1 | The Aarhus Sequences 1 | 51:18 | |
2 | The Aarhus Sequences 2 | 14:52 | |
3 | The Aarhus Sequences 3 | 6:28 | |
4 | The Great Hall 1 | 36:46 | |
5 | The Great Hall 2 | 38:55 | |
6 | Contextual Part 1 | 14:10 | |
7 | Contextual Part 2 | 11:04 | |
8 | Contextual Part 3 | 10:31 | |
9 | Contextual Part 4 | 11:12 | |
10 | Contextual Part 5 | 13:41 | |
11 | Contextual Part 6 | 10:37 |
Triple layered release to mark 30 years of AMM. Bumper .zip includes material from three distinct periods spanning a quarter of a century -Prévost, Rowe, Gare, Cardew and Hobbs in Denmark in 1969, the first recordings from the Prévost-Rowe-Tilbury trio in The Great Hall at Goldsmith's College, London, in 1982, and the same trio in New York in 1994.
"The description of AMM's music as laminal came from Evan Parker in a lecture he gave on improvisation during an Actual Music Festival at the ICA in London during August 1980. This he contrasted with the 'atmistic' apprach of other practicioners. The idea of layers superimposed on other layers has always seemed close to the actuality of AMM music." - Eddie Prévost.
Dedicated to Evan Parker.
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Tracklisting:
The Aarhus Sequences
1-1 - 51:07
1-2 - 14:23
1-3 - 6:40
The Great Hall
2-1 - 36:45
2-2 - 38:56
Contextual
3-1 - 14:10
3-2 - 11:04
3-3 - 10:31
3-4 - 11:12
3-5 - 13:41
3-6 - 10:37
A founder-member of AMM (1965-2022)
“[Eddie Prévost’s] is one of the greatest metallurgists that music has produced. […] sparks delicately arcing through the air, of slow lava ingesting its surroundings, of the shifting grind of tectonic plates across each other, of the rustle and glint of a firebird darting between shadows, and of ore smashing into the surface of the earth; but perhaps this language is overwrought: all that needs to be remarked upon is Prévost's industry, his diligence.”
Nathan Moore — liner note to AMM’s ‘Indúsria’
Matchless Recordings mrcd105.
But beyond this work Prévost has also maintained a relationship with the jazz drum-kit.
“His free drumming flows superbly making perfect use of his formidable technique, but his most startling feature is his stylelessness. It’s as though there has never been an Elvin Jones or a Max Roach.” - review of a set with saxophonist Lou Gare, Melody Maker (27.03.1975)
“Prévost, meanwhile, was simply miraculous; it was fascinating to watch him and to compare his approach with that of a Kern or a Nilssen-Love. I can only say that he was possessed of an uncanny, burning intentness that navigated the ensemble through passages of stark, sculpted beauty, grave concentration and full-on, bristling energy.”
Blue Tomato, Vienna 2012. In concert with Marilyn Crispell and Harrison Smith. Richard Rees-Jones
“An excellent release from one of the finest percussionists around, jazz or otherwise.” review of Prévost’s solo CD ‘Collider’
Matchless Recordings mrcd106 – Brian Olewnic, Squidsear (2022).
“Relentlessly innovative yet full of swing and fire.” – Morning Star
John Tilbury is renowned for his peerless interpretation of the piano music of Morton Feldman, John Cage, Christian Wolff and Howard Skempton. In addition to the performances and seminal recordings that he has made of these composers’ works, he has been an eloquent advocate of their music in his writing and speaking about them. The same is true of the attention he has paid to the music and ideas of Cornelius Cardew, the subject of his authoritative biography published in 2008, and with whom he played in the legendary improvisation groups the Scratch Orchestra and AMM. In the last ten years John Tilbury has performed a range of plays and prose pieces by Samuel Beckett.
Keith Rowe (born 16 March 1940 in Plymouth, England) is an English free improvisation tabletop guitarist and painter. Rowe is a founding member of both the influential AMM in the mid-1960s (though in 2004 he quit that group for the second time) and M.I.M.E.O. Having trained as a visual artist, Rowe's paintings have been featured on most of his own albums. After years of obscurity, Rowe has achieved a level of relative notoriety, and since the late 1990s has kept up a busy recording and touring schedule. He is seen as a godfather of EAI (electroacoustic improvisation), with many of his recent recordings having been released by Erstwhile Records.