Afternoon Of A Georgia Faun
发行时间:1971-11-15
发行公司:ECM Records
简介: by Brian OlewnickDifficult as it may be for younger listeners to believe, there was a time when ECM released adventurous, improvised music. Back near its inception in the early 70's, the label issued a wide variety and decent number of challenging, avant-garde recordings that represented some of the most forward-looking musical thinkers of the time. One of these was Marion Brown who, at the time of this session, was about midway between his extreme post- Coltrane explorations and the luscious, down-home evocations of Georgia that he would create for Impulse over the next few years. He gathered eleven musicians including a couple from the then-current Miles Davis Bitches Brew band (hick Corea and Bennie Maupin), the then little-known Anthony Braxton, Andrew Cyrille and the late, great vocalist Jeanne Lee for two sidelong, wide-ranging pieces. The first, the title track is a wonderful, percussive evocation of pastoral Georgia, something along the lines of what the Art Ensemble of Chicago was doing around the same time but without the satire and with a greater sense of serenity. As the flutes, reeds, voice and piano enter, there is no idea of "soloing"; instead, each contributes to the ongoing, evolving texture of the piece creating a fabric that's as cohesive as it is unplanned. The remaining cut, "Djinji's Corner", is a bit more fleshed out, a little more "traditional" in one way, though still quite unusual for the time. Again, a reference point might be Art Ensemble works from around the same time, here a mélange of free horns and intense percussion, with Jeanne Lee soaring over the top, mixing words and glossolalia, similar to her stellar work on Carla Bley's Escalator Over the Hill. The effect is more eerie and spiritually infused than the preceding piece, with keening, bowed cymbals and deep pulses from the lower clarinet family. It gradually builds to something of a frenzy, but in an unforced manner that shows it to be merely another approach to the territory explored earlier. Afternoon of a Georgia Faun is a lovely, inspired album, a key work in Marion Brown's oeuvre and a recording that belongs in any collection of contemporary jazz.
by Brian OlewnickDifficult as it may be for younger listeners to believe, there was a time when ECM released adventurous, improvised music. Back near its inception in the early 70's, the label issued a wide variety and decent number of challenging, avant-garde recordings that represented some of the most forward-looking musical thinkers of the time. One of these was Marion Brown who, at the time of this session, was about midway between his extreme post- Coltrane explorations and the luscious, down-home evocations of Georgia that he would create for Impulse over the next few years. He gathered eleven musicians including a couple from the then-current Miles Davis Bitches Brew band (hick Corea and Bennie Maupin), the then little-known Anthony Braxton, Andrew Cyrille and the late, great vocalist Jeanne Lee for two sidelong, wide-ranging pieces. The first, the title track is a wonderful, percussive evocation of pastoral Georgia, something along the lines of what the Art Ensemble of Chicago was doing around the same time but without the satire and with a greater sense of serenity. As the flutes, reeds, voice and piano enter, there is no idea of "soloing"; instead, each contributes to the ongoing, evolving texture of the piece creating a fabric that's as cohesive as it is unplanned. The remaining cut, "Djinji's Corner", is a bit more fleshed out, a little more "traditional" in one way, though still quite unusual for the time. Again, a reference point might be Art Ensemble works from around the same time, here a mélange of free horns and intense percussion, with Jeanne Lee soaring over the top, mixing words and glossolalia, similar to her stellar work on Carla Bley's Escalator Over the Hill. The effect is more eerie and spiritually infused than the preceding piece, with keening, bowed cymbals and deep pulses from the lower clarinet family. It gradually builds to something of a frenzy, but in an unforced manner that shows it to be merely another approach to the territory explored earlier. Afternoon of a Georgia Faun is a lovely, inspired album, a key work in Marion Brown's oeuvre and a recording that belongs in any collection of contemporary jazz.