Peter Brotzmann, Fred Hopkins, Rashied Ali

Peter Brotzmann, Fred Hopkins, Rashied Ali

Genres: free jazz, jazz, improvisation, Avant Jazz, harmolodics

About Peter Brotzmann, Fred Hopkins, Rashied Ali

In perhaps the most understated performance of his entire career, German saxophone giant Peter Brötzmann played in a trio with American free jazz legends Fred Hopkins and Rashied Ali back in 1991 at the now mythical Total Music Meeting. This “meeting” was designed to level the playing field between musicians on both sides of the Atlantic who regarded each other warily at best. The Europeans, who had had terminal jazz envy for decades had decided that no music from America, institutional or free, was worth crap. Hilarious to think of now that people like Evan Parker, Tony Oxley, Franz Koglmann, and Fritz Hauser were among them. Well, the festival brought the groups together — three saxophonists, three drummers, three bassists — from both sides of the ocean and had them play together in every kind of permutation possible. Which brings us to the record at hand. Brötzmann appears to have been in awe on this date so great is his restraint. There are literally no passages in the entire concert where he attempts to push his way through the rhythm section to get to the other side. No mean feat when you consider the man’s powerful personality both on and off the stage. But Hopkins was a founding member of Air with Henry Threadgill, and Ali, of course, played with John Coltrane. Given these proceedings with their haunted, hunted, beauty, it would be fair to say that — even on his own compositions — the mighty Brötzmann was humbled in the presence of these great musicians. Does that mean he was humbled by them? Hardly. Brötzmann’s playing here is so fiery and lyrical, so completely focused on his rhythm section that he turns harmonies on their heads and finds intervals in places where the only thing that should be happening is free blowing. He is the band’s leader by the force of that lyricism and restraint. He makes room for the other players to move through and around him rather than behind him. His sheer “musicality” is wondrous. Hopkins and Ali are no strangers to each other — there is telepathic communication; the shift from one modality to the next is seamless and grounded, each player by the other.

Taken from Last.fm

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