Sunday, October 22, 2023

Outer Modes

 Outer Modes Records


Outer Modes was run by Lenny Kagan in partnership with guitarist Robert Gutzka. Outer Modes only released 3 albums. The label was so poorly run by Kagan that the albums were barely distributed, if at all. The recordings were made at a loft on Greene st. in NYC known as "The Vortical Nexus" and which was run by Gutzka. Guzka had been a folkie who turned to improvising after a jam session at Ornette Coleman's place on Prince st. The first album is a wild affair, two long pieces featuring instruments more associated with bluegrass; banjo, mandolin, fiddle, guitar and bass, but played in a manner as far from bluegrass as possible.




The second release, although under the same band name, features mostly different musicians, but still led by Gutzka. Apparently most of the short pieces on this album were improv "exercises" that Gutzka worked through with whoever was on hand to jam. Notable drumming from Abdul Khalid, and Gutzka, now on electric guitar, is joined on many tracks by wah wah guitarist George Grant (later Grant and bassist Ronnie Jefferson went on to play with fusion band Starlight).

 


 



The final Outer Modes album, Energy Emergency!,  was a live concert recording featuring visiting Japanese pianist Yasahiro Takahashi with some of the VN guys backing him. It's wild, bombastic stuff which resulted in a terrible NY Post review, prompting label owner Lenny Kagan to print it in full on the back of the album! I haven;t located a copy of this album but will update if I do. Email if you have it.

Kagan and Gutzka's partnership ended when they lost the lease on the building and went their separate ways. Supposedly Gutzka was murdered in a drug deal and Kagan died in 1981 while in the middle of trying to reissue the albums. Hopefully someone will reissue these before too long.




Monday, October 2, 2023

Strata-East Records

Strata-East Records

 Strata-East was founded in 1971 by trumpeter Charles Tolliver and pianist Stanley Cowell.

Inspired by the Detroit label Strata, Tolliver and Cowell's vision was for a musician-controlled label. Musicians would fund and produce their recordings, bring the master to Strata-East for production, promotion and distribution, with a higher share of the money going to the musicians.

The label had a surprise hit with Gil Scott-Heron and Brian Jackson's Winter in America, which helped fund some further releases and pay off debts. The label continued into the 1980s began losing steam. Nonetheless, the music was influential.

Here are a couple real standouts in their catalog:

Alkebu-Lan, The Land of the Blacks

The double album’s was recorded at The East, an important venue best-remembered for Pharaoh Sanders' Live at the East. Interesting side note, The East was a blacks-only club, even prominent white musicians were turned away. The Mtume Umoja Ensemble was lead by percussionist Mtume, who at the time was just beginning a long stint with Miles Davis electro-funk enesemble and features saxophonists Gary Bartz and Carlos Garnett (both were in Miles Davis’s band) and the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians’ Leroy Jenkins on violin. But this album is much further out than even the Miles band, and that's saying something. It's a masterpiece of Black Nationalist spiritual improvisation.




Izipho Zam

Pharaoh Sanders recorded this gem in 1969, but for some reason it was not released until Strata-East put it out in 1973. The album features an epic cast of 15 musicians, including drummer Billy Hart, guitarist Sonny Sharrock and bassist Cecil McBee. They large cast of musicians really bring the heat and an edginess not found in his later, more spiritual albums.



 

Sunday, October 1, 2023

ESP-DISK

ESP-DISK
 
ESP-Disk is the Grandaddy of indie free jazz labels. The records released in the 1960s include some of the most legendary free jazz albums of the 1960s.

Weirdly, when Bernard Stollman created the label in 1963 it's first release was an album in the conlang Esperanto. But the second release was Albert Ayler's "Spiritual Unity" and the label's course was set.

In 1963 Ayler had just moved to New York and was already making the scene, playing with cats like Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor and John Coltrane. Not a bad way to make an entrance! Stollman was convinced by a friend to go check him out and sure enough, Stollman was blown away. He offered to record Ayler for his new label.

Ayler had just been playing with pianist Paul Bley's group, featuring the young bass prodigy Gary Peacock and Sunny Murray, the pioneering free jazz drummer, so he brought Peacock and Murray in for the session. The album was very provocative, resulting in a zero star review from Kenny Dorham. On the other hand, Coltrane was so into it he tried to get Ayler on Impulse! and even started playing like Ayler. Looking back there is no doubt this is one of the original masterpieces of the free jazz movement.

 

A week later the trio was back in the studio, along with Don Cherry, John Tchicai, and Roswell Rudd, recording another ESP-Disk album, "New York Ear and Eye Control." This was essentially a commission from experimental filmmaker Michael Snow, himself a free jazz aficionado, who wanted the music for a film soundtrack. Snow had a few stiplulations though, he wanted the music to be simultaneously improvised (rather than a sequence of solos) and he didn't want the pieces bookended by a main melody, as in the typical jazz arrangement.

Another landmark album, it almost didn't see the light of day as Snow at first didn't want the music released by Stollman as it was supposed to exist in the context the film . Luckily he agreed.


If that wasn't enough of an auspicious start, the next release was Pharaoh Sanders' first album (Pharaoh's First). Although this album is notable as the legendary tenor man's first, the paring with the straight ahead backing band makes for an odd match, as Pharaoh tries to blast for the stratosphere the back band swings along as if nothing unusual is happening. 

The next album was perhaps more seminal. The New York Art Quartet features John Tchicai on alto saxophone, Roswell Rudd on trombone, Lewis Worrell on bass, and Milford Graves on percussion. In addition, LeRoi Jones recites his controversial poem Black Dada Nihilismus on one track. This was 1964 and it was a heady time for the avant-garde. The New York Art Quartet had just played in the infamous "October Revolution in Jazz" organized by Bill Dixon, which included many luminaries fo the free jazz scene, including Paul Bley and Sun Ra.




 

1964 also saw ESP-Disk releasing the first album by the Giuseppe Logan Quartet. Logan plays alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, Pakistani oboe, bass clarinet, and flute along with pianist Don Pullen, bassist Eddie Gómez, and drummer Milford Graves.

Milford Graves recalled: "After the New York Art Quartet recording, Bernard approached me and asked me to do something. Fine, but then I thought about Giuseppi. I told Bernard, 'I'm a young guy, and I have time. Let's give it to Giuseppi.' I don't know if Giuseppi ever knew that. So I just recorded with Giuseppi as a sideman; that's how that took place." However, according to Stollman, on the day of the recording, "Milford Graves and [Logan] filed through the studio and as they walked in to record, Giuseppi turned to me and said 'if you rob me, I'll kill you.' Milford was mortified—he had asked me to record Giuseppi—I'd given him a record date and he threatened me with death." (from Wikipedia)

This album is extremely "out" and not for the meek.


1964 was a hell of a first year, and 1965 was an impressive follow up. First off the was the trio record by obscure pianist Lowell Davidson. Davidson had been recommended to Stollman by Ornette Coleman with whom he had been playing (Coleman would later refer to Davidson as his favorite pianist). For the session he was backed by Peacock and Graves who continued breaking new ground and wreaking new havoc for a jazz rhythm section. Davidson's piano stylings are very unique, with a free-flowing abstraction unheard at the time.  



The same year also saw the recording of Sun-Ra's The Heliocentric Worlds of Sun Ra, volumes 1 and 2, Paul Bley's Barrage and Closer, Albert Ayler's Bells and Spirits Rejoice, Milford Graves' Percussion Ensemble, and one of my favorites, The Marion Brown Quartet.

The album features Brown on alto saxophone, Alan Shorter on trumpet, Bennie Maupin on tenor saxophone, Reggie Johnson and Ronnie Boykins on bass, and Rashied Ali on drums. A rambling, lyrical journey with Boykins and Ali driving the bus.

Another seminal recording made in 1965 was tenor player Frank Wright's first album. Wright was a bass player from Mississippi who switched to tenor after meeting Albert Ayler in Cleveland. He moved to New York and found himself playing Larry Young, Noah Howard, and Sunny Murray. He even played with Coltrane who then invited him to the legendary "Ascension" recording session. Stollman heard Wright sitting in with Coltrane and asked him what label he was with, to which Wright replied "none." Stollman told him "Well, you are now." Wright followed this up with his album Your Prayer.


1966 brought another round of great recordings. Alto sax player Noah Howard recorded his debut album The Noah Howard Quartet which was followed later that year with the live album At Judson Hall.


The label began branching out after the success of folk rock band The Fugs. There were still plenty of Free Jazz gems, such as the 1973 debut of Frank Lowe's Black Beings.


 

The label folded in 1975, according to Stollman's claims it was in large part due to rampant bootlegging. Stollman went on to become the Assistant Attorney General of the State of New York until 1991. He then licensed some recordings to various labels, eventually restarteing ESP itself in 2005.

It must be said, Stollman was not on the up and up when it came to royalties and it seems to be the unanimous opinion that he ripped off all his artists when it came to royalties. Luckily, the current incarnation of the label is reissuing a lot of this material and presumably has sorted out the financial side of things.






 


    




Outer Modes

 Outer Modes Records Outer Modes was run by Lenny Kagan in partnership with guitarist Robert Gutzka. Outer Modes only released 3 albums. The...