The great avant-gardist
Anthony Braxton threw the jazz world a curve with this album (and its second volume).
Braxton, filling in for an ill
Dexter Gordon, was joined by pianist
Tete Montoliu, bassist Niels Pedersen and drummer
Tootie Heath for a set of five jazz standards. After playing the melodies fairly straight,
Braxton tears into
Warne Marsh's "Marshmallow," "Just Friends" and "Lush Life" with very complex and abstract improvisations that are generally ignored by the rhythm section who go about playing in their usual bop-oriented style. An exception is a duet with bassist Pedersen on a very spooky "Goodbye Pork Pie Hat," one of two songs on which
Braxton plays contrabass clarinet. His solo on "Ornithology" on that instrument is a bit silly, for the contrabass clarinet is so low that one has difficulty telling some of its notes apart from each other. A historical curiosity, this set is not as essential as
Braxton's explorations of his own music.