CD/LP/Track Review

Cecil Taylor: FLY! FLY! FLY! FLY! FLY! (2012)

By
JOHN KELMAN,
John Kelman

John Kelman

Senior Editor since 2004
You and 295 other members follow John

With the realization that there will always be more music coming at him than he can keep up with, John wonders why anyone would think that jazz is dead or dying.

Recent articles (2,379 total)

Published: October 14, 2012
Cecil Taylor: FLY! FLY! FLY! FLY! FLY!

83 years old and approaching ninety releases as a leader, pianist Cecil Taylor's place in the history of jazz may already rest assured, but he's more cited than seen these days. He may not come up as a primary influence as often as usual suspects Bill EvansBill Evans Bill Evans
1929 - 1980
piano
, Keith JarrettKeith Jarrett Keith Jarrett
b.1945
piano
, McCoy TynerMcCoy Tyner McCoy Tyner
b.1938
piano
or Herbie HancockHerbie Hancock Herbie Hancock
b.1940
piano
, but in the free jazz realm there are few as distinctive or influential—and who've avoided the lure of compromise. Paul BleyPaul Bley Paul Bley
b.1932
piano
comes close, but while the Canadian pianist hasn't marched to anyone's drummer but his own, he's been more out there in the world, collaboratively speaking, versus the more absolute and resolute Taylor, who rarely works with anyone beyond the purview of his own groups. And though equally unencumbered by preconception—at least in most circumstances—Bley has always played the austere aesthete to the seemingly more flamboyant and aggressive Taylor.

For those who've dismissed Taylor as an important but unapproachable player, 1980's FLY! FLY! FLY! FLY! FLY!—part of Promising Music's ongoing remaster series of Germany's MPS catalog—might just change some minds. Spontaneity may be the order of the day—culminating Taylor's near-decade long exploration of solo piano—and there's plenty of his signature virtuosic expressionism, but what FLY! also demonstrates in the clearest possible fashion, is Taylor's broad purview, and complete and utter sense of purpose.

Taylor's original (and brief) liner notes tell all: "If a man plays for a certain amount of time...eventually a kind of order asserts itself. There is no music without order—if that music comes from a man's innards...it is a question of recognizing ideas and expressions of order." There's plenty of order to be found, as Taylor pulls motifs from the ether and works them—stopping, starting, twisting, turning and stretching—with unmistakable animus. Free this may be, but it's still the consequence of split-second decision-making that renders these eight improvisations as far more than the meandering randomness to which free jazz naysayers so often ascribe. There are unmistakable roots in the jazz tradition, with encyclopedic trace elements of everything from stride to bop, but the references are so fleeting that it's easy to miss them. There are changes, too—as in "T (Beautiful Young'n)"—though how and when they manifest themselves is never anything but unpredictable.

There are hints of European classicism, too, as German pianist Alexander von SchlippenbachAlexander von Schlippenbach Alexander von Schlippenbach
b.1938
piano
writes in notes written specially for this edition, even as Taylor relentlessly turns on a dime, moving from one thought to the next with unerring logic and unmistakable inevitability. And there are brief glimpses of real beauty, too, despite often being bookended by more oblique ideation.

Taylor's technical acumen is truly the subsummation of a life already past midpoint when he entered MPS Studio in Villingen, Germany in September, 1980. Remastered with the same tender care as the rest of its series, Promising Music's reissue of FLY! FLY! FLY! FLY! FLY! brings an album that has been all-too-often overlooked back into circulation, and is a welcome entry point into the music of an artist for whom "compromise" and "pander" are the two dirtiest words of all.

Track Listing: T (Beautiful Young'n); Astar; Ensaslayi; I (Sister Young'n); Corn in Sun + T (Moon); The Stele Stolen and Broken is Reclaimed; N + R (Love is Friends); Rocks Sub Amba.

Personnel: Cecil Taylor: piano.

Record Label: Promising Music/MPS
Style: Modern Jazz

comments powered by Disqus

Weekly Giveaways

Will Calhoun

Will Calhoun
About | Enter

Verve Jazz Ensemble

Verve Jazz Ensemble
About | Enter

Sinan Bakir

Sinan Bakir
About | Enter

Joshua Redman

Joshua Redman
About | Enter