Evan Parker

Evan Parker

Genres: free jazz, free improvisation, jazz, Avant-Garde, saxophone

About Evan Parker

*Other projects involved: 2 X 3 = 5, Alexander von Schlippenbach Trio, Barry Guy New Orchestra, Berlin Contemporary Jazz Orchestra, Cecil Taylor European Orchestra, Cecil Taylor Workshop Ensemble, Charlie Watts And The Tentet, Chris McGregor's Brotherhood Of Breath, Company, Dirty Songs, ElectroAcoustic Septet, Elsie Jo, Evan Parker Electro-Acoustic Ensemble, Evan Parker Electro-Acoustic Quartet, Evan Parker Octet, Evan Parker Quartet, Evan Parker Trio, Fast Colour, Foxes Fox, Free Range Orchestra, Freebop, Friends Of Kenny Wheeler Big Band, Globe Unity Orchestra, Iskra 1912, John Stevens Ensemble, John Wolf Brennan HeXtet, Jubileum Quartet, London Improvisers Orchestra, London Jazz Composers Orchestra, Louis Moholo Octet, Louis Moholo/Evan Parker/Pule Pheto/Gibo Pheto/Barry Guy Quintet, Peter Brötzmann Nonet, Peter Brötzmann Octet, Peter Brötzmann Sextet, Pierre Favre Quartett, Rocket Science, Sant'Anna Arresi Quintet By Evan Parker, Schlippenbach Quartet, School Of Velocity, Spontaneous Music Ensemble, Spontaneous Music Orchestra, Stan Tracey And His Orchestra, The Charlie Watts Orchestra, The Chris McGregor Septet, The Dedication Orchestra, The Mike Gibbs Orchestra, The Music Improvisation Company, The Wuppertal Workshop Ensemble, Tony Oxley Quintet, Townhouse Orchestra, Trance Map, Transatlantic Art Ensemble, Transatlantic Trance Map, Laboratorio Della Quercia *Collaborations with other artists (gradually added): Evan Parker/Bill Nace, Evan Parker/John Edwards/Chris Corsano, Evan Parker/吉沢元治, Evan Parker/Barry Guy, Evan Parker/Barry Guy/Paul Lytton, Evan Parker/John Stevens, Evan Parker/Paul Lytton Evan Parker (born 5 April 1944 in Bristol) is a British free-improvising saxophone player. His original inspiration was Paul Desmond, and in recent years the influence of cool jazz saxophone players has again become apparent in his music — there are tributes to Warne Marsh and Lee Konitz on Time Will Tell (ECM, 1993) and Chicago Solo (Okkadisk, 1997). However, Parker is probably better known for his 1960s work, which rapidly assimilated the American avantgarde — John Coltrane, Pharoah Sanders, Albert Ayler and others — and forged his own, instantly identifiable style. His music of the 1960s and 1970s is harsh, raw and unsettling, involving fluttering, swirling lines that have shape rather than tangible melodic content; sometimes he makes use of pure sound in a manner that recalls Steve Lacy's more radical 1970s recordings or the work of some AACM members. He began to develop methods of rapidly layering harmonics and false notes to create dense contrapuntal weaves; these involved experiments with plastic reeds and rapid tonguing which initially were so intense that he would find blood dripping onto the floor from the saxophone. Parker is one of the few saxophone players for whom unaccompanied solo performance is a major part of his work. One critic has written that Parker's solo performances "reveal also the mechanical possibilities for the instrument that weren't even considered before he came along — things like playing in all three registers of the instrument at the same time."

Taken from Last.fm

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On RadioStar

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ITU Jaz/Blues
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MP3 : 128
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Evan Parker — Top 14 songs

Artist Song title Like / Dislike
Evan Parker Concert 01
Evan Parker Concert 04
Evan Parker Single Headed Serpent
Evan Parker The Spider's Web
Evan Parker Psalm5
Evan Parker One Of Six
Evan Parker Fixed Elsewhere
Evan Parker Naan Tso (Extract)
Evan Parker Five Of Six
Evan Parker Concert 03
Evan Parker Live in Sendai
Evan Parker Concert 02
Evan Parker Buriden's Ass
Evan Parker Titan Moon
Concert 01
Concert 04
Single Headed Serpent
The Spider's Web
One Of Six
Fixed Elsewhere
Naan Tso (Extract)
Five Of Six
Concert 03
Live in Sendai
Concert 02
Buriden's Ass
Titan Moon