Andrew Cyrille, in effect, was one of the first drummers to appear near the NY born pianist in two beautiful records by Blue Note label who sanctioned the maturity for Taylor: Unit Structures and Conquistador (both released in 1966). William Parker was part of the Cecil Taylor Feel Trio along with drummer Tony Oxley – I had the opportunity to listen to that trio: everyone was playing his own thing almost separately from the other twos, but it all worked so fine together.
As far as Rava, finally, in 2022 was distributed through bandcamp a recording from 1984 originally recorded in Warsaw by an ensemble comprising the Italian trumpet player and Taylor – and William Parker – commanding one of his large ensembles he was famous for. But this is not the only occasion the two played together: it’s only a good advice for you in order to find out incredibly interesting music from the past.
A magnificent concert the one I attended yesterday night, with a couple of Monk themes – Round About Midnight and Straight No Chaser – put one in the middle, the other almost at the end of the exhibition, echoing not only the pianist from Rocky Mount but also the phantom of Miles Davis who recorded those themes, and the rest as pure improvisation. Rava in a Miles mode with short sentences to which drummer and bassist responded with their instrument.
Cyrille is able to create complex polyrhithms, but in this occasion he also gave a lession in swinging to younger drummers. Parker didn’t use that much his famous bow on his bass, only in few point to underline the music in some passages. One might wonder where the spiritual charisma from groups as In Order To Survive is finished – but the theme from Criminals at the White House was beckoned yesterday night at a certain point – but I believe it has been transformed into a new kindness.
Dense up to a certain point, but gentle as Cyrille’s brushes on the skin of the drums, varied as you can exspect from seasoned musicians, full of nuances and not only of thick textures, the music did not pay hommage to the letter to the music of Cecil Taylor but was nonetheless a sum of the experiences of the three musicians involved, and so an indirect hommage to the late great pianist.
If I have to find a defect to what I heard, this resides not in the music but in times. William Parker would subscribe the phrase by Coltrane “I want to be a force for the good”, but with wars all around the world these three musicians who were ‘only’ playing music were seeming to me so small in comparison to what they have around in terms of conflicts and climate change, as an example. But I believe if I had in mind more than the music itself, this has to be credited to them, since music yesterday night was still, as it has to be, more than just a sum of sounds.
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