2nd in a projected 8-volume series of reed & wind player Sam Rivers archival recordings produced Ed Hazell and NoBusiness; "Zenith" is a masterful 1977 recording at Jazztage Berliner with Sam Rivers on sax, flute & piano, Joe Daley on tuba & euphonium, Dave Holland on bass &, cello, and Barry Altschul & Charlie Persip on drums, in an extended, diverse and exceptional set.
Format: CD Condition: New Released: 2019 Country: Lithuania Packaging: Jewel Case Recorded at the Jazztage Berliner 1977, in Berlin, Germany, on November 6th, 1977.
Personnel:
Sam Rivers-tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute, piano
"Sam Rivers was a living dynamo across his eighty-eight years on the planet. One of the predictable accompanying injustices of all that activity that his commercially released discography only partially reflected that vibrant prolificacy. If left to the vagaries and biases of record labels that might have been the whole story. Fortunately, in typical self-deterministic fashion Rivers took it upon himself to document much of his work. The result was a tape trove from which the source recording for Zenith originates. Second in a projected eight-volume series produced by archivist Ed Hazell and label owner Danas Mikailionis, it brings into circulation an appealing and action-packed vintage German concert hit by an amalgam of several of Rivers' most satisfying ensembles.
Bassist Dave Holland and drummer Barry Altschul were colleagues of Rivers going back to the former's pivotal album project for ECM, Conference of the Birds. Tubaist Joe Daley was a more recent associate playing and touring with a succession of Rivers' ensembles. Augmenting Altschul on a second kit, veteran drummer Charlie Persip made the band a quintet. A single unindexed improvisation, "Universal Message" follows Rivers' usual framework of episodic segments sequenced around his four primary instruments: tenor saxophone, flute, piano and soprano saxophone. Sections for the other players are threaded in as well with Daley hefting euphonium and the tandem of Altschul and Persip engaging in a dynamic duet prior to a soprano coda from Rivers.
For a nearly thirty-three-year-old tape, the recording is both clear and crisp with solid spatial depth and balance between the players. Rivers starts on tenor, blowing gutsy and loquacious against the rhythmic crosscurrents of his colleagues for seventeen vibrantly paced minutes. A switch to flute also signals a downshift by Holland into funk, with the leader peppering fluttering spirals with vocalized shouts. Rivers was never reticent about involving his voice in the instrumental palate and here as elsewhere his exhortations aren't frivolous bombast but rather another means of unbridled expression. Holland's swap to amplified cello exposes another avenue of tone color further enhanced by the sustained splash and crash of adjacent drum sets. The audience is largely silent rapt throughout, a complimentary reflection of the band's concerted ability to keep eyes and ears absorbed en mass."-Derek Taylor, Dusted Magazine
"This is the second release in NoBusiness Records series of archival recordings by the great multi-instrumentalist, composer and improviser Sam Rivers, the recording having been made in Berlin, Germany in November of 1977 with Rivers in the company of Joe Daley on tuba and euphonium, Dave Holland on bass and cello and Barry Altschul and Charlie Persip on drums. The music is uniformly excellent as they perform a continuous fifty-three minute collective improvisation called "Universal Message" with Rivers cycling through his instruments in nearly equal measures, creating a suite that where he moves from tenor saxophone to flute and finally to a mix of piano and soprano saxophone. The sound of the album is clear and transparent, allowing you hear all of the instruments, opening with River's raw tenor amid the bass, tuba and drumming creating a unique and fascinating soundscape. They build a caustic and exciting free improvisation with many layers that can be explored, with the drummers combining to create interesting rhythmic patterns and textures that push Rivers' saxophone into even higher realms as the music becoming witheringly intense at times. There is a brief abstract period for percussion and longer tones of sound, bass and tuba melding like molten liquid, and Holland taking a very impressive solo. Rivers moves to flute, beginning in a subtle manner with brushed percussion and Holland's thick bass for support, with the music gradually gathering steam, building to an inspired improvisation, the musicians playing at a breakneck speed without missing a beat. The sound of flute amid tuba, buoyant bass and double drums is daring and Rivers breaks into vocals exhortations that frame the visceral nature of this music. Holland uses his bow effectively engaging Rivers flute in a way that changes the nature of the music, allowing it to follow a different path, one that is quite melodic and beautiful. After an interlude of applause, Rivers moves to piano, beginning unaccompanied, developing his own percussive concept, as the band falls in beside him. He plays freely around Holland's stoic bass and the skittish drumming, creating a powerful atmosphere. The tuba takes flight for a very well articulated solo backed with rich bass and drummers playing cymbals along with spare piano chords, Daley has a lovely tone on the instrument, and is rewarded with applause from the audience. Rivers moves to soprano saxophone as the concert nears its conclusion, playing with sleek elegance, meeting urgent bass and drums with sharp peals of sound. The music undulates like a tempest as the drummers trade ideas in a titanic duet, with the band coming together for one final glorious sprint to the finish, ending this fantastic album with an excellent flourish. Zenith - NoBusiness Records."-Tim Niland, https://jazzandblues.blogspot.com/