"Recorded in concert at Willisau Jazzfestival on August 30th, 1979 two significant artists of different generations share a creative impetus of social and political concern, find a common ground of sound, and improvise a music of conscience and consequence that transcends time and place and comments on the human condition - an eternal struggle between intolerance and love. The song (and its message) remains the same."-Art Lange "[...] This is truly a historic date where Max Roach and Archie Shepp played both solo and as a duo for one night in 1979 at the Willisau Jazz Festival. Part 1 features Roach's truly astonishing "J.C. Moses," a tribute to Detroit jazz great J.C. Heard. The kinds of rim shots, trap stops and starts, and continuous rolling thunder take the breath away and make the listener wonder if this is really only one drummer. Next up is Shepp's solo tenor reading of Ellington's "Sophisticated Lady," where he coaxes from the ballad all its idiosyncrasies and fluidly combines them with his new jazz flourishes without once disrespecting the integrity of the original. Shepp adheres to his own rule that "you can hear every minute of every hour of every day that somebody put in on his horn when he plays a ballad." Finally, on the title track, the pair seeks the outer edges of what can be called jazz. Roach's disciplined fiery drumming is like great wails of roaring thunder (no matter how great Buddy Rich was, he was no Max Roach) where color, shape, ambiance, and dimension take on the quantum dictum of time. Shepp keeps up, unbelievably, by punching through the constant backdrop, repeating lines, recontextualizing them with different embouchures and emphases, then floating new ones through Roach's drums until only sound itself exists. Finally, on Shepp's "U-JAA-MA," the roots of bebop are pulled through the sleeve of modern improvisation. This is where the Europeans can't hang (nor do they want to): there is a soul and purpose here, that tradition exists not as history, but as a continual force and imprint on whatever comes next no matter how antithetical. And as hard bop, swing, bebop, free jazz, and Miles' particular brand of modal expression collide and weave together, this particular piece -- even though it is the halfway point in this collaboration -- is a fine cap, leaving the listener breathless, yes (how does Roach ring those bells while playing the kit with both hands -- in time!?), but literally begging for more. There is no duo record remotely like this one or its counterpart."-Thom Jurek, All Music
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 At The Squid's Ear!
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Track Listing:
CD 1:
1. J.C. Moses 5:52
2. Sophisticated Lady 5:47
3. The Long March 26:18
4. U-Jaa-Ma 12:31 CD 2:
1. Triptych - Four Big Sid - Drums Unlimited - Papa Jo 7:27
2. Giant Steps 5:36
3. South Africa Goddam 20:10
4. It's Time 9:37
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