



"Ambassador Duos" (2015) collects a selection of four duo improvisations, that the artist and composer Phillip Schulze recorded over ten years with multi-instrumentalist and composer Anthony Braxton, the sound and action-artist Christia...
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Sample The Album:



Anthony Braxton-saxophone
Christian Jendreiko-pedal steel guitar
Andrew Raffo Dewar-saxophone
Detlef Weinrich-electronics
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Label: apparent extent
Catalog ID: AE024
Squidco Product Code: 36733
Format: 2 LPs + CD
Condition: New
Released: 2015
Country: Germany
Packaging: Double LP in a Gatefold Sleeve
A1 recorded in Middleton, Connecticut, on March 29th, 2005.
B1 recorded in Middleton, Connecticut, in April, 2005.
C1 recorded in Dusseldorf, Germany, on May 13th, 2009.
D1 recorded in Dusseldorf, Germany, in October, 2014.
E1 recorded in Dusseldorf, Germany, on September 11th, 2011.
F1 recorded Tuscaloosa, Alabama, in November, 2014.
G1 recorded in Dusseldorf, Germany, on March 27th, 2014.
H1 recorded in Dusseldorf, Germany, November, 2014.
"Ambassador Duos" (2015) collects a selection of four duo improvisations, that the artist and composer Phillip Schulze recorded over ten years with multi-instrumentalist and composer Anthony Braxton, the sound and action-artist Christian Jendreiko, the composer and ethnomusicologist Andrew Raffo Dewar, and DJ and producer Detlef Weinrich aka Toulouse Low Trax.
The album documents encounters between these musicians and Phillip Schulzes electro-acoustic, responsive instrument, which algorithms he develops since 2001. With this instrument, he opens "a dialogue with external (analog) and internal (digital) realities". Here in "Ambassador Duos" the center of Schulzes attention is a "transidiomatic, interpersonal communication, augmented with instruments".
The album comes as a beautiful glossy gate-folded Double LP and CD, in addition to comprehensive writings from all participants translated into German and English as well as photographs printed on two large folded inlays."-apparent extent

Artist Biographies
• Show Bio for Anthony Braxton [Anthony Braxton (born June 4, 1945) is an American composer and instrumentalist.] "Genius is a rare commodity in any art form, but at the end of the 20th century it seemed all but non-existent in jazz, a music that had ceased looking ahead and begun swallowing its tail. If it seemed like the music had run out of ideas, it might be because Anthony Braxton covered just about every conceivable area of creativity during the course of his extraordinary career. The multi-reedist/composer might very well be jazz's last bona fide genius. Braxton began with jazz's essential rhythmic and textural elements, combining them with all manner of experimental compositional techniques, from graphic and non-specific notation to serialism and multimedia. Even at the peak of his renown in the mid- to late '70s, Braxton was a controversial figure amongst musicians and critics. His self-invented (yet heavily theoretical) approach to playing and composing jazz seemed to have as much in common with late 20th century classical music as it did jazz, and therefore alienated those who considered jazz at a full remove from European idioms. Although Braxton exhibited a genuine -- if highly idiosyncratic -- ability to play older forms (influenced especially by saxophonists Warne Marsh, John Coltrane, Paul Desmond, and Eric Dolphy), he was never really accepted by the jazz establishment, due to his manifest infatuation with the practices of such non-jazz artists as John Cage and Karlheinz Stockhausen. Many of the mainstream's most popular musicians (Wynton Marsalis among them) insisted that Braxton's music was not jazz at all. Whatever one calls it, however, there is no questioning the originality of his vision; Anthony Braxton created music of enormous sophistication and passion that was unlike anything else that had come before it. Braxton was able to fuse jazz's visceral components with contemporary classical music's formal and harmonic methods in an utterly unselfconscious -- and therefore convincing -- way. The best of his work is on a level with any art music of the late 20th century, jazz or classical. Braxton began playing music as a teenager in Chicago, developing an early interest in both jazz and classical musics. He attended the Chicago School of Music from 1959-1963, then Roosevelt University, where he studied philosophy and composition. During this time, he became acquainted with many of his future collaborators, including saxophonists Joseph Jarman and Roscoe Mitchell. Braxton entered the service and played saxophone in an Army band; for a time he was stationed in Korea. Upon his discharge in 1966, he returned to Chicago where he joined the nascent Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM). The next year, he formed an influential free jazz trio, the Creative Construction Company, with violinist Leroy Jenkins and trumpeter Leo Smith. In 1968, he recorded For Alto, the first-ever recording for solo saxophone. Braxton lived in Paris for a short while beginning in 1969, where he played with a rhythm section comprised of bassist Dave Holland, pianist Chick Corea, and drummer Barry Altschul. Called Circle, the group stayed together for about a year before disbanding (Holland and Altschul would continue to play in Braxton-led groups for the next several years). Braxton moved to New York in 1970. The '70s saw his star rise (in a manner of speaking); he recorded a number of ambitious albums for the major label Arista and performing in various contexts. Braxton maintained a quartet with Altschul, Holland, and a brass player (either trumpeter Kenny Wheeler or trombonist George Lewis) for most of the '70s. During the decade, he also performed with the Italian free improvisation group Musica Elettronica Viva, and guitarist Derek Bailey, as well as his colleagues in AACM. The '80s saw Braxton lose his major-label deal, yet he continued to record and issue albums on independent labels at a dizzying pace. He recorded a memorable series of duets with bop pioneer Max Roach, and made records of standards with pianists Tete Montoliu and Hank Jones. Braxton's steadiest vehicle in the '80s and '90s -- and what is often considered his best group -- was his quartet with pianist Marilyn Crispell, bassist Mark Dresser, and drummer Gerry Hemingway. In 1985, he began teaching at Mills College in California; he subsequently joined the music faculty at Wesleyan University in Connecticut, where he taught through the '90s. During that decade, he received a large grant from the MacArthur Foundation that allowed him to finance some large-scale projects he'd long envisioned, including an opera. At the beginning of the 21st century, Braxton was still a vital presence on the creative music scene." ^ Hide Bio for Anthony Braxton • Show Bio for Andrew Raffo Dewar "Andrew Raffo Dewar (b. 1975 Rosario, Argentina) is a composer, improviser, woodwind instrumentalist and ethnomusicologist. Since 1995, he has been active in the music communities of Minneapolis, New Orleans, the San Francisco Bay Area and New York City, performing his work in North America, Southeast Asia and Europe. Dewar studied with saxophonist/composers Steve Lacy, Anthony Braxton and Phillip Greenlief, composer Alvin Lucier, trumpeter/composer Bill Dixon, and multi-instrumentalist improviser Milo Fine. He has also had a long involvement with Indonesian traditional and experimental music, particularly the Minangkabau music of West Sumatra and Central Javanese gamelan. Dewar has been noted as "having the rare ability to translate his knowledge into something beautiful" (Matthew O'Shannessy, Foxy Digitalis). The 2008 debut recording of his music on Porter Records was described as "a garden of forking paths" (Foxy Digitalis), "absorbing" (Bill Meyer, Dusted Magazine) and "evoking something unnatural and plugged-in" (Clifford Allen, Bagatellen). San Francisco's Aquarius Records described the album as "musical rainfall...a swirling soft cloud of free jazz flutter," and "absolutely essential listening for the drone inclined and jazzbos with a thing for far out sounds." As a composer, his pieces have been performed by the Flux Quartet (NYC), Sekar Anu (Indonesia), the Koto Phase ensemble (USA/Japan) and the XYZ composer collective (NYC). He has received grants from Arts International, Meet The Composer and the Getty Foundation to support his work. "Though he's a noted composer of chamber music, Dewar's flutters and wails show that he's no slouch when it comes to heavyweight sax playing either" (Clifford Allen, Signal to Noise). As a performer, Dewar has been described as having "complete control of the instrumental nuances," and being "inherently clever [and] intuitively rational," with "uncommon sensitivity" (Massimo Ricci, Temporary Faults). Approaching the soprano saxophone as "a piece of metal capable of making sounds" (Richard Grooms, The Improvisor), Dewar's conception at times "sounds almost electronic in the way it pulsates" (Bruce Lee Gallanter, Downtown Music Gallery, NYC), leading one writer to comment that "you don't have to know what that means to appreciate that this will not be a traditional sax solo" (Flagpole Magazine, Athens, GA). In addition to leading his own ensembles and performing in collaborative groups with musicians from around the world, he performs with and appears on recordings by the Anthony Braxton 12+1tet and the Bill Dixon Orchestra." ^ Hide Bio for Andrew Raffo Dewar
9/15/2025
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.
9/15/2025
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.

Track Listing:
SIDE A
1. Anthony Braxton, 2005 19:51
SIDE B
1. Christian Jendreiko, 2009 19:54
SIDE C
1. Andrew Raffo Dewar, 2011 19:58
SIDE D
1. Detlef Weinrich, 2014 19:59
CD
1. Anthony Braxton, 2005 19:51
2. Christian Jendreiko, 2009 19:54
3. Andrew Raffo Dewar, 2011 19:58
4. Detlef Weinrich, 2014 19:59

In Stock, Not Yet Cataloged
Vinyl Recordings
Improvised Music
Jazz
Free Improvisation
Electro-Acoustic
Electro-Acoustic Improv
NY Downtown & Metropolitan Jazz/Improv
Anthony Braxton
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