Sun Sept. 16, 2012
20:30

Evans / Fernandez / Gustafsson (USA/ESP/S)

Peter Evans: trumpet, pocket trumpet
Agusti Fernandez: piano
Mats Gustafsson: baritone saxophone, alto fluteophone, slide saxophone

Sorry this part has no English translation

Acoustic Noise? Distorted Jazz? Misunderstood Improv?
Dieses kreative Trio experimentiert in bekannten und unbekannten Territorien. Explosionen sind garantiert!

Much like conceptual artist Piero Manzoni's Merda d'artista project, trumpeter Peter Evans, pianist Agustí Fernández, and saxophonist Mats Gustafsson present this all-acoustic improvisation session called Kopros Lithos, or "fossilized dung."

In 1961, Manzoni set about to produce 90 cans of his own feces as a limited edition art piece. In 2007, one can sold at auction for 124,000 Euro.

This project refers to dinosaur droppings, a much prized fossil. Indeed, the group's sound (which is occasionally musical) draws from minimal improvisation, noise, and plenty of surprise. All three players are part of the cutting-edge tradition of improvised music: Gustafsson is regarded as the heir apparent to Peter Brötzmann; Spaniard Fernández has been heard most recently with both Evan Parker and Barry Guy; and Evans is a jazz trumpet wunderkind who is featured in Mostly Other People Do The Killing, as well as projects by Parker, Okkyung Lee, and Mary Halvorson.

As an archeological project, this recording is a rare artifact, documenting the collaboration of three important improvisers whose technique is paraded on each track. Sometimes they choose to walk a minimalist line, Fernández exploring the piano's insides—much of the time mimicking a percussionist—while Gustafsson and Evans play with breathy sounds. In other spots, Gustafsson delivers his now-patented shout-smack saxophone punch and Evans brings his growling rumbles. Without the persistence of beat or the bounds of meter, the trio is free to exercise some serious kopros noise-making, Some may think these challenging sounds merde, others an instant archaeological treasure. (Mark Corroto)