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Put your hands on the remote! browse music »Dearness by Fred Frith, Anne Bourne & John Oswald
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fave it Weird Jazz | Free Jazz
3 tracks | 45 minutes
Released Jul 2006
on Spool
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- sample lyrics "album only" 38:40 A Walk Is An Adventure lyrics "album only" 38:40 A Walk Is An Adventure lyrics "album only" 38:40 A Walk Is An Adventure
- sample lyrics "album only" 02:00 Three Hundred Ears and An Ocean lyrics "album only" 02:00 Three Hundred Ears and An Ocean lyrics "album only" 02:00 Three Hundred Ears and An Ocean
- sample lyrics "album only" 05:11 Lower Flower lyrics "album only" 05:11 Lower Flower lyrics "album only" 05:11 Lower Flower
Free Improvisation
Editorial review
Cellist Anne Bourne is best known for her appearances on albums by Jane Siberry, Loreena McKennitt, and Holly Cole. Her activities as a free improviser have been documented only sporadically. Dearness puts her between two long-runners on the avant-garde circuit: Canadian saxophonist John Oswald and British guitarist Fred Frith. This session was recorded live in August 1998, but came out only four years later. It is not particularly strong, especially if one looks at it from Frith's ample discography, but it still has its shining moments. The album contains three pieces, but the first one accounts for 39 of the 46 minutes it lasts. Bourne leads the way most of the time, either with her deep cello drones, soaring instant melodies, or dreamy vocalizations. Frith provides textures, lightly hammering the strings of his electric guitar, occasionally shifting to long notes faded in with a volume pedal, and even getting into a straight-away solo at the end of the first piece. He also joins in on vocals. Oswald remains very quiet throughout, seemingly unassuming but providing a backdrop of quiet staccato blurps and clicks (much like what he was doing at the time in CCMC -- see aCCoMpliCes). It makes Dearness a mostly ambient adventure. "Three Hundred Ears and an Ocean" sparks a few flames, with Frith and Oswald getting excited and lively. Audience noises get in the way of what sounds at times like an informal meeting: good-humored and lacking a bit of discipline. It must have been a good concert, but on disc it lacks challenge. ~ Fran?ois Couture, All Music Guide
Bio / Background
Fred Frith, guitar, voice
Anne Bourne, cello, voice
John Oswald, saxophone, voice
Spool is very pleased to announce the release of dearness, featuring Fred Frith, certainly one of the great contributors to adventurous new music, John Oswald, (in)famous for his landmark plunderphonics work, and Anne Bourne, who carries her sense of musical adventure along with her cello gracefully across the musical spectrum. This concert recording captures the trio at the Rivoli in Toronto, Canada in 1998, kicking up a sonic dust storm.
Recorded live at the Rivoli, Toronto, August 1998. Concert Produced by Rough Idea. Recording facilitated by Phil Strong. Mastered by Myles Boisen at Headless Buddha Mastering Labs, Oakland, Ca.
What the Critics are Saying:
...While Frith taps and scrapes his strings and Oswald swerves between textures, Bourne sings, sighs and bows to incite an initial calm. Frith responds with spectral slide work and Oswald with otherworldly cries and whispers.
↓ more ↓For the remainder, it is Bourne, with gambits ranging from an agitated arco motif to plaintive vocalisations, who triggers transitions in this sprawling soundscape.
Still, Frith and Oswald merit equal credit for moving the music along with carefully accumulated and overlaid details. Both occasionally relegate themselves to the background, letting a timbre serve as a momentary template. When they step to the foreground, it is done cleanly, with a clear bead on the open space they seek to fill, if only partially. To her credit, Bourne doesn't flinch when Frith and/or Oswald unleash their furries, but also dives into the breach. All three musicians come across as keen to blend with each other throughout the performance, even at its rawest, noisiest moments. Subsequently, the main event is as well rounded as its structure is elusive.
Bill Shoemaker, The Wire
This 1998 live recording is a successful combination of artists: guitarist Fred Frith with cellist Anne Bourne and sax squawker John Oswald. The main set is about 40 minutes long and impresses throughout. Frith's emphasis on vibrato and delay seems to dictate the kinds of ideas the three of them come up with, and all three are in great form, able to invent shifting rhythmic ideas and melodic statements to match the implied rhythms of the effects. Oswald shows nice range in his sax playing, sounding plaintive, dirty and angry. Bourne's cello playing is equal parts full-bore sawing and more delicate passages, where she and Frith duet with Oswald's punctuations. All three mimic each other's ideas with wordless vocalising, and they each display strong improvising skills. This concert would have been a great show, and this recording has miles of headroom.
David Dacks, Exclaim
...It's another example of Frith with some fine musicians creating something greater than their individual selves...What the sound dictates on [this release] is odd and enigmatic, an internal logic not easily dissected but rewarding to absorb.
Kurt Gottschalk, Signal to Noise
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