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Masayuki Takayanagi New Direction Unit - Axis/Another Revolvable Thing (2020)

Masayuki Takayanagi New Direction Unit - Axis/Another Revolvable Thing (2020)
  • Title: Axis/Another Revolvable Thing
  • Year Of Release: 2020
  • Label: Blank Forms Editions
  • Genre: Jazz
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 96:38 min
  • Total Size: 538 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Fragment - I (Gradually Projection)
02. Fragment - II (Gradually Projection)
03. Fragment - III (Percussion Solo)
04. Fragment - IV (Mass Projection)
05. Fragment - V (Mass Projection)
06. Fragment - VI (Mass Projection)

Personnel:

Masayuki Takayanagi – guitar
Kenji Mori – reeds
Nobuyoshi Ino – bass, cello
Hiroshi Yamazaki – percussion

Reissue of ear-flicking improv jazz lead by Japanese maestro Masayuki Takayanagi: frighteningly tight and brimming with shifty detail; a classic example of his “non section music” from 1975 brought to light by the amazing Blank Forms Editions

Another prism-challenging and head tweaking ace from the label that brought you stunners by CC Hennix and Graham Lambkin with Joe McPhee, not to mention the last Masayuki Takayanagi New Direction Unit side ‘April is the Cruelest Month’ in 2019, this one packs recordings of his ‘Another Revolvable Thing’ concert in Shinuuku, Tokyo, 1970 in chronological sequence for the first time, spanning the spacious “gradually projection” part, a wild bit of stairs-falling-up-stairs solo drumming, and the utterly head-spinning brilliance of their “mass projection” throw-downs.

Just tip-of-the-tongue sizzling stuff full of confoundingly precise and never repeated movement, it’s sure to ping the pleasure centres of all free improv heads. They sound like a live band playing Parmegiani one minute, or a load of tropical birds let loose in Harry Bertoia’s shed the next, with the mutability of Matsuyuki’s guitar playing maybe best considered like a calligraphic Japanese adjunct to the harsher markings of Derek Bailey, for example. Surely all matched by a shockingly tight unit of Kenji Mori (reeds), Nobuyoshi Ino (bass, cello), and Hiroshi Yamazaki (percussion), whose atomised playing and edge-of-seat anticipation appears to cooperate at supernatural levels of live craft recalling everyone from Ornette Coleman to Kenji Haino.

Blows the cobwebs away we tell ya. Not to be missed!


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