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Independent music since 1986.
Independent music since 1986.

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267: FRED FRITH TRIO. Another Day In Fucking Paradise

Intakt Recording #267/ 2016

Fred Frith: Electric Guitar, Voice
Jason Hoopes: Electric Bass, Double Bass
Jordan Glenn: Drums, Percussion

Recorded and mastered at Headless Buddha, Oakland, March 2016.

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
More Info

Frith returns to his deep roots in this improvising trio with the classic lineup of guitar, bass and drums. Playful, intimate, and bound together by a dark and delicate interplay, the group reminds us what listening is all about. After a lifetime of experience across almost every field of musical endeavor, Fred stretches out in the company of two stalwarts of the vibrant Bay Area music scene who have their own stories to tell.

Fred Frith writes about his Trio: „When I proposed this trio I had nothing in mind beyond getting together with a couple of formidable musicians who I love and respect and seeing what would happen, which is pretty much the way things go in my world. We played a few gigs many months apart, always had a blast, invited a couple of awesome guests (Lotte Anker and Jessica Lurie) and didn’t think much in conceptual or any other terms. It took playing night after night during our European tour of 2015 or some themes to start emerging. I appeared to be channeling some of my earliest rock and roll experiences – jamming with members of Pink Fairies in 1969, a couple of sad weeks in a band with Syd Barrett, and attending Gong and Pink Floyd concerts where I had the chance to absorb the lessons of Daevid Allen and Dave Gilmour. Earlier my electric guitar heroes hadbeen George Harrison and Pete Townsend, and then – as my horizons broadened – Muddy Waters and Sonny Sharrock. McLaughlin’s playing in Tony Williams’ Lifetime had been a revelation. On tour with the trio these voices all started clamoring for attention, and Jason’s stunning ability to wring every-thing there is to be wrung out of an electric bass was as liberating as Jordan’s playful, irreverent, and absolute authority. Anything can happen. Really. It’s a bloody great feeling. I think this record captures it quite well!»

Album Credits

Cover art: Heike Liss
Graphic design: Jonas Schoder
Photo: Heike Liss

All Music by Fred Frith Trio. Recorded at Sharkbite Studios, Oakland, January 2016. Engineer: Scott Evans. Mixed at Guerrilla Recording and mastered at Headless Buddha, Oakland, March 2016. Engineer: Myles Boisen.
Produced by Fred Frith and Intakt Records, Patrik Landolt.

Customer Reviews

Based on 21 reviews
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J
John Pietaro
The New York City Jazz Record

Exploratory British guitarist Fred Frith's career is one of constant motion. Forays around the globe and across his fretboard produce a uniquely improvisational music with no loss of aesthetic for the emoting. Collaborations with a peerless cadre including Anthony Braxton, Derek Bailey, John Zorn, Chris Cutler, Bill Laswell, Evan Parker, Han Bennink, Ikue Mori and ensembles Henry Cow, Skeleton Crew, Naked City, Material, the Golden Palominos and Massacre saw his legend flourish over a period encompassing nearly 50 years.

On Another Day in **** Paradise, Frith's trio with Jason Hoopes (basses) and Jordan Glenn (drums/ percussion) brings dark, heavy textures reminiscent of the Downtown scene in which the guitarist thrived. Streams of feedback dance through arching, valley- wide guitar lines at once dissonant and gorgeous. The album opens with "The Origin of Marvels", a brief piece featuring Glenn's orchestral chimes, bells and clay pots against Frith's ECM-esque volume pedal phrases. The album is a study in conflict: near-gentle melodies alternate with raceways of raucousness. Frith spares little when searching for the right sound, including use of vocalized cries and neologisms. Most of the pieces are short with the central work, "Yard With Lunatics", as the standout epic. Throughout, Glenn fleetingly rolls over a drumset that includes brake drums and small percussives, responding to and rephrasing even the subtlest nuances before him while Hoopes' role, thrusting, guttural and deeply effective, often recalls Jah Wobble more than Jamaaladeen Tacuma. This is a trio fans of Frith will devour soundly.

C
Chris Robinson
Point of Departure

Evocative and disturbing, the Fred Frith Trio’s Another Day in **** Paradise may just be one of the weirder and most arresting albums of the year. Joining Frith are bassist Jason Hoopes – who alternates between electric and acoustic – and drummer Jordan Glenn, whose kit wonderfully sounds as if half of it is built from toys and found objects. This album is all about sound, mood, texture, ideas, and atmosphere: demented church bells over distant guitar wails; tumbling kit and static guitar crunch punctuated by acoustic bass interjections; arco bass alongside Frith’s piercing Morton Subotnik impersonations; fuzzy slabs; his spoken nonsense syllables; long echoes reverberating across anxious and restless drums; quiet squeals and clacks behind long guitar swells mirroring the shape and direction of whale song. It is a sonic and affective world with the power to raise goosebumps.

To create this surreal soundscape the trio often returns to many of the same devices and vocabulary, but they twists and reconfigure them in new ways to fashion something fresh each time. Several tracks segue together (tracks two through six form a kind of mini-suite) and the group shifts gears quite quickly, which makes for a very quick and engaging listen. When Frith et al decide to change direction there is no hedging or tip-toeing – transitions are made assertively and roles are settled into at once, allowing for immediate discovery and invention.

Frith, Hoopes, and Glenn’s take on paradise is dark, and sounds akin to a seedy underworld out of a China Miéville novel, or perhaps the soundtrack to deleted Blade Runner scenes that were too twisted to use. Regardless of the inspiration, it’s nowhere I’d like to visit in person. But I will gladly take my ears there any time.

https://www.pointofdeparture.org/PoD56/PoD56MoreMoments3.html

Reviews in Other Languages

A
Alessandro Manitto
Musica Jazz

L’eclettico e ineffabile Frith disegna qui una striscia sonora – consigliabile a chi ne segue le gesta da sempre ma anche a chi volesse prendere confidenza con la sua arte – che appare quasi come una sorta di guida all’ascolto dell’ex Henry Cow e di mille altre cose. Emerge in particolare lo spirito degli storici Massacre, dai quali il nuovo trio eredita tensioni ed energia propulsiva. I due partner di Frith si mostrano all’altezza del compito, fornendo adeguato sostegno ritmico, imbastendo trame sottili, o robuste e gagliarde. Ragguardevole è Hoopes, che mostra di aver messo a profitto l’insegnamento di Pastorius con un suono turgido e pastoso al tempo stesso. I tre si trovano a meraviglia e danno luogo a una sequenza sonora che oscilla tra piglio rock, atmosfere astratte, grande coralità, solitarie fughe chitarristiche, senza soluzione di continuità, da viaggi astrali a indagini sulla materia elettroacustica per giungere alla free form integrale. Una nota di merito per il titolo dell’album, che brilla di luce propria con un’espressione mirabilmente in equilibrio tra imprecazione very cool e bestemmia tout court, forse uno scampolo dei borborigmi cui si lascia andare Frith in Poor Folly.
Fucile

https://www.musicajazz.it/fred-frith-another-day-paradise/

A
Ayumi Kagitani
Way Out West, Japan

英国のギタリスト、フレッド・ フリス最新作。彼はインタク トから11枚ものアルバムを 出しています。

G
Guido Festinese
Il Manifesto

Ma chi lo ferma Fred Frith? Ha un'età che gli permetterebbe panchina, giornale e giardinaggio, e invece eccolo qui, sempre più presente e divertito in avventure radicali che fanno saltare per aria tutti i dadi stretti del jazz e del rock. Questo ad esempio è un «power trio>> elettrico che agisce sull'improvvisazione in cui la sua chitarra cerca e trova misteriose, spettrali, a volte palpitanti assonanze con la psichedelia d'antan che ascoltava all'Ufo Club quando sul palco c'era Syd Barrett.

// SCRAMBLED //