Wednesday, 20 August 2008

Download Derek Bailey mp3






Derek Bailey
   

Artist: Derek Bailey: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

funk
Jazz
Avantgarde

   







Discography:


Carpal Tunnel
   

 Carpal Tunnel

   Year: 2005   

Tracks: 6
Ballads: Derek Bailey
   

 Ballads: Derek Bailey

   Year: 2002   

Tracks: 14
Transmutations
   

 Transmutations

   Year: 1997   

Tracks: 9
Takes Fakes and Dead She Dances
   

 Takes Fakes and Dead She Dances

   Year:    

Tracks: 10






At first glance, Derek Bailey possesses almost none of the qualities 1 expects from a malarky musician -- his medicinal drug does not swing out in whatsoever appreciable way, it lacks a discernable sense of blues feeling -- yet there's a strong connective between his amelodic, arhythmic, atonal, uncategorizable free-improvisatory style, and much free idle words of the post-Coltrane epoch. His music draws upon a brobdingnagian array of resources, including indeterminateness, rock & roll, and several world musics. Indeed, this catholic banker's acceptance of any and all tuneful influences is arguably what sets Bailey's art outside the nonindulgent bound of "wind." The of the essence element of his do shape, however, is the type of offhanded musical interrelation that evolved from the '60s jazz new waving. Sound, not ideology, is Bailey's medium. He differs in approach to nearly any other guitarist wHO preceded him. Bailey uses the guitar as a sound-making, kind of than a "music"fashioning, gimmick. Meaning, he seldom plays melodies or harmonies in a formal horse sensation, simply quite pulls knocked out of his instrument every imaginable type of sound victimization every conceivable technique. His timbral field is quite full. On electrical guitar, Bailey is capable of the almost gratingly rough, distortion-laden heavy-metalisms; unamplified, he's as likely to mimicker a coiffe of windchimes. Bailey's guitar is often like John Cage's inclined pianissimo; both innovations enhanced the several instrument's percussive possibilities. As a grouping participant, Bailey is an fine sensitive respondent to what goes on around him. He has the sort of warm reflexes and complementary reference that posterior meld random musical events into a corporate whole.


Bailey came from a melodic family; his grandfather and uncle were musicians. As a fry surviving in Sheffield in the '40s, Bailey studied music with C.H.C. Biltcliffe and guitar with George Wing and John Duarte. Bailey began playing conventional jazz and commercial music professionally in the '50s. In the early '60s, Bailey played in a trio called Joseph Holbrooke, with drummer Tony Oxley and bassist (and afterwards renowned definitive composer) Gavin Bryars. In the track of its creation, from 1963-66, the mathematical group evolved from playing relatively traditional idle words with pacing and chord changes, to playing wholly loose. In 1966 Bailey stirred to London; in that respect, he formed a number of important melodious associations with, among others, drummer John Stevens, saxophonist Evan Parker, trumpeter Kenny Wheeler, and bassist Dave Holland. This specific assembling of players recorded as the Spontaneous Music Ensemble, which served as a crucible for the sort of equalitarian, collective improvisation that Bailey was to engage from and so on. In 1968, Bailey joined Oxley -- another musician interested in new possibilities of reasoned generation -- in whose sextet he remained until 1973. In 1970, Bailey formed the trio Iskra with bassist Barry Guy and trombonist Paul Rutherford. Also that twelvemonth, Bailey started (with Parker and Oxley) the Incus record book mark, for which he would extend to record into the '90s. In 1976, Bailey founded Company, a long-lasting free improv tout ensemble with ever-shifting staff office, which has included, at various times, Anthony Braxton, Han Bennink, Steve Lacy, and George Lewis, among others.


The eighties saw Bailey collaborating with many of the said, along with newer figures on the scene such as John Zorn and Joelle Leandre. Solo playing has always been a special strength, as have (especially in recent old age, it seems) ad hoc duos with a variety show of associates. Bailey by and by recorded an inflexible three-disc set with a group that included the unremarkably more than pop-oriented guitarist Pat Metheny. Bailey's utmost radicalism makes for a hard euphony, yet there's no sceptical his influence; his methods and esthetic have significantly impacted the downtown New York free scene, though many (if not most) of his disciples ar little known to the general public. In 1980, Bailey wrote Improvisation: Its Nature and Practice, an instructive and undervalued volume on various traditions of improvised music.





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