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Akira Sakata & Chikamorachi - Friendly Pants (2009) [Free Jazz]; FLAC (image+.cue)

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Mike1985
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Akira Sakata & Chikamorachi - Friendly Pants (2009) [Free Jazz]; FLAC (image+.cue)

Unread postby Mike1985 » 24 Feb 2019, 11:20


Artist: Akira Sakata & Chikamorachi
Album: Friendly Pants
Genre: Free Jazz
Label: Family Vineyard
Released: 2009
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue)
Tracklist:
  1. Friendly Pants 11:30
  2. Un 12:02
  3. In Case, Let's Go To Galaxy 8:38
  4. That Day Of Rain 9:12
  5. With Saigyo Path 5:21
  6. Yo! Yo! Dime 10:42

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    Personnel:
  • Alto Saxophone – Akira Sakata
  • Double Bass – Darin Gray
  • Drums – Chris Corsano
  • Producer – Jim O'Rourke

Friendly Pants is a passionate studio session between American free jazz rhythm section Chikamorachi (drummer Chris Corsano and bassist Darin Gray) and Akira Sakata, one of Japan's major free sax players. The recording took place in Tokyo, in August 2006. Sakata's range on the alto extends from tender swirls to furious screams, without resorting to skronks. The Americans are in fine form, overdriving the music as usual, Corsano's speed drumming remaining one of the marvels of the modern music world. Each foreigner gets to do a duet with Sakata, and these are the two shortest tracks. The rest of the album consists of four nine-minute-plus trios. Each piece is given its own personality: "Friendly Pants" is sweet and soulful, "Un" is cheerful-turning-to-bitter, "That Day of Rain" starts mournful, then gets excited. Particularly interesting is the Sakata/Corsano duet "In Case, Let's Go to Galaxy," if only because it allows for comparison with Corsano's long-running duo with another powerful saxman, Paul Flaherty (it comes off as less pathos-driven but just as galvanizing). Friendly Pants is a very satisfying record, intense but well paced, with Gray's low presence in the mix being the only sour note. And there is no denying the chemistry between the players. It makes a fine calling card for Sakata, who is little known on the North American free improvisation circuit.

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