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272: INGRID LAUBROCK. Serpentines

Intakt Recording #272/ 2016

Ingrid Laubrock: Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Glockenspiel
Peter Evans: Piccolo Trumpet, Trumpet
Miya Masaoka: Koto
Craig Taborn: Piano
Sam Pluta: Electronics
Dan Peck: Tuba
Tyshawn Sorey: Drums


Ursprünglicher Preis CHF 12.00 - Ursprünglicher Preis CHF 30.00
Ursprünglicher Preis
CHF 30.00
CHF 12.00 - CHF 30.00
Aktueller Preis CHF 30.00
Format: Compact Disc
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Rasch seit der Verlegung ihres Lebensmittelpunkts nach Brooklyn im Jahre 2008 ist Ingrid Laubrock zu einem kreativen Epizentrum der New Yorker Jazzszene geworden und zählt mittlerweile international zu den signifikantesten Stimmen des zeitgenössischen Jazz. Mit 'Serpentines' legt Laubrock ein weiteres höchstspannendes Album vor, das improvisatorischer Furor und kompositorische Strenge zu einem musikalischen Höchstgenuss bündelt. Die Formation mit seiner aussergewöhnlichen Besetzung wurde anlässlich einer Carte Blanche für des Vision Festival 2015 ins Leben gerufen. Florian Keller schreibt in den Linernotes: "Nimmt man in Anlehnung an den Album-Titel die Schlangenlinien als Bewegungsgraphen für diese Musik, lassen sich einige distinktive Merkmale ablesen. In kompositorischen und improvisatorischen listigen Kehrtwendungen schraubt sich die Musik empor und gipfelt in luftigen Höhenflügen. Richtungswechsel und rhythmisch-melodische Drehmomente treiben die Musik voran und entfalten ein dramaturgisches Potential."

Album Credits

All compositions by Ingrid Laubrock (PRS/MCPS). Recorded on May 24, 2016 at Systems Two, Brooklyn, NYC by Joe Marciano, assistant engineer Max Ross. Mixed by Sam Pluta, mastered by Alan Silverman.
Produced by Ingrid Laubrock and Intakt Records, Published by Intakt Records.

Customer Reviews

Based on 29 reviews
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Francis Davis
NPR Music

She's a German-born, now American-based saxophonist with bold ideas, a shining tone and a penchant for instrumental combinations as attractive as they are unusual - in this case, including tuba, kora, electronics and glockenspiel. Add Tyshawn Sorey on drums and Craig Taborn on piano, and you've got a surefire winner.

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Peter Margasak
The Chicago Reader

Saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock presents her most ambitious and thorny batch of compositions yet

Over the past decade, saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock has increasingly used composition to provoke and organize adventurous improvisation. She made a major leap on the knotty 2016 album Serpentines (Intakt). The musical personalities she’s assembled, and the unusual timbres they contribute, represent compositional decisions just as profound as anything she’s put down on the page. The band combines her own grainy, jagged tenor and soprano saxophones, the rubbery low end of tuba player Dan Peck, the skittering intervals of pianist Craig Taborn, the glistening harplike fragments of koto player Miya Masaoka, the fractured throb of drummer Tyshawn Sorey, the cleanly articulated smears and tart curlicues of trumpeter Peter Evans (a guest on the album), and the splintery, refracted signal processing of laptop improviser Sam Pluta. Laubrock’s writing, as strong as it is, never prevents her group from exercising its own creativity. Both parts of “Pothole Analytics,” for example, consist of lean, abstract composed phrases, but they’re collaged spontaneously by the musicians so that the overlap among them shifts with every performance. The corkscrew assemblage of “Squirrels,” on the other hand, makes Laubrock’s hand more audible; its slaloming complexity recalls the book for her group Anti-House as well as Tim Berne’s recent work, and requires each player to navigate its breathless twists and turns with careful precision. The busy arrangement seems to throw off charged solos like electrical arcs, though it’s not all constant motion: in one moment of strange repose, Pluta manipulates Masaoka’s glassy lines to create hall-of-mirrors effects. The darting zigzags of the title track (similar in feel to “Squirrels,” and in fact to most of Serpentines) and the rustling, meditative ambience of “Chip in Brain” give the ensemble a variety of ways to prove it can match Laubrock’s rigor. In the sextet’s Chicago debut (Evans isn’t a member), pianist Kris Davis and drummer Tom Rainey sub for Taborn and Sorey.

https://chicagoreader.com/music/saxophonist-ingrid-laubrock-presents-her-most-ambitious-and-thorny-batch-of-compositions-yet/

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