Sunday, April 14, 2024

Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Two Not One [2009] (4 x CDs)

JAZZ SUNDAY

WARNE MARSH& LEE KONITZ

Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Two Not One [2009] (4 x CDs)

The cumulative impression of this four-disc reissue of sets tenor saxophonist Warne Marsh and alto saxophonist Lee Konitz recorded in the 1970s is one of exceptional creativity. Both men were and are masters of the art of never repeating themselves and a set of this scope really brings the point home.

By this stage in their respective careers, it was in many respects irrelevant that they had once been under the tutelage of pianist and educator Lennie Tristano. The assertion that this automatically made them members of the "cool" school seems as irrelevant as the assertion that their music doesn't swing and that they are somehow cold and lacking in feeling. Marsh cut "Blues In G Flat" on December 28, 1975, in a quartet setting and it's clear from this performance that he was more than capable of working the form in a manner both idiosyncratic and trenchant. It's on the third disc here and it captures the work of a man who had extraordinary affection for the form even while he was more than capable of preserving his own identity within it. All of his hallmarks are here, such as the slippery, sometimes indeterminate phrasing and the burnished quality that was characteristic of his work in the tenor saxophone's middle range.

Given the reputation both men enjoy amongst those of a conservative bent, the fact that they perform a couple of JS Bach's two-part Inventions as a saxophone duo would be deeply ironic if it wasn't for the fact that they pull it off with such aplomb. Clearly, both men had by this stage of their respective careers taken their interest in music as such to a point which for the time at least was scarce amongst jazz musicians. Happily, their efforts, necessarily brief as they are given the nature of the pieces, are met with a delighted response from their Danish audiences.

On the last of the dates when those two pieces were recorded, the duo is backed by a Danish rhythm section that's so much more than the unassuming, quietly ticking Tristano ideal and the resulting interaction takes the music to another level. Pianist Ole Kock Hansen's work is a kind of amalgam of Cedar Walton's and Horace Parlan's, which might be more than coincidence as the latter spent a great many years as a Danish resident. The group is in full swing and in a fashion that might irk the purist in the closing out of "Just Friends," where the two saxophonists complement each other, as opposed to merely completing each other's phrases, in a joyous manner.

The first of two readings of "You Don't Know What Love Is" on the first disc finds Konitz in plangent form initially over Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen's rippling bass, which in its neo-interventionist way again subverts the Tristano ideal. Such is the fecundity of the music making that the point is moot anyway, particularly as Konitz goes on to put out a manifesto on ballad playing as singular as anything out there. It's Marsh's turn on the second reading from the quartet date referred to above and he's both more wistful and more laconic. Phrases seem to drift upwards out of a different area of his consciousness in a manner that only goes to show how wrong—and indeed superficial—it is to lump the two men together musically. British guitarist Dave Cliff, a player whose work has been taken for granted for too long, is on potent and empathetic form on this one too, and the overall performance serves in the capacity of a benchmark.

Without stretching credulity too far, the same might be said for the entire set, not least because it could be argued that on the evidence here Konitz and Marsh were and are simply not subject to the vagaries of human existence which jeopardize the quality of improvised music. Whilst citing examples in support of that thesis in addition to the ones already discussed, Marsh on Charlie Parker's "Confirmation" on the fourth disc, and Konitz on his own "317 East 32nd Street" on the third, serve a certain utilitarian purpose—but that has no bearing on the fact that anyone with an interest in improvised music's ability to move should give this set the closest attention. (allaboutjazz.com)

===========================================================

ALL 

or

ALL 

===========================================================

Track lists

CD1

01 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Background Music 10:52

02 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - You Don't Know What Love Is 3:57

03 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - April 9:40

04 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Kary's Trance 4:06

05 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Subconscious Lee 11:03

06 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Back Home 10:55

07 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Blues By Lester 7:46

08 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - You Stepped Out Of A Dream 10:12

09 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Lennie Bird 8:27


CD2

01 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Just Friends 7:52

02 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Little Willie Leaps 7:59

03 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Old Folks 4:08

04 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Au Privave 10:51

05 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Wow 6:32

06 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Kary's Trance 6:10

07 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Foolin' Myself 5:52

08 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Sound-Lee 8:11

09 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Chi-Chi 7:16

10 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Two Part Invention No.1, Allegro 1:11

11 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Two Not One 7:07

12 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Darn That Dream 5:02


CD3

01 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - 317 East 32nd. Street 8:18

02 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Two Part Invention No.13, Allegro Tranquillo 1:20

03 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - April 9:14

04 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Everything Happens To Me 5:08

05 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Blues In G Flat 7:24

06 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - After You've Gone 3:30

07 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - The Song Is You 6:07

08 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Lennie Bird 5:48

09 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - It's You Or No One 6:02

10 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - God Bless The Child 6:39

11 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - The Way You Look Tonight 5:46

12 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Without A Song 6:22

13 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Be My Love 5:39


CD4

01 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - You Don't Know What Love Is 6:21

02 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Lennie Bird 5:02

03 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Confirmation 4:36

04 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - I Can't Give You Anything But Love 5:30

05 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Without A Song 6:57

06 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Just One Of Those Things 3:28

07 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - All The Things You Are 5:08

08 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - I Should Care 4:24

09 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - The More I See You 6:25

10 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - When You're Smiling 2:57

11 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Taking A Chance On Love 3:39

12 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Little Willie Leaps 4:48

13 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - Everytime We Say Goodbye 4:12

14 Warne Marsh & Lee Konitz - I Want To Be Happy 4:27

=============================================================

=============================================================

4 comments:

  1. Thanks Butterboy for another interesting Sunday jazz.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Bob Mac.
      I always hope that these Sunday Jazz sets are picked up as they need to be heard.
      Cheers.

      Delete
  2. I've been dipping my toes in jazz lately and these sunday posts are helpful - thanks BB

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Dr Robert.
      There are many in the Archive. Not sue if all are still active, but they do seem popular.
      Cheers.
      BB

      Delete