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The Forest and the Zoo
Barnes and Noble
The Forest and the Zoo
Current price: $10.99


Barnes and Noble
The Forest and the Zoo
Current price: $10.99
Size: OS
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According to the liner notes of this new edition,
Steve Lacy
walked into the
ESP-Disk
offices in New York in 1966 and offered to sell
Bernard Stollman
a tape of a concert he had recorded with his quartet during a concert in Argentina (where they had been stranded). That band was truly an international one:
Lacy
and Italian trumpeter
Enrico Rava
made up the front line, and the rhythm section included South African expats
Johnny Dyani
on bass and drummer
Louis Moholo
-- who had both been members of
the Blue Notes
and
the Brotherhood of Breath
with
Chris McGregor
. Engineer
Ken Robertson
brought the tape back to
Stollman
in 1992, claiming the entire album had been recorded out of phase. This makes sense given the lags on the original. The remastered and reissued CD version issued in 2008 claims to have fixed that problem. It hardly matters. The musical interaction that takes place over 40 minutes here is compelling, fraught with openness and the willingness to explore the margins. Unlike a lot of the other "new thing" recordings made at the time, the focus here is unusually rich, expressive, colorful, and easy on the ears -- though it may not have been at the time.
, who came up playing in Dixieland groups before he heard
Thelonious Monk
, had been increasingly influenced by the music of
Ornette Coleman
,
John Coltrane
, and
Albert Ayler
. His own exploration of his chosen instrument, the soprano saxophone, is all evident here in the manner in which he is considering new tonal, textural, and color possibilities as a soloist and as a functioning member of an ensemble. This is white-hot musical invention -- it meanders, swoops, soars, digs in its heels, and above all offers a staggering kind of communication between four players who took nothing for granted and knew that everything was up for grabs. Even at this early stage of
and company's investigation of free and improvised music, there is a healthy melodicism, rich counterpoint exchanges between
Rava
, and a wildly expansive rhythmic palette employed by
Dyani
Moholo
. This is not normally considered an essential part of
's very large catalog, but in the 21st century it does deserve to be heartily and critically reexamined. The cover painting by the late artist
Bob Thompson
makes the set worth owning simply for its beauty. ~ Thom Jurek
Steve Lacy
walked into the
ESP-Disk
offices in New York in 1966 and offered to sell
Bernard Stollman
a tape of a concert he had recorded with his quartet during a concert in Argentina (where they had been stranded). That band was truly an international one:
Lacy
and Italian trumpeter
Enrico Rava
made up the front line, and the rhythm section included South African expats
Johnny Dyani
on bass and drummer
Louis Moholo
-- who had both been members of
the Blue Notes
and
the Brotherhood of Breath
with
Chris McGregor
. Engineer
Ken Robertson
brought the tape back to
Stollman
in 1992, claiming the entire album had been recorded out of phase. This makes sense given the lags on the original. The remastered and reissued CD version issued in 2008 claims to have fixed that problem. It hardly matters. The musical interaction that takes place over 40 minutes here is compelling, fraught with openness and the willingness to explore the margins. Unlike a lot of the other "new thing" recordings made at the time, the focus here is unusually rich, expressive, colorful, and easy on the ears -- though it may not have been at the time.
, who came up playing in Dixieland groups before he heard
Thelonious Monk
, had been increasingly influenced by the music of
Ornette Coleman
,
John Coltrane
, and
Albert Ayler
. His own exploration of his chosen instrument, the soprano saxophone, is all evident here in the manner in which he is considering new tonal, textural, and color possibilities as a soloist and as a functioning member of an ensemble. This is white-hot musical invention -- it meanders, swoops, soars, digs in its heels, and above all offers a staggering kind of communication between four players who took nothing for granted and knew that everything was up for grabs. Even at this early stage of
and company's investigation of free and improvised music, there is a healthy melodicism, rich counterpoint exchanges between
Rava
, and a wildly expansive rhythmic palette employed by
Dyani
Moholo
. This is not normally considered an essential part of
's very large catalog, but in the 21st century it does deserve to be heartily and critically reexamined. The cover painting by the late artist
Bob Thompson
makes the set worth owning simply for its beauty. ~ Thom Jurek