If you're into the kind of long form experimental free jazz
that aims at an aesthetic that takes the music beyond any of the conventions
that limit an artist's musical vision, you want to get hold of composer pianist
Heiner Stadler's two disc release ,Brains on Fire. If you like jazz that looks as much to the
innovations of modern classical composers as it does to jazz innovators like
John Coltrane, Thelonious Monk and Ornette Coleman, Brains on
Fire offers eight tracks recorded originally between 1966 and 19474
that will literally blow your mind. If,
on the other hand, your taste runs to something less avant garde,
Brains on Fire is more than likely not for you.
Heiner Stadler is not exactly a household name. Born in Poland and raised in Germany, he
emigrated to the US when he was 23. He settled in New York where his unique
musical vision attracted a host of collaborators. His 1978 Tribute to Bird and
Monk which features an ensemble of experienced talents like Reggie
Workman and Stanley Cowell was lauded by Downbeat. He has been cited as one of those
composer/arrangers taking the lead in the crossover of jazz and classical
music. His music has been compared to
others "responsible for shaping, a new, intelligent, post-free jazz,"
musicians like Anthony Braxton and Alexander von Schlippenbach.
Besides selections
previously released on vinyl, the new CD release of Brains on
Fire includes three works never released before. Of the eight tracks, seven are Stadler
originals and one, the cunningly titled "Bea's Flat," is a Stadler
arrangement of a Russ Freeman composition written for Chet Baker. Stadler himself plays on only five of the
pieces—four with a quartet and one with a sextet. The sextet opens the first disc with "No
Exercise." Stadler is joined by Workman on bass, Jimmy Owens on trumpet,
Tyrone Washington on tenor sax, Garnett Brown on trombone and drummer Brian
Brake. Owens and Brown are back in the
sextet for "The Fugue #2" which closes the second disc; they are
joined by Joe Farrell on tenor sax, Don Friedman on piano, Barre Phillips on
bass, and Joe Chambers on drums. Recorded
in '66, this is the oldest piece on the set, and in formal innovation it is a
clear illustration of the Stadler crossover.
The quartet consists of Stadler, Workman, Washington and
drummer Lenny White. Of their four tracks,
Stadler says that "Heidi" is "one of the most satisfying
performances I've initiated in its coherent integration of the written and the
improvised." "Love in the Middle of the Air" is a twenty minute
duet between Workman and vocalist Dee Dee Bridgewater, which has the young
singer showing the chops that were to make her a star. "Bea's Flat" is a 1974 recording by
The Big Band of the North German Radio Station conducted by Dieter
Glawisching. The variety of ensembles emphasizes
the adaptability of Stadler's compositions and arrangements.
Fairly exhaustive liner notes are the work of jazz critic,
Howard Mandel. If anyone can explain the
essence of Stadler's art, Mandel is the man for the job. Still even he advises listeners "to let
the music wash over you and to absorb as much as you can instead of analyzing
the format."
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