Artist: Art Ensemble of Chicago
Album: A Jackson in Your House/Message to Our Folks/Reese and the Smooth Ones
Genre: Free Jazz
Label: Charly Records
Released: 2013
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue)
Tracklist:
- CD 1 - A Jackson in Your House/Message to Our Folks:
- A Jackson in Your House (Mitchell) - 5:44
- Get in Line (Mitchell) - 5:45
- The Waltz (Mitchell) - 1:17
- Ericka (Jarman) - 3:23
- Song for Charles (Mitchell) - 17:36
Message to Our Folks - Old Time Religion (Mitchell) - 7:41
- Dexterity (Parker) - 4:05
- Rock Out (Mitchell) - 8:36
- A Brain for the Seine (Bowie-Favors-Jarman-Mitchell) - 20:19
A Jackson in Your House
- CD 2 - Reese and the Smooth Ones:
- Reese and the Smooth Ones - Part 1 (Bowie-Mitchell) - 19:55
- Reese and the Smooth Ones - Part 2 (Bowie-Mitchell) - 20:50
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- Personnel:
- Roscoe Mitchell - alto saxophone, soprano saxophone, bass saxophone, clarinet, flute, cymbal, gong, congas, log drums, bells, siren, whistle, steel drums
- Lester Bowie - trumpet, flugelhorn, bass drums, horns
- Joseph Jarman - alto saxophone, soprano saxophone, clarinet, oboe, flute, marimba, vibraphone, congas, bells, whistle, gong, siren, guitar
- Malachi Favors - bass, Fender bass, banjo, log drums, cythar, percussion
Two complete LPs by the Art Ensemble of Chicago are reissued in full on this single CD. Recorded in Paris originally for the BYG label, these intriguing and diverse performances feature the Art Ensemble when they were a quartet (before drummer Don Moye joined). Trumpeter Lester Bowie, saxophonists Roscoe Mitchell and Joseph Jarman, and bassist Malachi Favors all are heard playing many other instruments; for example, Jarman plays soprano, alto, clarinet, oboe, flute, marimba, vibes, congas, bells, whistles, gongs, siren, and guitar. The wide-ranging music mostly succeeds at looking both backwards (in eccentric ways) and toward the future. Of particular interest are "Old Time Religion," some credible bebop on "Dexterity," the funky "Rock Out," a demented "The Waltz," and the lengthy jams on "Song for Charles" and "A Brain for the Seine." Fascinating and always-colorful music that certainly breaks down a lot of musical barriers.
Review by Scott Yanow