The Squid's Ear Magazine
Squidco Used CD sale - save 20%!



Williams, Mars / Katinka Kleijn / Rob Kassinger: Two Or Three (Amalgam)

Three performances of Pauline Oliveros' compositions for two or three instruments, performed by the same trio who premiered the work in 2017 at the commission of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra's MusicNow Series--Mars Williams on reeds, Katinka Kleijn on cello and Rob Kassinger on bass--these versions performed live in 2018 at Elastic Arts along with two collective improvisations.
 

Price: $9.95


Quantity:

Out of Stock
Reordered on 4/25/2024

Quantity in Basket: None

Log In to use our Wish List
Shipping Weight: 2.00 units

Sample The Album:





product information:

Personnel:



Mars Williams-reeds

Katinka Kleijn-cello

Robert Kassinger-bass


Click an artist name above to see in-stock items for that artist.




Label: Amalgam
Catalog ID: AMA047
Squidco Product Code: 34532

Format: CD
Condition: New
Released: 2023
Country: USA
Packaging: Digipack
Recorded live in March 2018 at Elastic Arts, in Chicago, Illinois, by Caleb Willitz.

Descriptions, Reviews, &c.

"On April 3, 2017 Mars Williams, Rob Kassinger and Katinka Kleijn performed the World Premiere of Pauline Oliveros' For Two or Three Instruments which was completed shortly before her death in 2016.

Commissioned by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra's MusicNow Series, these longtime collaborators reached deep into their musical dream boxes, initiated by the great Oliveros and shaped by the powerful riches and history of Chicago's musical womb. Saxophonist Mars Williams is a living free jazz and rock legend (The Psychedelic Furs, Peter Brotzmann, Ken Vandermark, Liquid Soul, Hal Russell's NRG Ensemble, 'an Albert Ayler Xmas'). CSO bassist Rob Kassinger (Silk Road Ensemble, Woody Herman Band, Teldec) grew up touring in his father's jazz band and regularly trades Orchestra Hall for Andy's jazz bar. And CSO cellist Katinka Kleijn (International Contemporary Ensemble, SONY Japan, Drag City Records) performs freely across the genres of classical, experimental, improvisation, and performance art.

In March 2018 the trio booked Chicago's Elastic Arts venue to capture Oliveros' work in a series of versions, adding improvisations inspired by For Two or Three Instruments. In true Oliveros' style, these collaborations are guided by her Deep Listening practice, opening up possibilities of the musicians' reactions to her typical explorative and self-assessing way. These musical travels therefore can not be typified by the word improvisation alone, but perhaps can invite the listener into three minds constantly assessing in real time how to interpret Oliveros' directions while creating material that may be a reaction, an initiative or both. While one might argue this is what improvisation is, Oliveros is brilliant in creating a very specific space to musically live in, as the worlds of composition and improvisation are currently becoming accepted as so rightfully intertwined.

To simultaneously receive and send, is a highly crafted brain space that musicians uniquely culture and polish with their lifetime. No words or visuals can truly describe it, but you may be able to enter it if you let yourself be transported with this record."-Amalgam


Artist Biographies

"Mars Williams is an open-minded musician, composer and educator who commutes easily between free jazz, funk, hip-hop and rock, Mars has played and recorded with The Psychedelic Furs, Billy Idol, Massacre, Fred Frith, Bill Laswell, Ministry, Power Station, Die Warzau, The Waitresses, Kiki Dee, Pete Cosey, Billy Squier, DJ Logic, Wayne Kramer, John Scoffield, Charlie Hunter, Kurt Elling, Swollen Monkeys, Mike Clark, Jerry Garcia, Naked Raygun, Friendly Fires, The Untouchables, Blow Monkeys and virtually every leading figure of Chicago's and New York City's "downtown" scene.

John Zorn credits Mars as "one of the true saxophone players--someone who takes pleasure in the sheer act of blowing the horn. This tremendous enthusiasm is an essential part of his sound, and it comes through each note every time he plays. Whatever the situation, Mars plays exciting music. In many ways he has succeeded in redefining what versatility means to the modern saxophone player."

In 2001 Mars received a Grammy Nomination for Best Contemporary Jazz Record with his group Liquid Soul.

Despite his busy touring schedule with Liquid Soul and The Psychedelic Furs, Mars manages to stay active on the Chicago underground improvising scene. In recent years he has toured and recorded with the Peter Brötzmann Tentet, Switchback, Full Blast, Scorch Trio, the Vandermark 5, Boneshaker, Chicago Reed Quartet and Cinghiale, teaming him with such musicians as Ken Vandermark, Hamid Drake, Michael Zerang, William Parker, Ikue Mori, Kent Kessler, Fredric Lonberg Holm, Peter Brotzmann, Joe McPhee, Paal Nilssen-Love, Ab Baars, Mike Reed, Jeb Bishop, Harrison Bankhead, Dave Rempis, Kidd Jordan and Matts Gustafson.

He performs weekly in Chicago along with Jim Baker, Steve Hunt, and Brian Sandstrom in the improvising quartet "Extraordinary Popular Delusions". As a bandleader, he continues to perform and record CDs with his own free-jazz groups, the NRG Ensemble, Witches & Devils, Slam, XmarsX, Mars Trio, Boneshaker and The Soul Sonic Sirkus which features improvising musicians and aerial circus performers. Along with Die Warsau's Van Christie, Mars has started Ratking Music, a production company focusing on music for film and television.

In addition to performing and creating music, Mars has been an educator in the field of woodwinds and jazz improvisation for over thirty years. Mars held the position of Woodwind Instructor at Bard College for two years. In the last few years Mars has presented Master classes and clinics to a number of private and public institutions including, the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, the University of Chicago, Roosevelt University (Chicago, IL), and June Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art (Auburn, AL)."

-Mars Williams Website (http://www.marswilliams.com/about/)
4/24/2024

Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.

"Hailed as "Chicago's first lady of the cello" by Timeout Chicago Magazine, Dutch cellist Katinka Kleijn defies today's traditional definition of a cellist, transitioning comfortably through the styles of classical, experimental, contemporary, improvisatory, folk and progressive rock, as well as across the traditional fields of solo, chamber and orchestral performance.

Most recently, she appeared as soloist in the World Premiere of Dai Fujikura's cello concerto at Lincoln Center, New York, where The New York Times described her as "a player of formidable expressive gifts".

A member of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Kleijn is in frequent demand as soloist, performing with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Charles Dutoit in Penderecki's Triple Cello Concerto, as well as with the The Hague Philharmonic, the Chicago Sinfonietta , the Illinois Philharmonic, the Symphony Orchestras of Elmhurst, DuPage and Sheboygan, and as a soloist in Mark-Anthony Turnage's Kai on the CSO's MusicNOW Series.

Known for her innovative individual projects, Kleijn presented multi-media solo shows at the Library of Congress, Washington DC, the Chicago Humanities Festival and the Chicago Cultural Center. A collaboration with the Chicago-based performance art duo Industry of the Ordinary resulted in the highly-acclaimed and publicized work "Intelligence in the Human-Machine" by Daniel Dehaan, which Time Magazine called "a balancing act for Kleijn's whole body," and where Kleijn performs a duet with her own brainwaves.

In Kleijn's extensive work as a member of the prolific International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE), named Ensemble of the Year 2014 by Musical America, she has given numerous premieres, including the US premiere of Zona for solo cello and ensemble by Magnus Lindberg at the Lincoln Center's Mostly Mozart Festival, and Eternal Escape for solo cello by Dai Fujikura, described by the Chicago Tribune's John von Rhein as "a five-minute tour de force, played with wonderfully incisive bravado."

An avid chamber musician, Kleijn has collaborated with Yo-Yo Ma, Pierre-Laurent Aimard, Christoph Eschenbach, Richard Goode, and Lynn Harrell; and appeared in the Symphony Center Presents Chamber Music Series with pianist Jeremy Denk and violinist Stefan Jackiw. She has performed at the Marlboro Music Festival and Ravinia Festival's Rising Star Series. Kleijn was a member of the Chicago Chamber Musicians from 2006-2010.

Kleijn recorded for the Naxos, Boston Record and Cedille labels. Her 2003 recording of David Baker's Cello Concerto with the Chicago Sinfonietta received rave reviews: The Strad Magazine wrote "Kleijn gives infectious energy to the performance" and Fanfare Magazine commented that "Kleijn brings plenty of temperament and gorgeous tone."

Non-classical recordings include CD's with the progrock metal band District 97, the ambient-folk duo Relax Your Ears, singer-song writer David Sylvian, and for the newest single "Valkyrie" by Asia with John Wetton. She is part of a working improvised music duo with Chicago-based guitarist Bill MacKay, and performs on the Chicago free jazz scene."

-Katinka Kleijn Website (http://www.katinkakleijn.com/)
4/24/2024

Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.

"Robert Kassinger joined the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in 1993, and previously served as assistant principal bass for the Colorado Symphony and section bass for the New Orleans Symphony.

An active chamber musician, Robert has appeared with Daniel Barenboim, Menahem Pressler, Yo-Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble, the Fine Arts Quartet, the Orion Ensemble, Fulcrum Point, Ars Viva, Music of the Baroque, MusicNow, and radio broadcasts on WFMT.

Robert is adjunct professor of Double Bass at DePaul University. He has also served as guest instructor at Indiana University, and interim instructor at Northwestern University. He is a frequent master clinician at Manhattan School of Music, the Juilliard school and International Society of Bassists. It was Robert's honor to teach at the West- Eastern Divan, a ground-breaking youth orchestra that brings together musicians from Israel and various Arab countries to study with Daniel Barenboim, Yo-Yo Ma, and members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Berlin Philharmonic, and Staatskapelle Berlin.

Robert grew up in a family of musicians in Boulder, Colorado. He began his bass lessons with Frank Carroll at the University of Colorado. In 1985 he moved to New York to study with Homer Mensch at Manhattan School of Music and the Juilliard School, followed by studies with Bruce Bransby at Indiana University.

Some of Mr. Kassinger's most influential experiences as a student were his two years as principal bass of the New York String Orchestra, directed by Alexander Schneider, and two summers as a fellowship student at the Aspen Music Festival, studying with Stuart Sankey and Bruce Bransby. In 1989 Robert was the winner of the Aspen Double Bass Competition.

Robert's experience as a jazz performer began in his teen years, working in the house rhythm section at the Denver jazz club El Chapultapec. Since then he has performed with Wynton Marsalis, Branford Marsalis, Kenny Burrell, Woody Herman Orchestra, Conte Candoli, Charlie Rouse, Teddy Edwards, Harold Land, Red Holloway, Charles Brown, Richard Stoltzman, Gary Burton, Alex Acuna, Laurence Hobgood, and Bobby Lewis."

-Robert Kassinger Website (https://robkassinger.com/bio)
4/24/2024

Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.


Track Listing:



1. For Two Or Three Instruments I 05:35

2. Improvisation I 07:21

3. For Two Or Three Instruments II 05:38

4. Improvisation II 17:17

5. For Two Or Three Instruments III 05:25

Related Categories of Interest:


Improvised Music
Jazz
Free Improvisation
Chicago Jazz & Improvisation
Trio Recordings
New in Improvised Music
Recent Releases and Best Sellers

Search for other titles on the label:
Amalgam.


Recommended & Related Releases:



Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought:
Paccione, Paul
Distant Musics
(Another Timbre)
Influenced by the New York School of composers (Cage, Feldman, &c.), composer Paul Paccione revisits and revises five of his compositions written 40 years prior, performed by a 10-piece configuration of London's Apartment House; beautifully contemplative pieces linked together through common threads, the momentum of individual moments absorbed by the presence of the larger work.
Tragic Assembly + Tatsuya Nakatani
Live at the Artscenter
(Soul City Sounds)
The NC Tragic Assembly free improvising trio of Charles Chace on guitar, Crowmeat Bob on reeds and Phil Venable on upright bass are joined for this 2022 concert at Carrboro, NC's ArtCenter by improvising percussion powerhouse Tatsuya Nakatani, adding sonic expansion and rhythmic punctuation to this trio's typically drum free configuration, heard in four striking improvisations.
Ulher, Birgit / Carol Genetti / Eric Leonardson
Horizontal Shift
(Amalgam)
An international electroacoustic improvising trio of German trumpet player Birgit Ulher, also on radio, speaker & objects, and two Chicago outside improvisers--Carol Genetti on voice & objects, and Eric Leonardson on his unique self-built instrument the springboard, objects & electronics-- heard in a live performance at Elastic Arts, in Chicago, Illinois in 2018.
JAKAL (Fred Lonberg-Holm / Keefe Jackson / Julian Kirshner)
Peroration
(Amalgam)
Formerly known as J@K@L, this Chicago trio has explored hard hitting improvisation since 2014, the band name an amalgamation of the performer's names--Keefe Jackson on tenor & sopranino saxophone & tube, Julian Kirshner on drums and Fred Lonberg-Holm on cello, tenor guitar and electronics--in a dynamic and exciting 2022 concert at Elastic Arts, in Chicago.
Harris, Bill
MACRODOSE
(Amalgam)
Combining acoustic drums, percussion and electronics, the third solo album from Chicago drummer Bill Harris delves deeper into the sonic aspects of his improvisations while providing them in discrete segments through eleven succinct recordings, a diverse set demonstrating unique approaches to rhythm and sound, enhanced on some pieces through studio techniques.
Pilchen, Danya
Two Songs. Anne, Germaine, Koen, Seamus, Danya
(Edition Wandelweiser Records)
Two "songs" from a series of works by Netherlands composer and pianist Danya Pilchen, exploring the possibilities of making and experiencing time through attentive listening, these works focused on creating a dialogue between two measures of time, performed with Anne La Berge on flute, Germaine Sijstermans on clarinet, Seamus Cater on harmonica and Koen Nutters on double bass.
Profos, Felix / Peter Conradin Zumthor
Grund
(Edition Wandelweiser Records)
Since 2021 Swiss composer Felix Profos and drummer Peter Conradin Zumthor have performed as the duo Grund, Profos performing on harmonium and on the 1973 Italian organ Bontempi Pop3, Zumthor on bass drum, gong, bells & snare, their extended work on this self-titled album a tranquil and meditative work of slow transitions with moments of terse activity, receding with grace and serenity.
Gregorio / Smith / Bryerton
The Cold Arrow
(Balance Point Acoustics)
The second trio release from clarinetist Guillermo Gregorio, double bassist Damon Smith and Jerome Bryerton on gongs, selected metal & cymbals (but no drums), in a sophisticated album of eight collective improvisations numbered as "The Planar Effect" and two Gregorio compositions, an absolutely impressive set that obscures the line between "spontaneous" and "composition".
Void Patrol (Sharp / Stetson / Martin / MacDonald)
Live @ Victo
(Victo)
A wild and adventurous concert and one of the highlights of the 39th Festival International de Musique Actuelle de Victoriaville from the electric improvising quartet of Elliott Sharp on electric guitar & electronics, Colin Stetson on bass, alto & tenor saxophones, Billy Martin on drums & percussion and Payton Macdonald on marimba, vibraphone & African xylophone.
Braxton, Anthony
10 Comp (Lorraine) 2022
(New Braxton House)
Documenting six live performances with Anthony Braxton's Lorraine Trio featuring trumpeter Susana Santos Silva, accordionist/vocalist Adam Matlock, and Anthony Braxton, plus four studio recordings featuring Braxton, saxophonist James Fei, and bassists Zach Rowden and Carl Testa, in a solid box set of 10 CDs in five gatefold wallets with a 28 page booklet of notes by Anthony Braxton.
Lewis, James Brandon Quartet
Transfiguration
(Intakt)
With a rare ability to play hard-hitting jazz while maintaining a lyrical sense to his compositions, tenor saxophonist James Brandon Lewis' new studio album from his quartet of Aruan Ortiz on piano, Brad Jones on bass and Chad Taylor on drums is the fourth album from this working band, demonstrating their strong group affinity that invokes impressive soloing from all four.
Mingus, Charles
Presents Charles Mingus To Pre Bird, Revisited
(ezz-thetics by Hat Hut Records Ltd)
Three sides of Charles Mingus in this remastered reissue set: the 1961 Candid album Mingus Presents Mingus with the classic quartet of Eric Dolphy, Ted Curson and Dannie Richmond; then the Mercury release Pre-Bird from the same year, in ensembles performing the music of or influenced by Duke Ellington, along with the ambitious and brilliant through-composed work, "Half Mast Inhibition".
Perelman, Ivo / Mark Helias / Tom Rainey
Truth Seeker
(Listen! Foundation (Fundacja Sluchaj!))
Meeting at Park West Studios in Brooklyn, the NY trio of Ivo Perelman on tenor saxophone, Mark Helias on bass and Tom Rainey on drums record seven collective free improvisations of great depth and expression, unhurried playing that concentrates on the group dialog, yielding space for exceptional soloing supported by perceptive interaction; masterful!
Dunmall, Paul / Paul Rogers / Marc Sanders
Wildlife
(Listen! Foundation (Fundacja Sluchaj!))
A wildly explorative and masterful studio encounter for three of the UK's most well-known and well-recorded improvisers--Paul Dunmall on tenor & soprano saxophones, clarinet & flute; Paul Rogers on 7-string double bass; and Mark Sanders on drums--in four collective improvisations that run the gamut from explosive to introspective conversation; ferocious!
Hevleticus (Samuel Blaser / Daniel Humair / Heiri Kanzig)
Our Way
(Blaser Music)
A trio of all-star European jazz performers from three generations — drummer Daniel Humair (85), bass player Heiri Kanzig (66) and trombonist Samuel Blaser (42) — in their second album after 2020's album 1291, for a mixture of original compositions and standards including Monk's "Jackie-ing" & "Bemsha Swing", Ellington's "Creole Love Song" & "Tiger Rag".
Leandre, Joelle / Pascal Contet
Miniatures
(Trost Records)
A collaboration that goes back 30 years, French improvising bassist Joëlle Léandre and avant accordionist Pascal Contet in their fifth album together, turning from their more typically extended conversations to a series of 10 "Miniatures", shorter and diverse dialogs recorded live in 2022 at the beautiful Arsenal Concert Hall in Metz, France.
Williams, Mars / Hamid Drake
I Know You Are But What Am I?
(Corbett vs. Dempsey)
The second of three archival albums from late saxophonist Mars Williams' vaults, this 1996 recording is a rare duet with Chicago drummer Hamid Drake, and is also one of the first concerts of the Empty Bottle Jazz and Improvised Music series, a diverse set of four improvisations marked by energetic enthusiasm, doubling of reeds, and wild playing from both.
Perelman, Ivo (Fowler / Workman / Cyrille)
Embracing the Unknown
(Mahakala Music)
Recording with the legendary rhythm section of bassist Reggie Workman and drummer Andrew Cyrille, tenor saxophonist Ivo Perelman and stritch & saxello player Chad Fowler perfectly complement each other as they play off and complete each other's lines and phrases under the support of astute foundational support, an exemplary album of collective, cross-generational free improvisation.
Futterman, Joel / Michael Wimberly
Innerpause
(Creation Music)
The result of two formidably versatile improvisers--pianist Joel Futterman and drummer/percussionist Michael Wimberly--meeting in Futterman's home city of Virginia Beach for a session of collective, spontaneous improvisation, is this magnificent two-part work released as the unedited live first takes, an epic journey through masterful technique and compelling expression.
Friends & Neighbors (Roligheten / Johansson / Gronberg / Strom / Ostvang)
Circles
(Clean Feed)
An exuberant album of modern jazz from the Norwegian quintet of Andre Roligheten on tenor saxophone, Thomas Johansson on trumpet, Oscar Gronberg on piano, Jon Rune Strom on double bass and Tollef Ostvang on drums & percussion, their 6th full album of lyrically rich, energetic free jazz taking the 60's & 70s New Thing movement into new modern directions; excellent!
PNY Quintet (Swell / Brown / Edelin / Giron / Betsch)
Over The Wall
(RogueArt)
While NY trombonist Steve Swell and alto saxophonist Rob Brown were in Paris, flutist Michel Edelin, who has recorded and performed with Swell over more than a decade, organized this session with Paris-based American ex-pats, drummer John Betsch and bassist Peter Giron, recording three Swell compositions, two by Brown, one from Edelin and four collective improvisations; magnifique!
Brotzmann, Peter / Paal Nilssen-Love
Chicken Shit Bingo
(Trost Records)
Often performing together as a duo after their initial 2004 Chicago Tentet encounter, drummer/percussionist Paal Nilssen and multi-reedist Peter Brötzmann typically released albums of live performances, this 2015 studio date in Antwerp unique in their catalog, an exemplary set of recordings, particularly with Brötzmann on a new contra-alto clarinet and Paal adding gongs to their improvisations.
Evans, Peter Being & Becoming (Evans / Ross / Jozwiak / Ode)
Ars Memoria
(More Is More)
The second album from New York trumpeter Peter Evan's band Being and Becoming stretches out his concepts in five extended works that dovetails superb contemporary jazz — integrating extended techniques and solid vibraphone work — with beautifully rich and explorative passages, masterfully performed with Joel Ross (vibes), Nick Jozwiak (bass) and Michael Shekwoaga (drums).
Merzbow
Cafe OTO [2 CDs]
(Cold Spring Records)
A live and extended performance of brutal but shifting sonic assault performed before an appreciative audience at London's Cafe OTO in 2016, a solo performance from Japanese noise legend Masami Akita, AKA Merzbow, each of the 2 CDs in this set more than 50 minutes of tightly controlled electronic mayhem from the unremitting determination of one of the globe's masters of noise.
Ughi, Federico (w / Leo Genovese / Brandon Lopez)
Infinite Cosmos Calling You You You, Vol. 1
(577 Records)
The first album under 577 label leader and drummer Federico Ughi's name in five years brings together the incredible bass skills of Brandon Lopez and expansive Argentinean keyboard sonics of Leo Genovese, the first of two planned volumes recorded in the studio for a boundary-less album of acoustic and electric improv influenced by the music and philosophy of Sun Ra.
Williams, Mars / Vasco Trilla
Critical Mass
(Not Two)
The second release from the duo of Spanish percussionist Vasco Trilla and Chicago reedist Mars Williams, the latter performing both on reeds and on toy instruments, each using extraordinary and extended technique to create exotically energetic conversations and beautifully meditative environments, in five creative, playful and impressively informed dialogs.



The Squid's Ear Magazine

The Squid's Ear Magazine

© 2002-, Squidco LLC