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Centering. Unreleased Early Recordings 1976​-​1987

by William Parker / Charles Gayle, David S. Ware, Roy Campbell, Charles Tyler, Billy Bang

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Thulin 10:02
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Commitment 21:37
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Tapestry 16:26
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Angel Dance 05:46
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Sincerity 06:35
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about

Parker and most of his cohorts were among the cadre of younger musicians who came of age during the loft era and have to some extent continued the ethos of self determinism which the lofts represented, not least in Parker's ongoing involvement in the annual Vision Festival. Interestingly the only participant on these discs who appeared on the 5 LP Wildflowers: The New York Loft Jazz Sessions (Douglas, 1977), probably the definitive chronicle of the loft jazz era, is saxophonist David S. Ware. So this is a milieu which left little trace and has been largely unheard until now. The first three discs contain small groups, while the last three document larger ensembles.

Disc one comprises two lengthy excerpts from a 90-minute studio date for Parker and reedman Daniel Carter, originally intended for issue on the bassist's Centering imprint. Carter plays with a certain detachment so that even the heat is deployed with a blow torch control. Never just a fire breather he also shows traces of the grainy lyricism which became more prevalent over the years. Carter remains shockingly underrated, and one can only speculate that the distribution of this recording at the time would have put him more firmly on the radar. Peaks of empathy and synchronicity punctuate their mercurial give and take. There is always a shape and contour to the bass narrative—what Parker calls in the booklet "compositional improvisation." For "Thulin" Parker sticks with his bow, displaying his uncanny facility, while on "Time and Period" he switches to a pliant pizzicato, walking tautly beside Carter's bop-derived licks. Carter's vocal embellishments are happily brief. Together they create a powerful, intense, purposefully paced and ultimately uplifting experience.

Rounding out the first disc is the 21-minute "Commitment." Intriguingly, this is a different selection to that released under the same title on Parker's Through Acceptance Of The Mystery Peace (Eremite, 1998), which clearly comes from the same concert, and both must represent fragments from a longer work. What a work it is: the composerly layers creating a spellbinding, at times serene affair, although belying the chamber instrumentation in places. A dirge like interplay between John Hagen's assertive tenor saxophone and Arthur Williams' clear and texturally inventive trumpet forms the defining characteristic over Parker's bowed undulations. Both sessions are real finds.

The entire second disc and the first track of the third consist of an extended showing by a trio featuring David S Ware's burly tenor saxophone accompanied by Parker and Denis Charles' dancing drums. Billed as the Centering Dance Ensemble, the almost unheard part of the offering are the sporadic footfalls of Parker's wife Patricia Nicholson. Although thematic material enters during the session, it is largely a blowing date. There are occasional hints of the majesty and gravitas Ware displayed with his classic quartet in the '90s, notably on the "Rainbow Light," but the brawny tone, bottomless imagination and prodigious stamina are already in place. Parker's elastic propulsion meshes well with Charles, and he takes a turbo-charged arco solo before a delicate investigation of harmonics to end "One Day Understanding (Variation on a Theme by Albert Ayler)." Inspired by Ed Blackwell, in his features Charles deconstructs the rhythm into its essential components, allocated between distinct parts of his kit, leavened by telling portions of silence.

Making up the central stretch of disc three is 38 minutes of a 1987 live duet between Parker and tenor saxophonist Charles Gayle. Coming a year before the saxophonist's initial clutch of Silkheart releases, this set now represents the reedman's earliest issued recording. Like Ware, Gayle possesses imagination and stamina to spare, imbued with a raw shamanistic spirituality. Both he and the bassist come out of the gate full pelt, stentorian bellows vying with abrasive pizzicato, both creating form from thin air. Parker's bowing makes a exceptionally fine blend with the saxophonist's braying invocation on "Entrusted Spirit (Dedicated to Bilal Abdur Rahman)."

Completing the disc are three short vocal pieces completely unlike anything heard thus far. Wordless but lyrical, the voices of Ellen Christi and Brenda Bakr are buoyed by the relaxed lope of Parker in combination with Rashid Bakr's drums. But it is the final "In The Thicket" which stands out, with the two women joined by Lisa Sokolov for a short but sweet a capella rendering of a Parker lyric, presaging the songs for his Raining On The Moon quintet in the '00s.

Disc four contains another outstanding live session. Drawing inspiration from Ornette Coleman's double quartet on Free Jazz (Atlantic, 1960), Parker's Big Moon Ensemble brought together an octet, comprising many of his closest associates over the years. Alto saxophonist Jemeel Moondoc's Muntu unit is here in its entirety, along with Carter once more and his fellow spokesperson from Other Dimensions in Music, trumpeter Roy Campbell. As with Ornette's masterpiece, individual soloists are cushioned, echoed and challenged by a chorus of horns and rhythm. Although the sound is slightly muffled (Carter suffers the most), it remains sufficiently clear to convey the energy, excitement and assuredness of an indispensable performance.

Collected on disc five are extracts from a rare high profile gig at the Kool Jazz Festival by Parker's Centering Big Band. Even though bringing together musicians who hadn't appeared together before, Parker provides only loose orchestrations, relying instead on the smarts of his players. It works like a dream, occasionally murky, mostly exciting and at times dazzling, as the seething mass parts for hot solos, especially by Ware and Campbell on flugelhorn, which bloom before being subsumed back into the bristling nexus. Other highlights come during a series of pre-planned duets in "Lomahongva (Beautiful Clouds Arising)," where Moondoc, Ware and baritone saxophonist Charles Tyler excel. Voices are integrated into the ensemble just like any other instrument, but also feature in the charts which make effective use of unison riffs, recalling British pianist Keith Tippett's arrangements for his Centipede orchestra. In the final "Tototo (Warrior Spirit Who Sings)" the successful contrast of descending phrases for saxophone, against soaring voices and horns produces a bittersweet elegy. While it might be nice to know exactly who plays when, in the end one is just grateful that this music has escaped from the vaults.

The final disc is revelatory. It contains passages from a production by another version of the Centering Dance Ensemble, this time taking on a chamber feel in the absence of drums. The whole piece evokes a mass or liturgy, particularly in light of the final section where Parker declaims an affecting poem about his father's death. In "Illuminese/Voice" long slow lines for the leader's arco bottom end interweave with the contrapuntal trumpets of John Mingione and Malik Baraka, and the clarinet of Rozanne Levine. "Falling Shadows" is even better, an exquisitely modulating chorale for horns, voice and strings, which calls to mind Arvo Part in its simple beauty. For the extended closing selection, Parker deploys his resources thoughtfully, moving between call and response for Christi's voice and Levine's clarinet, the sawing violins of Billy Bang and Ramsey Ameen, and the concluding recitation (the only cut which has already seen release, as an 8-minute snippet on the 1998 Eremite issue). In the booklet, Parker recalls that this was the only dance-music piece done in this style. It suggests one unexplored avenue which might well bear further examination.

One of principal delights of this superb collection is that it so clearly establishes the antecedents for so much of Parker's subsequent output, demonstrating a breathtaking breadth and confidence in his expression, even at this early stage in his development. We are lucky to have Parker still active among us, given that so many of the participants here have now passed, but also to have this poignant reminder of an otherwise unsung scene.

John Sharpe

credits

released May 1, 2012

The music on these six discs comes from roughly the first decade of William Parker’s career, one of the most intensely creative periods enjoyed by any musician of any era. It’s safe to say that much of the music will come as a revelation to even his most devoted listeners. This box set contains a book full of rare photos, essay and interview written by Ed Hazell




DISC ONE
1. Thulin 28:33
2. Time and Period 25:51
3. Commitment 21:38
Track 1-2 - William Parker and Daniel Carter Duo

Daniel Carter – trumpet, alto saxophone
William Parker – bass

Track 3 - William Parker Ensemble

William Parker – bass
John Hagen – tenor saxophone
Arthur Williams – trumpet



DISC TWO
1. Facing the Sun, One is Never the Same 24:18
2. One Day Understanding (Variation on a Theme by Albert Ayler) 22:28
3. Bass Interlude 1:55
4. Tapestry 16:28
Centering Dance Music Ensemble 1980

David S. Ware – tenor saxophone
William Parker – bass
Denis Charles - drums
Patricia Nicholson – dance



DISC THREE
1. Rainbow Light 26:56
2. Crosses (Long Scarf Over Canal Street) 18:39
3. Entrusted Spirit (Dedicated to Bilal Abdur Rahman) 19:08
4. Angel Dance 5:50
5. Sincerity 6:39
6. In the Thicket 1:22
Track 1 - Centering Dance Music Ensemble 1980 (continues)

David S. Ware – tenor saxophone
William Parker – bass
Denis Charles - drums
Patricia Nicholson – dance

Track 2-3 - William Parker and Charles Gayle Duo

William Parker – bass
Charles Gayle – tenor saxophone

Track 4-6 - Centering Dance Music Ensemble: Voices

Brenda Bakr - voice
Ellen Christi - voice
Lisa Sokolov - voice
William Parker - bass
Rashid Bakr - drums



DISC FOUR
1. Dedication to Kenneth Patchen 24:59
2. Hiroshima, Part One 16:30
3. Hiroshima, Part Two 28:44

Big Moon Ensemble

Jemeel Moondoc - alto saxophone
Daniel Carter - alto and tenor saxophones, trumpet, cornet
Arthur Williams - trumpet
Roy Campbell Jr. - trumpet
William Parker - bass, recitation
Jay Oliver - bass
Denis Charles - drums
Rashid Bakr - drums



DISC FIVE
1. Ankti (Extending the Clues) 12:59
2. Munyaovi (Cliff of the Porcupine) 14:46
3. Palatala (Red Light of Sunrise) 4:35
4. Lomahongva (Beautiful Clouds Arising) 29:10
5. Tototo (Warrior Spirit Who Sings) 10:58

Centering Big Band (Extending the Clues)

Jemeel Moondoc - alto saxophone
Daniel Carter - alto saxophone
Ricardo Strobert - alto saxophone, flute
David S. Ware - tenor saxophone
Charles Tyler - baritone saxophone
Raphe Malik - trumpet
Roy Campbell Jr. - trumpet
Alex Lodico - trombone
Masahiko Kono - trombone
William Parker - bass
Zen Matsuura - drums
Lisa Sokolov - voice
Ellen Christi - voice



DISC SIX
1. Illuminese / Voice 34:07
2. Falling Shadows 13:06
3. Dawn/Face Still, Hands Folded 30:52

Centering Dance Music Ensemble 1976 (Dawn Voice)

Rozanne Levine - clarinet
Malik Baraka, John Mingione - trumpet
Billy Bang, Ramsey Ameen - violin
William Parker - bass, recitation
Ellen Christi - voice
Patricia Nicholson - dance



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