Saturday 9 August 2008

Evan Parker

Evan Parker   
Artist: Evan Parker

   Genre(s): 
Jazz
   



Discography:


2 X 3 = 5   
 2 X 3 = 5

   Year: 1986   
Tracks: 1


Birds and Blades   
 Birds and Blades

   Year:    
Tracks: 11




Among Europe's most groundbreaking and challenging saxophonists, Evan Parker's solos and playing style ar grand by his originative use of circular external respiration and mistaken fingering. Parker tin can sire angered bursts, screeches, bleats, honks, and helical lines and phrases and his solo saxophone go isn't for the dainty. He's one of the few players not only willing but nervous to mArch his chemical attraction for late-period John Coltrane. Parker worked with a Coltrane-influenced foursome in Birmingham in the other '60s. Upon resettling in London in 1965, Parker began acting with Spontaneous Music Ensemble. He joined them in 1967 and remained until 1969. Parker met guitar player Derek Bailey spell in the mathematical group, and the twosome formed the Music Improvisation Company in 1968. Parker played with them until 1971, and as good began working with the Tony Oxley Sextet in the late '60s. Parker started acting extensively with other European free medicine groups in the '70s, notably the Globe Unity Orchestra, as well as its founder Alexander von Schlippenbach's triplet and quartette. Parker, Bailey, and Oxley co-formed Incus Records in 1970 and continued operating it through and through the '80s. Parker in any case played with Chris McGregor's Brotherhood of Breath, other groups with Bailey, and did duet roger Huntington Sessions with John Stevens and Paul Lytton, as well as giving various solo concerts. Parker's albums as a leader and his collaborations ar all for versatile foreign labels; they tramp be obtained through persevering cause and mail lodge catalogs. Among his many releases ar Process and Reality (1991), Breaths and Heartbeats (1995), Obliquities (1995), Bush Fire (1997), Here Now (1998), Drawn Inward (1999), Monkey Puzzle (2000), Two Seasons (2000), Alder Brook (2003) and After Appleby (2004). Eleventh Hour, officially credited to the Evan Parker Electo-Acoustic Ensemble, appeared from ECM in 2005.





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