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Of ANI-105 The
Fell Clutch
Ned Rothenberg - bass clarinet, clarinet, alto saxophone
Tony
Buck - drums
Stomu
Takeishi - fretless bass
Tronzo - slide guitar
Produced by Ned Rothenberg
This is a 'jam band' that casts its net wide but keeps a sharp focus. Its about grooves, grooves in every sense
of the word. No solos in the
standard framework - this is a group going for musical strength through sonic
cohesion and rhythms that are both 'tight' and 'loose'. Better living through better listening.
From
All About Jazz, NYC:
"What
King Crimson did for rock and Voivod did for heavy metal, the quartet of Ned Rothenberg,
David Tronzo, Stomu Takeishi and Tony Buck might one day do for improvised
music if their performance at Issue Project Room (Nov. 13th, 2005) was any
indication. The granite rotunda of the Brooklyn venue was transformed into
a cyclotron for two stunning sets of music, beams of sound spinning around
at hyperspeed. Those that know Tronzo's slide guitar as a warm inviting presence
were chilled by its bleak, almost apocalyptic message. Buck's drums and Takeishi's
electric fretless effected bass provided searing rhythms over which the guitar
and Rothenberg's circular breathed reeds bubbled, volcanic in purpose and
execution. If Ornette Coleman innovated the 'time, no changes' approach to
jazz, this quartet's advance was 'intensity over time'.
Andrey Henkin, All About Jazz,
NY (Selected top 10 performances of the year 2005)
Click on photo to download 300 dpi version
(photo:
Scott Friedlander)
"(Rothenberg)
recently released a superb album, The Fell Clutch (Animul),
with drummer Tony Buck (best known as a member of the Necks), electric bassist
Stomu Takeishi, and a handful of cameos by slide guitarist Dave Tronzo. In
a press release for the album, he refers to the group as “a kind of
next-generation jam band,” but that description sells the music short.
It’s all improvised, and even though the pieces are built from loose
but hypnotic rhythmic schemes, there’s nothing aimless or indulgent
about the performances, which reveal a stunning degree of interaction. The
best pieces use short little stuttery phrases that coalesce neatly into transparent
grooves, alternately choppy and fluid, the perfect setting for Rothenberg’s
mesmerizing, interlocking phrases. "
Peter
Margasak, Chicago Reader
"...a
strong new album". Nate Chinen, NY Times
Bruce
Gallanter's (owner of Downtown
Music Gallery) review:
The
Fell Clutch (Animul 105) The Fell Clutch feature Ned Rothenberg on bass &
regular clarinets & alto sax, Stomu Takeishi on fretless electric bass,
Tony Buck on drums and Dave Tronzo on slide guitar (3 tracks only). There
was rave review of this quartet playing live in Brooklyn last year by Andre
Henkin in All About Jazz, so I've been eagerly awaiting this disc to arrive.
And what an amazing and unlikely downtown all-star quartet this is. I recall
Ned Rothenberg sitting in with Spanish Fly (Tronzo, Steve Bernstein &
Marcus Rojas) in the recent past and fretless bass god, Stomu Takeishi (Threadgill's
Make a Move & Myra Melford) has been a longtime partner with Tronzo in
his trios/duo throughout the years, so that's where these connections were
made. Australian drum wiz, Tony Buck (The Necks), has been coming to town
pretty often in the last few years and has played at a couple of Zorn's monthly
improv sessions at The Stone, which is where this quartet first played together.
Enough history. Which brings us to this colossal trio and quartet date.
The
Fell Clutch love to twist its grooves inside-out. Ned establishes the groove
on the opening piece, "moment of reloading" on his bass clarinet
with Tony playing skeletal drums, Stomu throbbing those cool bass swirls and
Dave playing his fractured slide sounds. Stomu's sly, distinctive fretless
bass sound starts off "life in your years" with Ned's sumptuous
clarinet and Dave's haunting slide slowly swirling around one another, a superb
gem. What is most wonderful about this disc is that although it is mostly
improvised, this trio or quartet sound as if they are playing mainly charted
pieces, so focused is the overall sound. On "food for a rambling",
Ned sets up an odd groove with a bent sax -line that he repeats and twists
into odd shapes as he circular breathes with the bass and drums punctuate
his groove. It's always great to hear Tronzo make his guitar talk, which he
does on a number of these pieces with his wah-wah slide playing. I dig the
way the guitar, bass & drums often set up these great little grooves,
sometimes a bit bent but always infectious in one way or another. "epic
in difference" is in fact an epic-length piece that begins with immense
suspense, floats eerily with Ned playing dijeradoo-like bass clarinet. The
bass and guitar sound like mutant ghosts as Tony plays alarm clock-like cymbals.
It builds in intensity as it develops, feeling like some sort of ritualistic
dance of the spirits. This is a most mesmerizing journey through some dark
lands. An awesome endeavor from a fine quartet downtown's best.
Free
Download! Check out Food
for a Rambling from Ani 105
For
distribution contact Pogus:
POGUS PRODUCTIONS
50 AYR ROAD
CHESTER, NY 10918-2409
Fax: 509.357.4319
pogal@pogus.com
http://www.pogus.com/animul.html

Fell Clutch at Amsterdam's Bim
Huis in May, 2007. Photo by Mirjana Klemm