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trio
hurricane
live at fire in the valley
mte-10
26 july
1997
fire in the valley festival amherst, ma
glenn
spearman tenor saxophone
paul murphy drums
william parker bass
1. initiation
(12:50)
2. blues for john & frank (10:27)
3. tones for william (11:41)
4. n.y.n.y. (11:10)
5. the natural (5:08)
music
that stands at the apex of those traditions that really matter
in jazz: power, beauty, invention, insurrection. -- byron coley
jazziz
critics' pick top ten recordings 1998 coda
magazine writers choice top ten recordings 1998
cadence
magazine reviewers' choice top ten recordings 1998
"One
of the best concerts of 1997 is now one of the best releases of
1998. The fire-breathing Trio Hurricane made one previous album
10 years ago, a tribute to Jimmy Lyons, and hadn't played together
since, but at Amherst's annual all-day free jazz fest, FIRE IN
THE VALLEY, they picked up where they left off in a set played
with life-or-death intensity. The energy level is impressive, but
it's the band's rapport and the tight focus, concentration, and
discipline that makes the album extraordinary. Spearman's urgency
is of Biblical proportions, and his tenor jeremaids of blisteringly
fast runs, choppy short phrases, squeals, and white-hot sounds
are delivered with righteous wrath that burns like coals. But the
intellectual passion balances the emotional power of his solos.
'Blues for John and Frank' and the blistering 'N.Y.N.Y.' are towering,
even terrifying performances. Bassist Parker is the most consistently
inventive player on any instrument in contemporary free jazz, and
he outdoes himself here: his bowed lamentation on 'Tones For William'
is a highlight. Murphy is one of the more obscure figures in free
jazz, but he deserves more credit for his powerful and responsive
trap work. This is an essential document." --ed hazell, boston
phoenix
"Grit
from the true vein, delivered with a sensuous, pugnacious tenacity
that heightens the blood." --ben watson, hi-fi news/record
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