CD/LP/Track Review

Anthony Braxton: Trio & Quintet (Town Hall) 1972 (2011)

By
TROY COLLINS,
Troy Collins

Troy Collins

Senior Contributor since 2006

After hearing Sonny Sharrock's Ask The Ages, there was no turning back.

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Published: March 23, 2011
Anthony Braxton: Trio & Quintet (Town Hall) 1972

Time has an ability to obscure certain details of the past. This notion is apparent when considering the multi-decade oeuvre of visionary composer Anthony BraxtonAnthony Braxton Anthony Braxton
b.1945
reeds
, whose restructuralist Tri-Axium Theory is as unique as Ornette ColemanOrnette Coleman Ornette Coleman
b.1930
sax, alto
's Harmolodic Theory or Cecil TaylorCecil Taylor Cecil Taylor
b.1929
piano
's Unit Structures. Braxton's use of pulse structures and multiple logics has long encouraged a considerable amount of expressive autonomy from performers, yet the composer's idiosyncratic aesthetic has commonly been attributed to an iconoclastic sensibility that inadvertently undervalues his seminal membership in the AACM—an organization whose collective ideology places great importance on group collaboration. Embracing this communal methodology more than most of his albums, the live concert recording Trio & Quintet (Town Hall) 1972 documents some of Braxton's most intriguing and embryonic experiments, conceived well before his elaborate concepts blossomed into the daunting complexities for which he is renowned.

Totaling in the hundreds, Braxton's numbered/graphical compositions have encompassed a wealth of technical innovations over the years; this set reveals the expansive dynamics of his Number 6 series—realized in a range of approaches, from austere introspection to brash expressionism. The first half of the concert presents Braxton's oblique alto excursions supported by bassist Dave HollandDave Holland Dave Holland
b.1946
bass
and drummer Philip Wilson. Holland's earlier work with Braxton, pianist Chick CoreaChick Corea Chick Corea
b.1941
piano
and drummer Barry AltschulBarry Altschul Barry Altschul
b.1943
drums
in the avant-garde super-group Circle (1970-1971) lends his rapport with the leader an intuitive, freewheeling air. Holland's virtuosic pizzicato and Wilson's lithe, in-the-pocket accents provide Braxton's blistering chromatic flights a supple undercurrent through a range of extreme sonic dynamics, while framing the lyrical interpolations of an abstract reading of "All The Things You Are" with recognizably melodic footnotes.

The quintet pieces illuminate a far more esoteric aspect of Braxton's singular aesthetic. The expanded ensemble features Altschul replacing Wilson in the drum chair and multi-instrumentalist John StubblefieldJohn Stubblefield John Stubblefield
1945 - 2005
saxophone
serving as Braxton's foil, with vocalist Jeanne LeeJeanne Lee Jeanne Lee
b.1939
stepping out front. Neo-classical in approach, the second half of the date waxes and wanes from aleatoric pointillism to roiling bouts of frenetic collective improvisation, with Lee's highly expressive vocalese uniting a kaleidoscopic array of instrumental textures, from Braxton's bellowing contrabass clarinet ululations to Altschul's effervescent marimba cascades. In addition to matching the leader's angular cadences note for note, Lee imbues Braxton's quixotic lyrics on the concluding "Composition 6 P II" with poetic finesse, bringing a stately sensibility to an early period of Braxton's work that is sorely under-documented, making Trio & Quintet (Town Hall) 1972 a truly remarkable reissue.

Track Listing: Composition 6 N/Composition 6 (O); All The Things You Are; Composition 6 P I; Composition 6 P II.

Personnel: Anthony Braxton: alto and soprano saxophones, flute, contrabass clarinet, soprano and Bb clarinet, percussion; John Stubblefield: tenor saxophone, flute, bass clarinet, gong and percussion (3, 4); Jeanne Lee: voice (3, 4); Dave Holland: double bass; Philip Wilson: drums (1, 2); Barry Altschul: percussion and marimba (3, 4).

Record Label: Hatology
Style: Modern Jazz

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