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