London Free Improv Scene long-standing members, vocalist Phil Minton and drummer/percussionist Roger Turner's first album together, "Ammo", was released in 1984; the two have continued to record together, and this live recording from 2016 in Hanover, Germany shows the two continuing to create distinctly bizarre and wonderfully personal dialog unlike any other.
London Free Improv Scene long-standing members, vocalist Phil Minton and drummer/percussionist Roger Turner's first album together, "Ammo", was released in 1984; the two have continued to record together, and this live recording from 2016 in Hanover, Germany shows the two continuing to create distinctly bizarre and wonderfully personal dialog unlike any other. The recordings were made in the audience at this concert, but are clear and present, catching the nuances of Turner's percussion work and every odd utterance from Minton's mouth. The two pieces average 25 minutes each, allowing each to stretch out and provide a wealth of material, from active and quick interactions to introspective moments. Turner is in creative form as he tosses out a great variety of rhythmic and punctuating interventions, never resting but often showing great restraint amidst an arsenal of percussive sound. Minton must be one of the most unabashed vocalists on the planet, as his voice runs the gamut from unnerving utterances to cartoon playfulness, never pandering to the audience but often surprising with a seemingly endless found of approaches to the voice. It's weird, it's wonderful, it's frightening, and it's sublime.