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379: INGRID LAUBROCK – ANDY MILNE. Fragile

Intakt Recording #379/ 2022

Ingrid Laubrock: Soprano and Tenor Saxophone
Andy Milne: Piano

Recorded June 24, 2021, at Oktaven Audio, by Ryan Streber, Mt Vernon, NY.

Original price CHF 12.00 - Original price CHF 30.00
Original price
CHF 30.00
CHF 12.00 - CHF 30.00
Current price CHF 30.00
Format: Compact Disc
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For the third installment of Ingrid Laubrock's duo series on Intakt (following Kasumi with Aki Takase and Blood Moon with Kris Davis) Ingrid Laubrock and Andy Milne develop their own sounds in a common sound world. Fragile is characterized by the great empathy that unites these two artists. The music, which is both stirring and soothing, confident and intuitive, is deeply expressive and inventive. “Laubrock’s growth as an original writer and improviser has been marked in the last two decades, during which time she has led several bands, notably Sleepthief and Anti-House, and proved adept at creating for large ensembles and small groups that revealed her own individuality, mostly within avant-garde traditions. As for Milne he has more than fulfilled the promise he showed as a member of Steve Coleman’s Metrics in the early ‘90s. The Laubrock- Milne duo has a balance between the drive and momentum of large ensembles and the stillness and engagement with silence and space of smaller groups. Making music that releases a form of energy, something that pulses with life, while also drawing down into intimacy, suggesting feelings of tenderness or uncertainty, is no mean feat”, writes Kevin Le Gendre in the liner notes.

Album Credits

Graphic design: Jonas Schoder
Liner notes: Kevin LeGendre
Photo: Ryan Streber

All music by Ingrid Laubrock (PRS/MCPS). Recorded June 24, 2021, at Oktaven Audio, by Ryan Streber, Mt Vernon, NY. Mixed and mastered by Ryan Streber at Oktaven Audio. Painting: Sean Riley, Offering 2003. Recording produced by Ingrid Laubrock and Intakt Re- cords. CD produced and published by Intakt Records, P. O. Box, 8024 Zürich, Switzerland.

Customer Reviews

Based on 26 reviews
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C
Chris Searle
Morning Star Online

FOR me, the record of the year is the re-release of a precious vinyl disc on CD of the Jazz Doctors, who toured the UK in in 1983-84, and recorded their first session as Intensive Care on John Jack’s Cadillac label in a Hoxton studio in November 1983.

Val Wilmer’s expressive sleeve photograph shows squatting tenor saxophonist Frank Lowe, drummer Dennis Charles with a cymbal under his arm, violinist Billy Bang and bassist Rafael Garrett fresh from the US, posing in an East End park. As they romp into Jackie McLean’s Little Melanae, they play with prescriptive fire in the heart of London.

The record includes an unreleased session of November 1984, with bassist Wilbur Morris and drummer Thurman Baker, with the Doctors still offering a full dose of groove. My favourite track is the 12 minutes of Ornette Coleman’s Lonely Woman from the 1983 date, its haunting melody set on edge by Garret’s throbbing bass, Lowe’s moaning horn and Bang’s palpitating strings: marvellous!

In 2020 jazz lost the great Bristolian pianist Keith Tippett. The album Sound on Stone (Discus Records), was created by his vocalist wife Julie (formerly Julie Driscoll) in 2022, using extracts from recordings of Keith from his tour of Holland which sparked the making of his 1979 album The Unlonely Raindancer, and other unreleased waxings made in Bologna (1991) and the Welsh College of Music and Drama (1995-96). This final album of the Couple in Spirit duo is a brilliant amalgam of Keith's pianism and Julie’s effervescent voice, including a memorable version of Michel Legrand’s ballad, Windows of Your Mind.
Elaborately reinvented, beautifully harmonised, extraordinarily fused, this landmark album fully expresses one of jazz’s blessed unities. An outstanding track is the title song, Stone on Stone, and as Julie sings “Who stood enraptured?/ How many echoes call/Sharp on the breeze?” we know it is us, the listeners, spellbound by their sound.

Another powerful duo album is Fragile (Intakt Records), full of co-operative beauty by Stadtlon, Germany-born saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock and the pianist from Hamilton, Ontario, Andy Milne.
Both musicians explore their sonic vulnerability on tracks like Fragment or Shard but the power of their inventiveness seems boundless, with Laubrock giving full scope to her soprano horn and Milne playing with a potent empathy and, as a student of a master, Oscar Peterson, with a deeply affective lyricism.
Although there are but two musicians at work, as a listener you feel that their sounds are coming from a much larger collective ensemble, giving them their strength and innovation, and making Fragile a profoundly memorable album.

The Arizonan pianist now living in New York City, Angelica Sanchez, a lover of big band music, moved to a secluded cabin while teaching upstate. She would walk in the woods at night and “realised that it was only my ears that were activated. I became fascinated by what I couldn’t see.”
Her album Nighttime Creatures (Pyroclastic Records) recreates those moments where “coyotes and other animals make noise in the dark.” It’s where living nature stews up into ensemble music and the human imagination joins with the animate external world, with Sanchez tunes plus Ellington’s Lady of the Lavender Mist and Carla Bley’s huge influence with CB the Time Traveller and Wrong Door for Rocket Fuel.
Alongside eight other virtuosi like saxophonists Michael Attias, Chris Speed and John Goldberg, Thomas Heberer’s trumpet and bassist John Hebert, Sanchez opens up the night and makes beautiful light out of darkness in a profoundly original and revelatory album.

https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/best-2023-jazz-albums

G
George Kanzler
The New York City Jazz Record

This is the third in saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock's series of duo recordings with pianists, following albums with Aki Takase and Kris Davis. Laubrock contributed all ten compositions and/or concepts for the project, undertaken during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Two pieces, "Fragment" and "Splinter", feature prepared piano and Laubrock using false fingering and pushing her soprano sax into weird, flute-like ranges and sounds. Otherwise, the music here seems more an exploratory extension of the traditional piano-sax duo tradition than anything "out". Maybe that's because Laubrock has a robust, centered, appealing tone on tenor sax, which wouldn't be out of place in a swinging big band. She employs that sound to advantage in a largely a capella solo on the title track, one favorably recalling Sonny Rollins.

Laubrock and Milne employ space and silence as collaborators in their duets here. "Equanimity", the first track, has a gorgeous opening piano solo, each note reverberating and vibrating through the surrounding silence. When Laubrock's tenor enters at 1:40, the feeling persists as both musicians step carefully through the open space. They are more blunt and abrupt on the aptly titled "Unapologetically Yours", sax spluttering and piano probing. Laubrock's circular-breathing tenor solo on the wry "Illusion of Character" seems to engage in an internal dialogue with itself.

Milne returns to prepared piano on "Shard", variously conjuring up a koto or drum pads, all under Laubrock's ethereally high-pitched soprano. The album's longest track, at just under 10 minutes, is "Ants in My Brain", a soprano/piano duet reminiscent of the pairing of Wayne Shorter and Herbie Hancock. Milne begins alone and is joined eventually by Laubrock's slyly commenting soprano, her solo in the instrument's altissimo register. The piece concludes with a long, tandem melodic line.

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