Cecil Taylor Unit: Fragments: Complete 1969 Salle Pleyel (Elemental Music, on vinyl)
On Record Store Day last week, my friend Dave (Hi Dave) posted to Facebook: "BRB, GOING TO PICK UP THAT MIKE & MECHANICS PICTURE DISC". I knew what he meant. The overwhelming majority of releases on RSD are ridiculous, and even some of the best ones are ridiculous too. A featured item this year was a double LP reissue of Captain Beefheart's Lick My Decals Off, Baby, which I consider to be one of his best albums, if not my personal favorite. Sure, I'm mildly curious about the tracks sans vocals and alternate takes, but I'm just not that much of a completist to care. Plus I have an original copy in nice shape.
I was hesitant on this particular three record set.* I run a bit hot and cold on Cecil Taylor. I acknowledge his importance, there's little denying it. I find some of his recordings interesting. But there's so much of it that sounds alike to me, a sort of constant barrage of sound centering on his piano at (almost) all times.
So why did I spring for this one? Largely because Sam Rivers is in the group for these concerts, along with longer-standing Taylor stalwarts Jimmy Lyons and Andrew Cyrille. Tenor saxophone (+ soprano and flute), alto saxophone, piano and drums, it's the same lineup as the Pittsburgh Composers Quartet, though we do a bit more doubling.
Record one is the evening concert. It starts similar to many Taylor records: he plays an active, fragmented set of phrases, leading to the ensemble joining on while. There are more phrases tossed around. The energy and density rarely let up over the length of both sides. The piano never lets up.
Here's where I'm critical of Cecil's approach. There is some loose, if not notated compositional idea (the work for both concerts, all six sides, it titled "Fragments of a Dedication to Duke Ellington"). Maybe I need to listen to the opening of both concerts more to get the idea, but on initial listening I'm not picking up on it. Not that it's necessary for me to, but I'm interested in the idea of a compositional launching point. Indeed, if you're not really blowing on the ideas, why start with anything?
When the tutti ensemble is blowing, there's a lot of playing and playing and playing, everyone contributing to the sound mass but very little of what I hear as interplay. It's not that everything in immprovsed music needs to be a back-and-forth between players, but I do believe crossplay is an essential component. Ensembles that take this group's approach of co-existing yet largely discreet performances I find, well, boring. it becomes tiresome. This was my complaint when seeing David S. Ware many years ago, a former Cecil Taylor protege. He'd start most "pieces" on the concert by playing solo for a bit (and sounding great), give a downbeat, then the band would enter with a barrage of sounds. It all started to sound the same to me and I came away severely disappointed. (A local writer put the show in his top ten jazz concerts of the year, to my surprise.)
Records two and three contain the whole of the afternoon concert from that day. I find more variety to this concert, but for a significant portion of it, I have the same complaints. Plus, I know it's Cecil's band and his vision, but there's almost never a moment when he's not playing. Why not give some space up to the other players? Wouldn't it be more interesting if the group reduced to just two saxophones for a time, or even one?
I haven't lost sight of the time period. These concerts date to 1969, a tumultuous time if ever there was one. Coltrane died two years earlier and improvised music is being pushed to further extremes. This is the era of civil rights struggles, of Nixon, of J. Edgar Hoover. There's a lot of political tension in the air currently, but we should keep these things in perspective.
I'll study this album more. Maybe there are secrets it hasn't revealed yet.
*The triple-LP live album is about as prog rock as you can get, not this is prog in any way. There's the first live Emerson, Lake, and Palmer album, and yes' Yessongs. For RSD this year, there's a new Yes triple LP live issue, Tales From Topographic Tours. I don't mind admitting curiosity to hear it, but I saved my money on that one.










