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George Russell & The Living Time Orchestra: The 80th Birthday Concert
ByThe music still captures the imagination. It runs the gamut of several idioms, each of which fits into the other, the whole a marvel in shape and design, in the depth of its colors and the lucidity of its portraiture. Russell knows where to peg his focus; the Orchestra can resolve that vision, even in the shift of its personnel. But that precisely is the mark of its accomplishment: all who come in are part of the whole, even as they introduce an individualism.
And so it seems appropriate that Hiro Honshuku joined this tour to play both flute and electronics, the latter providing the perfect cast for "Electronic Sonata For Souls Loved by Nature. The tune has been recorded using different conglomerations, but this big band does a spiffy take. The fanfare of the horns delves into funk, the lines crisscrossing before Andy Sheppard gives it the first defining edge with his solo, the rest of the brass bouncing off his lines. Sheppard has a big, at times brawny sound and a deep well of ideas that he draws from constantly, gripping attention. The twitter and the gurgle of electronics are loosened gradually by Honshuku as a shuddering beam pierces the silence, a skein that is interrupted by the wisps of sound that float out of his flute. The music breaks loose and convolves in the forlorn cry of Stanton Davis's trumpet, the unhindered freedom of collective expression, and the seamless coordination of orchestration.
When The African Game was released in 1983, it had, quite understandably, another cast in the Orchestra. That was also a larger ensemble with a different combination of instruments. If the tunes took on another dimension thenthe group had a bata section, for one thingthey certainly don't lack in character this time. The light makes its presence slowly and softly, the gradual rising of the sun, the tips of the first ray harkening to a new dawn, a new day, filling its surroundings in measured gait and then the dance of arrival as another age dawns. The impact comes in the way Russell juxtaposes movements, keeping the balance at an even keel as his concepts of harmony and modality come into significance.
The suite is fired up by solos from Stanton, some gutbucket funk from Sheppard and Dave Bargeron on trombone, and Palle Mikkelborg's inspired presence on several of the tunes. Some of his best trumpet playing is showcased on the Orchestra's show closer, "So What. The horns are placed in a lush setting, and when Mikkelborg takes his turn, he blows soft wafts, breathy and seemingly fragile, yet the tensility is palpably present. The last facet becomes pronounced as he soars on to a heated plateau, the cycle of his invention now stunningly complete.
At the end of it all the music stands as testimony to the art and craft of George Russell.
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Track Listing
CD1: Listen to the Silence; Electronic Sonata For Souls Loved by Nature. CD2: The African Game: Organic Life on Earth Begins; The Paleolithic Game; Consciousness; The Survival Game; The Human Sensing of Unity With Great Nature; African Empires; Cartesian Man; The Mega-Minimalist age; The Future?; It
Personnel
George Russell
composer / conductorGeorge Russell: leader; Stuart Brooks, Stanton Davis, Palle Mikkelborg: trumpet; Dave Bargeron: trombone; Richard Henry: bass trombone; Andy Sheppard: tenor saxophone; Chris Biscoe: alto saxophone; Pete Hurt: baritone/bass clarinet: Hiro Honshuku: flute/electronics; Brad Hatfield, Steve Lodder: keyboards; Bill Urmson: Fender bass; Mike Walker: guitar; Richie Morales: drums: Pat Hollenbeck: percussion.
Album information
Title: The 80th Birthday Concert | Year Released: 2005 | Record Label: Concept Publishing
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About George Russell
Instrument: Composer / conductor
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