Black Orpheus (In Concert, Tokyo Bunka Kaikan Recital Hall) Masabumi Kikuchi Trio

Cover Black Orpheus (In Concert, Tokyo Bunka Kaikan Recital Hall)

Album info

Album-Release:
2016

HRA-Release:
30.03.2016

Label: ECM

Genre: Instrumental

Subgenre: Piano

Artist: Masabumi Kikuchi Trio

Composer: Masabumi Kikuchi

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • 1Tokyo, Pt. I (Live)05:52
  • 2Tokyo, Pt. II (Live)03:57
  • 3Tokyo, Pt. III (Live)05:33
  • 4Tokyo, Pt. IV (Live)07:27
  • 5Tokyo, Pt. V (Live)05:05
  • 6Black Orpheus (Live)08:17
  • 7Tokyo, Pt. Vi (Live)06:38
  • 8Tokyo, Pt. VII (Live)07:38
  • 9Tokyo, Pt. VIII (Live)06:30
  • 10Tokyo, Pt. IX (Live)07:09
  • 11Little Abi (Live)06:43
  • Total Runtime01:10:49

Info for Black Orpheus (In Concert, Tokyo Bunka Kaikan Recital Hall)

Ein Dokument eines 2012 in Japan dargebotenen Solo Rezitals – nicht nur das letzte dieser Art in seinem Heimatland, sondern das Letzte überhaupt von dem einzigartigen Improvisator Masabumi Kikuchi (1939-2015). Als eine nicht kategorisierbare Größe seines Fachs hat sich Kikuchi sein eigenes musikalisches Universum erschaffen. In seinen letzten Jahren kappte er still und systematisch seine Bindungen zum Jazz und bewegte sich stattdessen in Richtung von, wie er es nannte, „schwebenden Klängen und Harmonien“ – introvertierten und lyrischen Improvisationen. Mitunter materialisierten sich darin noch Liedformen. Kikuchi reflektiert „Little Abi“, einer seiner Tochter gewidmeten Ballade, die der Pianist einst mit Elvin Jones eingespielt hatte. Und dann ist da noch eine überraschende und zugleich sehr berührende Version des sehnsüchtig schmachtenden Themas aus dem brasilianischen Film Black Orpheus (1959).

Masabumi Kikuchi, Klavier


Masabumi Kikuchi
Born 1939 in Tokyo, Masabumi Kikuchi played with Lionel Hampton and Sonny Rollins while still a teenager, and made his recording debut in the early 1960s with Toshiko Akiyoshi and Charlie Mariano. In the 1970s he collaborated with Gil Evans and Elvin Jones and led his own groups, in both acoustic and electric modes, variously drawing influence from Miles Davis and Stockhausen, from Duke Ellington and Ligeti and Takemitsu. Kikuchi was amongst a small group of musicians with whom Miles Davis would confer in his post-Agharta retirement period, and he contributed to a still-unissued session with Miles, Larry Coryell and others, in 1978. Several of Kikuchi’s 1980s recordings were devoted to the synthesizer, but by the 1990s he was again emphasizing acoustic piano, founding the group Tethered Moon with Gary Peacock and Paul Motian. Motian, in particular, encouraged Kikuchi’s experimental tendencies, and was pleased to feature Masabumi Kikuchi in his own groups.

Motian was also on hand for Kikuchi’s sole ECM studio album, Sunrise, as was bassist Thomas Morgan. All About Jazz described the album as “sparse, abstract and forged on the spur of the moment, but with a Zen-like beauty: atonal, sublime and powerful.” Jazziz noted the album’s emotional undercurrents: “For all its freedom and space, the music is filled with tension, as if Kikuchi were carrying some great burden through his search for enlightenment.”

The release of Sunrise in 2012 provided a context for Kikuchi to play in Japan again, where the music of Black Orpheus was recorded in October of that year, in the responsive acoustics of the Tokyo Bunka Kaikan Recital Hall, a space originally designed for chamber music.

Back in his New York loft, a home base since the 1970s, Masabumi Kikuchi continued to work on the music. He withdrew from public performance but, with ECM’s support, made numerous recordings at home, both of solo piano meditations and group improvisations with a circle of younger associates including Thomas Morgan, guitarist Todd Neufeld, and saxophonist Michaël Attias, who helped him in the quest for new shapes and forms in spontaneous music-making. He died on July 6, 2015.

Booklet for Black Orpheus (In Concert, Tokyo Bunka Kaikan Recital Hall)

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