Showing posts with label Dewey Redman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dewey Redman. Show all posts

7 September 2023

DEWEY REDMAN :: Soundsigns (Galaxy 1981)


This vinyl rip was posted in Contributions section some time ago. Unlike "Musics" album from the same sessions, this was not reissued on CD.

DEWEY REDMAN :: Soundsigns (Galaxy 1981)

DEWEY REDMAN - tenor saxophone, harp ("Come Earth" only)
FRED SiMMONS - piano ("Half Nelson" and "Adesso Lo Sai" only)
MARK HELiAS - bass
CHARLiE HADEN - bass ("Piece for Tenor ..." and "Come Earth" only)
EDDiE MOORE - drums ("Half Nelson" and "Adesso Lo Sai"), saw and cymbals ("Come Earth")

A1. Piece for Tenor and Two Basses [08:23]
A2. Half Nelson [10:07]
B1. Adesso Lo Sai [13:59]
B2. Come Earth [8:00]

Compositions by Dewey Redman except "Half Nelson" by Miles Davis
Recorded October 18-19, 1978, at Fantasy Studios, Berkeley

This album consists entirely of complete-performance takes, whithout editing or overdubs.
Galaxy Records GXY-5130, rel. in 1981 

14 April 2020

DEWEY REDMAN QUARTET :: Willisau 1977-03-26


These two live tracks, shared by mew23 in Contributions section, are killers! I did equalisation as usually. Enjoy.

Dewey Redman Quartet - Willisau, Switzerland, March 26, 1977

Dewey Redman - ts, musette
Ted Daniel - tp
Fred Hopkins - b
Edward Moore - dr

1) 31:03
2) 13:37 n.c.

2 April 2019

DEWEY REDMAN "UNRELEASED STUDIO SESSION" (NEW YORK, 1969)



This unreleased studio recording is flowing at the internet since years.
Mostly announced as an unissued Blue Note date. But this claim most likely isn't correct.
However - great music from one of the masters.



Dewey Redman, alto saxophone, musette
Chris Capers, trumpet
Bob Cunningham, bass
Ed Blackwell, drums
Rashied Ali, drums
Eddie Moore, drums

1. Apple-itis 12:51
2. Interconnection (take 2) 10:22
3. P.S. (take 1) 8:05
4. Look for the Black Star 13:37
5. Look for the Black Star (take 2) 15:17

'Record Plant', New York, NY on December 19, 1969


11 October 2018

DEWEY REDMAN "LOOK FOR THE BLACK STAR" (FONTANA, 1966)






Dewey Redman, tenor saxophone
Jym Young, piano
Donal Garrett, bass, clarinet(only tr.4)
Eddie Moore, drums


1. Look For The Black Star     15:41
2. For Eldon     6:29
3. Spur Of The Moment     1:54
4. Seven And One  13:22
5. Of Love     7:58


Recorded in San Francisco on January 4, 1966.


FONTANA 888 311 ZY (Netherlands, 1966)
This rip from Freedom TKCB-70321 (CD - Japan, 1994)


28 May 2016

ORNETTE COLEMAN "MAN ON THE MOON / GROWING UP" (STATESIDE / IMPULSE, 1969)




Ornette Coleman, alto saxophone
Dewey Redman, tenor saxophone
Don Cherry, trumpet
Charlie Haden, bass
Ed Blackwell, drums
Emmanuel Ghent, electronic devices (A)

A. Man On The Moon (Dr. Emanuel Ghent & O. Coleman) 3:06
B. Growing Up  (O. Coleman) 2:17


Recorded in NYC, July, 1969.

Stateside – 2C 006-90.643 M (France)

(vinyl rip)

For further reading:
http://www.pointofdeparture.org/PoD53/PoD53Ornette.html
http://valghent.com/emmanuel-ghent-ornette-coleman-man-on-the-moon/

28 December 2014

DEWEY REDMAN QUARTET - Prague, 1999


DEWEY REDMAN QUARTET - Prague, Baráčnická rychta, April 1999

DEWEY REDMAN - tenor sax, musette
RiTA MARCOTULLi - piano
JOHN MENEGON - bass
MATT WiLSON - drums

01 Dewey square 13.44 (fade in)
02 The very thought of you 14.51
03 I-Pimp 13.29
04 Everything happens to me 8.31
05 Stablemates 12.35
06 I should care 13.49
07 Turn Over Baby 9.20
08 Turn Over Baby 9.08
09 Take the A train (encore 1) 5.51
10 Thren (encore 2) 12.51 74:09

The concert was announced at last minute and was a real treat at tradititional pub hall.

Soundboard recording, total time 114:12

28 September 2013

JANE BUNNETT ‎– IN DEW TIME (DARK LIGHT MUSIC LTD, 1988)





A1. Big Alice
A2. The Wanderer
A3. Limbo

B1. Utviklingssang
B2. In Dew Time
B3. Five/As Long As There's Music



Scott Alexander, bass (A2-B3)
Claude Ranger, drums (A2-B3)
Jane Bunnett, flute, soprano saxophone
Vincent Chancey, french horn (A2-B1, B3)
Brian Dickenson, piano (B1, B3)
Don Pullen, piano (A1-A3)
Dewey Redman, tenor saxophone (A2, A3, B2, B3)
Larry Cramer, trumpet (A2-B3)


Recorded at Manta Sound Recording Studio, Toronto, on February 25-6, 1988.

Dark Light Music Ltd. ‎– DL-9001

Vinyl Rip

19 April 2011

BILLY HART "ENCHANCE" (HORIZON, 1977)






BILLY HART "ENCHANCE"

Billy Hart, drums
Oliver Lake, alto saxophone, soprano saxophone (7), flute (5)
Dewey Redman, tenor saxophone (not on 5)
Hannibal Marvin Peterson, trumpet, koto (5)
Eddie Henderson,trumpet (1-5,7), fluegelhorn (1,2), echoplex (5)
Don Pullen, piano, electric piano (5)
Buster Williams, acoustic bass (1,3,5)
Dave Holland, acoustic bass (2,4,6,7)
Thabo Michael Carvin, percussion (3,5)


1. Diff Customs (Lake) 05:53
2. Shadow Dance (Holland) 07:52
3. Layla-Joy (Hart) 07:04
4. Corner Culture (Redman) 02:52
5. Rahsaan Is Beautiful (Peterson) 04:38
6. Pharoah (Pullen) 09:44
7. Hymn For The Old Year (Lake) 08:56



Recorded February 24 and March 3, 1977, Generation Sound Studio, New York City.


HORIZON 24

.

1 November 2010

Old And New Dreams - Live in Moers '80


There was a great interest for a previous OAND post, so i've thought
to digitalize even this concert.

Rec. live at "The 9th Moers Festival", Moers, Germany,
on May 23, 1980 (mics recording)

Dewey Redman,tenor saxophone
Don Cherry,pocket trumpet,piano
Charlie Haden,bass
Eddie Blackwell,drums

1. Happy House [O.Coleman] (07:01)
2. Lonely Woman [O.Coleman] (13:26)
3. Rushour [D.Redman] (04:44)
4. Mopti [D.Cherry] (12:04)
5. Togo [E.Blackwell] (05:36)
6. Open Or Close [O.Coleman] (07:13)
7. Song For The Whales [C.Haden] (08:06)

Total Time 58:13

13 September 2010

Dewey Redman Quartet - Live in Milan '78


Redman is, probably, remembered more for his partnership with
Coleman,Jarrett,Haden,etc than for the groups he led at his name,
nonetheless the level of his live performace and records was always
very high.
For the lenght of the concert, i'll post the two sets separately.

Rec. live at "Capolinea", Milan, Italy, on May 22, 1978
(mics recording)

Dewey Redman,tenor sax,musette,zither
Fred Simmons,piano,percussion
Mark Helias,bass
Eddie Moore,drums,percussion

1st set (1:20:04) :
1. Dewey Square [C.Parker] (28:59)
2. Unknown (24:12)
3. Unknown Tongue [D.Redman] (10:46)
4. One Beautiful Day [D.Redman] (16:06)

2nd set (1:03:12) :
5. Half Nelson [M.Davis] (30:39)
6. Unknown Tongue [D.Redman] (10:15)
7. Walls Bridge [D.Redman] (22:18)

Total Time 2:23:17

2 February 2010

Old And New Dreams - Live in Nervi '79

"A virtual reincarnation of Ornette Coleman's first ensembles, the
cooperative Old and New Dreams brought together trumpeter Don
Cherry, tenor saxophonist Dewey Redman, bassist Charlie Haden,
and drummer Ed Blackwell to reinterpret the master's early repertoire.
By the time their first album was released in 1978, ECM's Old and New
Dreams, all four musicians were leaders with their own projects;
this perhaps explains the intermittent nature of their ensuing
collaboration (four albums in ten years).
The quality of the group's recordings was uniformly high;
the two ECM albums benefit from that label's characteristic clarity
of sound. With the deaths of Cherry and Blackwell in the '90s,
further collaborations of course became impossible.
However, the band's limited yet superb output is an important
complement to the work they did under Coleman's leadership
in the late '50s and early '60s."

Rec. live in Nervi, Italy, on July 21, 1979
(mix recording)

Dewey Redman,tenor saxophone,musette
Don Cherry,trumpet,piano
Charlie Haden,bass
Eddie Blackwell,drums

01. Happy House [O.Coleman] (13:58)
02. Chairman Mao [C.Haden] (14:29)
03. Dewey's Tune [D.Redman] (11:05)
04. Guinea [D.Cherry] (05:07)
05. Lonely Woman/Open Or Close [O.Coleman] (18:41)

Total Time 1:03:22

26 October 2009

80/81 - Live in Rome '81

80/81

80/81 a short lived super-group born within the German
label ECM, for which recorded the homonymous (and fine)
double LP in May 1980.
This Roman concert (taped by "Ilario") was part of the '81
European tour (the day before they played at the Willisau
Festival) and i think, it could be an interesting integration
at the poor official discography.

Rec. Live at the "V Rassegna Della Quercia Del Tasso",
Rome, Italy, on August 31, 1981 (mics recording)

Michael Brecker/Dewey Redman,tenor saxophone
Pat Metheny,electric guitar
Charlie Haden,bass
Jack DeJohnette,drums

1. Broadway Blues [Coleman] (27:57)
2. James [Mays,Metheny] (23:54)
3. Open [Brecker,DeJohnette,Haden,Metheny,Redman]
(32:45)
4. Turnaround [Coleman] (37:35)

Total Time 2:02:11

25 January 2009

Dewey Redman - The Struggle Continues

In solidarity, and hoping that sotise will return, after all he invited me to join this blog, here's my contribution for today:

The Struggle Continues
Dewey Redman | ECM Records (2007)


By Budd Kopman

Dewey Redman, who died September 2, 2006 at the age of 75, will be best remembered for his work with Ornette Coleman from 1967-1974 and Keith Jarrett's "American" quartet in the mid-1970s, with an overall reputation leaning towards the freer side of jazz expression.

The Struggle Continues, recorded in 1982, is making its first appearance on CD and is quite welcome. The overall style is on the straight-ahead side, but rather than merely play changes using the well-known language of bop, hard bop and post bop, chances are taken — the mark of the creative artist. For Redman, there is no need to play outside of the boundaries of the music at hand. Indeed, his playing on one of his last recordings, alto saxophonist Francois Carrier's freely improvised Open Spaces (Spool, 2006), is exactly what is needed, but at the other end of the spectrum.

Redman's supporting band is very sharp, featuring bassist Mark Helias, who plays aggressively with a full, deep sound, while maintaining a strong connection to drummer Ed Blackwell and pianist Charles Eubanks. They sound like a band and not merely a collection of good players brought together for a recording session.

Redman wrote all the compositions except the last, "Dewey Square," which is by Charlie Parker, and each shows a different side of his personality within the more structured confines of the mainstream. However, because Redman is such an original artist, The Struggle Continues is anything but a pure straight-ahead session as every note becomes personalized and hence recognizable as coming from him.

"Thren" starts out clearly enough with its bebop-ish theme. However, over the straight drumming and walking bass, Redman plays with rhythmic freedom, while never losing touch with Helias and Blackman. Eubank's answering solo takes up the challenge and things get hot. Once it gets going, "Love Is" initially sounds like a straightforward jazz ballad, except that the meter refuses to be in 3 or in 4, making for a lovely effect underneath Redman's expressive playing.

"Turn Over Baby" is a real low-down, slinky, deep bluesy piece that makes you realize that Redman can do that convincingly too, but this and "Joie De Vivre," a delightful light swinger, act as an aural cleanser for "Combinations." Here, the free Redman surfaces, as he and the band play an intense, harmonically static, racing track that is just long enough to show that Redman can do this too, without losing the album's balance.

The set ends with "Dewey Square," and Redman is again himself, playing rhythmically free lines against the Parker changes. The Struggle Continues presents an artist who is a true original, putting his stamp on every note played. Redman and the band are clearly having fun, playing accessible music of the highest quality.




Track listing: Thren; Love Is; Turn Over Baby; Joie de Vivre; Combination; Dewey Square.

Personnel: Dewey Redman; tenor saxophone; Charles Eubanks: piano; Mark Helias: bass; Ed Blackwell: drums.