
John Butcher
13 Friendly Numbers
© 2004 John Butcher (634479839726)
CD IN STOCK. ORDER NOW. Will ship immediately.
John Butcher's Seminal solo saxophone album that redifines the instrument. Sound is put under a microscope.
tracks
- 1 Buccinator's Outing
- 2 Notelet
- 3 There Are Today More Than 390 Known Pair of Friendly Numbers
- 4 A Leap in the Light
- 5 Bells and Clappers (4tenors)
- 6 Two Up - Two Down (2 Sopranos, 2 Tenors)
- 7 Humours and Vapours
- 8 Uncommon Currency
- 9 A Sense of Occasion
- 10 The Brittle Chance
- 11 Mackle Music
- 12 Tolv Two Elf Kater Ten (it Can't Be) Sax (six Sopranos)
- 13 Wisp & Whisk
try this
albums you will love
- ANNE JAMES CHATON & ANDY MOOR: Le Journaliste
- ANDY MOOR: Marker
- ROBERT ASHLEY: Tap Dancing in the Sand
- YANNIS KYRIAKIDES: Wordless
- FRANCISCO LOPEZ: Untitled #164
- THE CORTET: Hhhh
- YANNIS KYRIAKIDES: The Buffer Zone
- YANNIS KYRIAKIDES/ VEENFABRIEK: The Thing Like Us
- ANDY MOOR & YANNIS KYRIAKIDES: red v green
- KRAAKGELUIDEN: document 1
- MOOR.LEHN.BUTCHER: Thermal
- MARKO CICILIANI: Tullius Rooms
- GRAND MAL: Perfect Fit
- YANNIS KYRIAKIDES: a conSPIracy cantata
- ANDY MOOR AND KAFFE MATTHEWS: Locks
genres you will love
By Location
Recommended if you like ...
notes
John Butcher
13 Friendly Numbers
John Butcher appeared on six records, beginning with the 1984 LP "Fonetiks, before he first released "Thirteen Friendly Numbers" on his own Acta label in 1992. But the disc is still something of a debut; it is the first document of his peculiar language for solo saxophone, which he had fashioned by purging his vocabulary of the instrument's familiar sounds and jazz-associated gestures, and filling the space with carefully selected sounds located at the periphery of instrumental control. Butcher's inspirations were as singular as his sounds. In musique concrete, he explains, "the actual source of the sound could change quite drastically within the course of a phrase of the music, and I was intrigued with trying to find ways of doing that on the saxophone." In "The Brittle Chance," for example, Butcher replicates the dynamic and textural shifts of 50s and 60s electronic music by nimbly switching between multiphonics and fluttering, high-frequency tones. "Notelet" unveils his determination to wring something new from that ancient device, melody, by trying to avoid idiomatic references. And the four multi-tracked pieces bypass the dubious legacy of saxophone quartets; while Butcher preserves spontaneity by executing the parts in real time, each track of "Bells And Clappers" hews to the same notes, creating densely massed sonorities, effectively treating the horns as one giant instrument instead of a reduced ensemble. And by amplifying the interior action of his horns to the point of feedback, he turns microphones and clattering keypads into an electro-acoustic ensemble on "Mackle Music." In the years since "Thirteen Friendly Numbers'" initial release Butcher has advanced as a player, making apposite contributions in settings as disparate as his intimate duo with harpist Rhodri Davies and the massively amplified Ex Orkest. His burgeoning discography now includes three more solo albums, yet this one still holds its own in any company; the ideas are compelling, the playing committed, the music thrilling. In an age when so many records of improvised music seem like little more than calling cards, that's no mean feat.
Bill Meyer, Berwyn IL, January 2004.