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Žánr Jazz
EAN: 0806267100428
(info)Obsahuje nosičů: 1
Nosič: CD
Popis - TRIPHONY:
The Onus/Triphony (2005), Honorable Mention, Village Voice Jazz Consumer Guide â€?Darryl Harper's clarinet trio is a marvel of studied moderation, searching but not rushed, long but not wearing.â€? –- Tom Hull, Village Voice THE ONUS A Philadelphia native and Phi Beta Kappa and summa cum laude graduate of Amherst College, clarinetist Darryl Harper founded The Onus in 1996, after completing a master's degree in jazz performance at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ. Presently a doctoral candidate at the New England Conservatory of Music in Cambridge, MA, Harper has directed the ensemble in live performances at prominent venues throughout and beyond the Mid-Atlantic region. With the completion of two new CDs set for release in January 2005, The Onus has four recordings to its credit: its self-titled, independently released 1997 debut; 2000's Reoccurring Dream (the first CD released on the HiPNOTIC label); Y'All Got It (2005); and Triphony (2005), which features the trio of Harper, bassist Matthew Parrish, and drummer Butch Reed (see full CD deion below). The Onus features guitarist Jeff Ray, a former classmate of Harper's at Rutgers, who, like Harper, studied with Kenny Barron, among others. Based in Philadelphia, bassist Parrish (also a Rutgers jazz alum) and drummer Reed also are original members of the ensemble, and set the pace on all of the band's recordings to date. Harry Appelman presently fills the piano/organ chair previously occupied by Jason Shattil and Kyle Koehler. Parrish (with Circles) and Ray (with The Walkup) made their recording debuts as leaders in 2002 and 2003, respectively, and remain active in both leader and sidemen roles outside of their work with The Onus. Appelman and Reed are among the most in-demand players on the Washington, DC, and Philadelphia jazz scenes, respectively. In addition to the unusual sonorities produced by The Onus's 'throwback' pairing of clarinet and hollow-body guitar (immediately recalling Benny Goodman and Charlie Christian), an emphasis on ensemble interplay, group improvisation, and original writing make The Onus 'one of the most interesting jazz combos in the Mid-Atlantic region.' (The Jeffersonian, Towson, MD, June 29, 2000) TRIPHONY Over the years, Harper has sought to exploit the various textural and harmonic possibilities within The Onus and he has orchestrated the ensemble's instruments in a wide variety of configurations -- ranging from clarinet-piano duo to full quintet, and including nearly every possible combination in between (occasionally sitting out himself). Triphony is the outgrowth of a run of performances by Harper, Parrish, and Reed (clarinet/bass/drums) in Baltimore during Harper's tenure as director of the Ward School of the Arts at the St. Paul's Schools. Beginning in 2000, the trio made frequent appearances at Ze Mean Bean Caf?©, a popular eatery located in the historic Fells Point neighborhood that Harper called home before matriculating at NEC in Fall 2004. Within the confines of the cozy restaurant's tiny, railed bandstand, Harper, Parrish, and Reed explored pieces from The Onus's working repertoire and also developed new material of their own, sometimes starting from scratch, right then and there, on the fly. For Triphony, they duplicated this close-quartered, high-wire improvisational approach in the recording studio, with Reed employing a pared-down drum kit and sundry percussive 'toys.' The traditional 'Limehouse Blues' and Stevie Wonder's 'Jesus, Children of America' serve as reference points as the trio proceeds to investigate and blur the boundaries between composition and improvisation, and between genres, on twelve tracks. The musicians rely on familiarity and trust to guide each other intimately through barely-ed or entirely spontaneous adventures that variously use Bach, Brazil, bebop, and the blues as springboards for the trio's sonic trapeze. From the liner notes . . . 'Group improvisation is first and foremost the art of discipline-the discipline of being at once paradoxically free and limited by the myriad of available possibilities. The series of decisions and judgments must be instant and unbroken. It is a state of constantly controlled abandon. The challenge is heightened here with the pared down format of clarinet, bass, and partial drum kit. There is no place to hide, no piano chords or riff-setting brass or wind sections to use as a smokescreen or blind. The participants must, while inhabiting the moment, and without prearrangement, 'feel' each other second to second, note to note. From the opening clave beat of 'The Snake' to the cymbal riding, bass pulsing exit of 'Something Inside Me,' through the title tune, 'Dig In,' and 'Jig,' the improvised pieces display an atlas, tables, charts, and plates mapping the landscape of The Onus's intellectual, emotional, and musical complexity and control in freeform modes...From first to last, Triphony, never venturing down dead ends or beaten paths, is a joyful trip of liberation, discovery, and tripping the light fantastic . . .' - Bill Harris, Playwright, Poet, and Professor of Creative Writing at Wayne State University