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A CD Review : Live performance at Frakture, 02/03/2000 web presence : http://www.jazzweekly.com/reviews/jbutcher_liverpool.htm Brevity, it's said, is the soul of wit. Yet, as this singular
duo CD proves, it can also be the font of improvisation. After
listening to the slightly more than half an hour of interaction
between reedman John Butcher and percussionist Gino Robair that
is this limited-edition disc, you realize that the duration couldn't
and shouldn't be lengthened. Oakland, Calif.-based percussionist Robair, who has worked with
improvisers as different as multi-reedman Anthony Braxton and
turntablist Otomo Yoshihide, plus frequently with Butcher, easily
gets with the program as well. Using tools that include styrofoam,
a faux dax, an e-bow snare and motors as well as more (un) conventional
percussion, over the course of four tracks here, he scraps, scratches,
strokes, whizzes, twists and turns out an entire sound field from
his instruments. Leaving very few aural spaces unaccented, the
two players fabricate tones that, on the last track for instance,
resemble motors grinding, garbage cans being dropped, and cash
registers ringing. The climax, -- probably from Butcher's reed
-- transmutes what could be feline wailing into a hiss of pure
white sound.
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