Changing approaches to his music with new quartet of Jimmy Lyons on alto sax, Alan Silva on double bass and Andrew Cyrille on drums, pianist Cecil Taylor's incredible 1966 concert in Paris presented four extended compositions, here remastered and reissued with a track from a compilation LP--"With (Exit)"--extending his quartet with Bill Dixon on trumpet and Henry Grimes on double bass.
Label: ezz-thetics by Hat Hut Records Ltd Catalog ID: ezz-thetics 1133 Squidco Product Code: 32110
Format: CD Condition: New Released: 2022 Country: Switzerland Packaging: Cardboard Gatefold Track 1 recorded at Van Gelder Studio, in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, on October 6th, 1966.
Tracks 2-5 recorded in Paris, France, on November 30th, 1996.
"With (Exit)" originally included on the compilation album The Amazing Shōichi Yui Volume 2 released on CD in 1999 in Japan on the Blue Note label as catalog code BNCJ-99. Student Studies originally released in 1973 as a double LP in Japan on the BYG Records label with catalog code YX-4003~4.
"On November 30 1966, NASA made public three high resolutions photographs that for the first time showed clearly the depth of the Copernicus crater, one of the most prominent features on our moon, as well as other features. The pictures had been taken about a week before by Lunar Explorer 2. On that same last day of November, a musical explorer offered a new perspective on his musical landscapes. Playing in Paris with his quartet, Cecil Taylor broke with his previous recording and presented a body of music that was precisely concerned with space. Originally released in 1973 as Student Studies but also known as The Great Paris Concert, it differed sharply from the dark, difficult but flawless Conquistador! which proceeded it, represented here by the remarkable "With (Exit)", and then in turn by the tumbling linear language of Unit Structures which came shortly before that.
Critics gasp when a known artist takes new directions, and yet Cecil Taylor, in some ways the most mercurial of all the modernists, is often treated monolithically, as if he developed a language sometime in the 1950s and simply replicated it for the rest of his career. In contrast, Miles Davis - no fan of Taylor's and the feeling was mutual - is famed for his shape-shifting but sounds remarkably of a piece when heard at length and in retrospect.
Produced by Alfred Lion, Conquistador! retains something of the feel of a classic Blue Note hard bop date with the two horns out in front over a heavy, roiling "rhythm section" that behaves almost like the ripieno in a classical concerto grosso. Jimmy Lyons, Bill Dixon and Andrew Cyrille usually take away the significant sideman credits, but it is Alan Silva's sonorous bass, operating like a huge gyroscope at the centre of this music, that unites the two recordings. Dixon was absent from the Paris concert and there is no second bass player. Silva's prominence also puts paid to another loose generalisation about Taylor, true only for a short phase of his career, that he didn't need or welcome a string bass in his groups. Quite the opposite. While some of his most compelling duo work was in the company of drummers, Taylor more often relied on the anchoring sound of a bass at the heart of the group. A pianist who rarely used pedals and didn't rely on sustain, but rather on notes so rapidly juxtaposed that they functioned quite distinctly either from melody, or conventional harmony, or any form of modal organisation. Nobody has yet provided a fully satisfactory account of Taylor's methods. He offered gnomic hints, but always held back from a full explication, perhaps because he hadn't quite worked it all out himself yet.
The other aspect of Student Studies/The Great Paris Concert that was striking was the extent to which Taylor used arranged passages and pre-determined shapes in the music. In later years, he was fascinated by hip-hop and the art of sampling. He shows an instinct for it himself. Ultimately, though, these are group records. Lyons and Cyrille, while not necessarily the only game in town, are instinctively wise even to Taylor's most extreme procedures. They follow him into the most uncharted territory and seem to emerge exactly where needed. There is more space in the music of this period than there had been previously and was later. Listening with evenly suspended attention one doesn't hear a pianist and rhythm - not least because the pianist is generating much of the rhythm - but a musical entity moving forward in an utterly distinct way. The paradoxes of modern physics - light as both particle and wave - operate here. These were groups made up of individuals, some of the most idiosyncratic in the music; and yet the music functions as a complete entity. Taylor's whole career was a wave-front of exploration. The analogy with light is apposite enough. He evolved so fast most of us never quite caught up and relied instead on a few safe generalisations that momentarily applied around 1962 and only occasionally thereafter.
Taylor rarely referenced the space programme, and admitted towards the end of his life that he had found the moon landings "banal". Like Sun Ra, he was a cosmonaut of sound, breaking free of gravity and showing us the musical landscape in ways we had never seen before."-Brian Morton, April, 2022