Collapse Uncollapse at Fizzle online from Sansom Studios, Birmingham

Legendary UK jazz promoter Tony Dudley-Evans, pictured, introduced Birmingham scene improvisers CollapseUncollapse broadcast last night for the first time in a Fizzle stream filmed at Sansom Studios in the Wythall area of the city. Drummer Mark …

Published: 5 Feb 2021. Updated: 3 years.

Legendary UK jazz promoter Tony Dudley-Evans, pictured, introduced Birmingham scene improvisers CollapseUncollapse broadcast last night for the first time in a Fizzle stream filmed at Sansom Studios in the Wythall area of the city.

Drummer Mark Sanders is the most familiar and internationally known of the players beyond their stature on the local scene, his style on this showing sharing more in common with the Anthony Braxton player Steve 'Dakiz' Davis in Belfast and perhaps even Terje Evensen in Norway than I have heard him on any occasions before. As for the electronics side, Monotron synth and more from Andrew Woodhead in alliance with Chris Mapp on bass guitar and pedals together share an affinity somehow with the outcomes of Irish improviser Shane Latimer's explorations.

Operating at the technologically driven nexus of electro-acoustic improvisation and ambient sounds rather than loud free-jazz and noise, a different sound entirely, the performance thrives on lulls and contrasting build-ups of scrabbling detail rather than abject hyperbole that you might find in other settings. An introverted sound or rather another way of looking at its unravelling is to delve into its rejections of certainty and belief instead more in consequential/inconsequential textural stretches that are painstakingly established and rendered abstract.

A galaxy away from the rites and rituals of mainstream jazz and a world distant too even from orthodox heritage free-jazz certainly as imposed from the top heading down the rigour of the discipline is what works best. Whether consciously or not an acceptance of the influential innovations long ago of Delia Derbyshire also spring to mind in the blend. SG

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Review: Why Am I Telling You This? With Bill Clinton: Wynton Marsalis – How Jazz Explains Democracy (Clinton Foundation podcast)

Stimulating discussion here as former US President Bill Clinton introduces and interviews the great jazz trumpeter Wynton Marsalis. President Clinton refers to the great playwright and Czechoslovakian president Václav Havel whose life and work …

Published: 4 Feb 2021. Updated: 3 years.

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Stimulating discussion here as former US President Bill Clinton introduces and interviews the great jazz trumpeter Wynton Marsalis. President Clinton refers to the great playwright and Czechoslovakian president Václav Havel whose life and work intersected with the arts and society in his introduction and turning to Wynton speaks of his own enduring friendship with the great New Orleanian and mentions topical albums of his such as Wynton's recent albums including the excellent satire The Ever Fonky Lowdown and The Democracy Suite. President Clinton, a keen tenor saxophonist and committed jazz fan, says that when he was practising going back to his younger days he realised that he could never be as good as John Coltrane and then reminisces with Wynton about advice he gleaned from him when they talked about making progress as a player taking the model of Coltrane as an ultimate example. Wynton says: ''I loved the fact you played and brought that consciousness to people'' and speaks of the ''hipfulness'' and ''soulfulness of Coltrane''. ''We know what A Love Supreme Is… Coltrane worked his behind off… In jazz you can achieve the sound of your person… It depends what your definition of virtuosity is''. The discussion then gets deeper and even more thought provoking on societal matters as America looks to get to a place where the healing may even, pausing to consider, be observable to have begun. Both President Clinton and Wynton were also involved recently in supporting fundraising efforts to keep the lights on at the great jazz club Birdland in New York City which is under threat of permanently closing due to the sustained shuttering of venues as the Pandemic continues to rage. SG