Pianista Paul Bley zasłużył sobie na miejsce w historii jazzu choćby ze względu na intuicję, z jaką wyszukuje młode talenty. Legendarny kwartet Ornette'a Colemana (z Donem Cherrym, Charliem Hadenem i Edem Blackwellem) rozpoczął karierę jako cztery piąte kwintetu Paula Bleya. Pianista przyczynił się do zaistnienia na kompozytorskim rynku swojej żony, Carli Bley, oraz Annette Peacock, budując swój repertuar w latach 60. i 70. głównie na ich utworach. W latach 60., gdy jeszcze nikt nie słyszał o Pacie Methenym i Jaco Pastoriusie, zaprosił ich do swojego zespołu i umożliwił nagranie płyty.
Jednakże wszystko to nie dorównuje w najmniejszym stopniu znaczeniu, jakie dla jazzu ma jego muzyka, która niezależnie od okresu, kiedy powstała, zawsze brzmi nowocześnie i świeżo. Od 40 lat Bley należy do awangardy muzyków jazzowych, zarówno w czasach bebopu, free, jak i jazzu lat 90.
Mając 20 lat, zaprzyjaźnił się i występował z Charliem Parkerem. Stałymi gośćmi tria Bleya koncertującego w Nowym Jorku na 52 ulicy byli Jackie McLean i Donald Byrd. W rozpoczęciu kariery nagraniowej pomógł mu Charlie Mingus, który na "Introducing Paul Bley" grał na kontrabasie (za perkusją zasiadał Art Blakey). Bleya zawsze ciągnęło do najbardziej kreatywnych muzyków, a ich do niego.
W latach 60. jego kariera rozwijała się w różnych kierunkach: w orkiestrze George'a Russella grał duety z Billem Evansem, w triach Dona Ellisa i Jimmy'ego Giuffre'ego swoją grą ożywiał intelektualną, introspekcyjną tkankę ich muzyki. Jest też autorem klasycznej dziś płyty "Footloose", która zapoczątkowała nową estetykę w jazzie, rodzaj kameralnego jazzu, często później utożsamianego z brzmieniem niemieckiej wytwórni ECM.
Jednakże wszystko to nie dorównuje w najmniejszym stopniu znaczeniu, jakie dla jazzu ma jego muzyka, która niezależnie od okresu, kiedy powstała, zawsze brzmi nowocześnie i świeżo. Od 40 lat Bley należy do awangardy muzyków jazzowych, zarówno w czasach bebopu, free, jak i jazzu lat 90.
Mając 20 lat, zaprzyjaźnił się i występował z Charliem Parkerem. Stałymi gośćmi tria Bleya koncertującego w Nowym Jorku na 52 ulicy byli Jackie McLean i Donald Byrd. W rozpoczęciu kariery nagraniowej pomógł mu Charlie Mingus, który na "Introducing Paul Bley" grał na kontrabasie (za perkusją zasiadał Art Blakey). Bleya zawsze ciągnęło do najbardziej kreatywnych muzyków, a ich do niego.
W latach 60. jego kariera rozwijała się w różnych kierunkach: w orkiestrze George'a Russella grał duety z Billem Evansem, w triach Dona Ellisa i Jimmy'ego Giuffre'ego swoją grą ożywiał intelektualną, introspekcyjną tkankę ich muzyki. Jest też autorem klasycznej dziś płyty "Footloose", która zapoczątkowała nową estetykę w jazzie, rodzaj kameralnego jazzu, często później utożsamianego z brzmieniem niemieckiej wytwórni ECM.
Zwraca uwagę różnorodność stylistyczna i emocjonalna muzyki Bleya: "Footloose" jest przykładem nastrojowej, poetyckiej strony jego natury, podczas gdy jej przeciwny biegun ilustruje płyta "Barrage", zrealizowana przez huraganowy kwintet na czele z saksofonistą Marshalem Allenem z Sun Ra Arkestry. W 1964 r. z Bleyem współpracowali Albert Ayler i John Gilmore.
Pod koniec dekady odkrył syntezator Arp i wydobywał z niego wszelkie możliwe elektroniczne hałasy, przez które starali się przebić tak oryginalni perkusiści, jak Hank Bennink ("Improvise" i "Dual Unity") oraz Robert Wyatt z Soft Machine.
Wspólnym mianownikiem dla tych, zdawałoby się, odległych poszukiwań Bleya jest wyczucie formy: wszystkie jego improwizacje mają logikę i spójność kompozycji. W latach 70. Bley wrócił do muzyki akustycznej, a melancholijny, wzruszający album "Open To Love" był wyznacznikiem nowego kierunku w jego twórczości. W tym samym czasie pianista założył wydawnictwo płytowe, IAI, i w miarę potrzeby przeistaczał się w producenta takich muzyków, jak Sun Ra, Ran Blake, Marion Brown, Sam Rivers. W latach 80. regularnie wydawał nowe płyty, niezmiennie na tym samym wysokim poziomie, które dowodziły, że emocjonalną ekspresję można osiągnąć nie tylko agresywnym instrumentalnym krzykiem. (diapazon)
Pod koniec dekady odkrył syntezator Arp i wydobywał z niego wszelkie możliwe elektroniczne hałasy, przez które starali się przebić tak oryginalni perkusiści, jak Hank Bennink ("Improvise" i "Dual Unity") oraz Robert Wyatt z Soft Machine.
Wspólnym mianownikiem dla tych, zdawałoby się, odległych poszukiwań Bleya jest wyczucie formy: wszystkie jego improwizacje mają logikę i spójność kompozycji. W latach 70. Bley wrócił do muzyki akustycznej, a melancholijny, wzruszający album "Open To Love" był wyznacznikiem nowego kierunku w jego twórczości. W tym samym czasie pianista założył wydawnictwo płytowe, IAI, i w miarę potrzeby przeistaczał się w producenta takich muzyków, jak Sun Ra, Ran Blake, Marion Brown, Sam Rivers. W latach 80. regularnie wydawał nowe płyty, niezmiennie na tym samym wysokim poziomie, które dowodziły, że emocjonalną ekspresję można osiągnąć nie tylko agresywnym instrumentalnym krzykiem. (diapazon)
Pianist Paul Bley, whose earliest recordings sound like Al Haig or Bud Powell, took the styles and techniques associated with Oscar Peterson, Wynton Kelly and Bill Evans to new levels of creative experimentation, becoming an indispensable force in modern music by combining the best elements in bop and early modern jazz with extended free improvisation and procedural dynamics often found in 20th century chamber music. This approach places him in league with artists as diverse as Red Garland, Elmo Hope, Mal Waldron, Jaki Byard, Stanley Cowell, Keith Jarrett, Andrew Hill, Lennie Tristano, Cecil Taylor, Ran Blake, Sun Ra, and Marilyn Crispell. Even a cursory overview of Bley's life and work can be pleasantly overwhelming, for he is among the most heavily recorded of all jazz pianists and his story is inextricably intertwined with the evolution of modern jazz during the second half of the 20th century.
Hyman Paul Bley was born in Montreal, Canada on November 10, 1932. A violin prodigy at five, he began playing piano at eight and studied at the McGill Conservatorium, earning his diploma at age eleven. Before long, Hy "Buzzy" Bley was sitting in with jazz bands and had formed his own group. Already a skilled pianist, he landed a steady gig at the Alberta Lounge soon after Oscar Peterson left to begin working for Norman Granz in 1949. The following year Bley continued his musical education at the Juilliard School in New York while gigging in the clubs with trumpeter Roy Eldridge, trombonist Bill Harris, and saxophonists Ben Webster, Sonny Rollins, and Charlie Parker. While enrolled at Juilliard he played in a group with trumpeter Donald Byrd, saxophonist Jackie McLean, bassist Doug Watkins, and drummer Art Taylor. He also hung out at Lennie Tristano's residential studio, absorbing ideas.
Paul Bley's earliest known recordings survive as soundtracks from Canadian television; the first in 1950 with tenor saxophonist Brew Moore and the second in February 1953 with Charlie Parker, special invited guest of the Montreal Jazz Workshop, an artist-run organization Bley helped to establish. His first studio recording date took place in November 1953 with bassist Charles Mingus and drummer Art Blakey. The young pianist's constant interaction with archetypal and influential musicians was phenomenal; he also sat in with trumpeter Chet Baker and saxophonist Lester Young. In 1954 he led three different recording sessions with bassists Peter Ind and Percy Heath, and drummer Alan Levitt. At this stage of his career Paul Bley was an inspired, extremely adept bop pianist whose first decisively innovative period was just about to commence.
The plot thickened when Bley moved to California in 1957 and began holding down a steady engagement at the Hillcrest Club in Los Angeles, where he was recorded in 1958 with saxophonist Ornette Coleman, trumpeter Don Cherry, bassist Charlie Haden, and drummer Billy Higgins. He also performed with Canadian trumpeter Herb Spanier and recorded an album with vibraphonist Dave Pike, featuring liner notes and one composition by Karen Borg, a brilliant musician who married the pianist in 1957 and changed her name to Carla Bley. In 1959 the Bleys moved to New York City where they continued to interact with musicians who were operating on the cutting edge of modern jazz including multi-instrumentalist Roland Kirk, saxophonist and composer Oliver Nelson; composer and bandleader George Russell; composer, bassist and bandleader Charles Mingus; trumpeter and bandleader Don Ellis; bassists Gary Peacock and Steve Swallow; drummer Pete La Roca and multi-reedman Jimmy Giuffre. In 1961 Paul Bley made his first visit to Europe.
In 1963 Bley toured Japan with Sonny Rollins and participated in the tenor saxophonist's historic jousting session with Coleman Hawkins. The following year Paul and Carla Bley accepted trumpeter Bill Dixon's invitation to join the Jazz Composer's Guild. This brought them into direct contact with Austrian-American composer and trumpeter Michael Mantler; trombonists Bennie Green and Roswell Rudd; saxophonists Archie Shepp and John Tchicai and pianist Cecil Taylor. Bley, who also worked with saxophonist Albert Ayler, taped a session with tenor saxophonist John Gilmore, bassist Gary Peacock and drummer Paul Motian, and then began recording for the independent ESP-Disk label. Barrage featured a quintet with bassist Eddie Gomez, drummer Milford Graves and two who like Gilmore were closely affiliated with Sun Ra: trumpeter Dewey Johnson and altoist Marshall Allen; all of the pieces were composed by Carla Bley. Recorded in 1965 and released as Closer, the first of many albums involving drummer Barry Altschul featured works by Carla Bley, Ornette Coleman and Gary Peacock's wife Annette Peacock. Several trio projects materialized in Scandinavia during the years 1965-1966; from this point on Bley would spend increasing amounts of time performing and recording in Europe.
Soon after he was divorced from Carla Bley in 1967, Paul Bley married composer and vocalist Annette Peacock. As was the case with Carla, the influence of this woman upon Paul Bley was profound and lasting, as he combined his own continuously evolving improvisational methodology with her intriguing tonal formations. She sometimes sang with Bley's groups as he began to experiment with electronic instrumentation including ARP and Moog synthesizers. Recorded in December 1970 and January 1971, an album called the Paul Bley Synthesizer Show spotlighted the futuristic instrument backed by multiple players including drummers Bobby Moses and Han Bennink. In 1972 the Bley/Annette Peacock partnership was dissolved.
Two years later Bley and his new companion, video artist Carol Goss, founded the Improvising Artists record label. Soon they set precedents for the gradually emerging format of music videos. During two back to back sessions in 1974, Paul Bley introduced to the scene a pair of promising young musicians: guitarist Pat Metheny and bassist Jaco Pastorius. Bley and Goss were married in 1980 and soon moved the Improvising Artists operation out of New York City to Cherry Valley in central New York State. The '80s saw Bley reaffirming his links with the Canadian music scene while engaging in recording projects with saxophonist John Surman; guitarists John Abercrombie, John Scofield and Bill Frisell; bassists Jesper Lundgaard, Red Mitchell, Ron McClure and Bob Cranshaw; drummers George Cross MacDonald, Aage Tanggaard, Keith Copeland and Billy Hart.
Throughout the '90s Paul Bley's creative activities became ever more diverse and international in scope. This healthy tendency was epitomized by a hat Art album bearing the title 12 (+6) In a Row, recorded in Boswil, Switzerland during May 1990 with flugelhornist Franz Koglmann and clarinetist/saxophonist Hans Koch. Other collaborations from this period involved vibraphonist Gary Burton, bassist Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen and vocalist Tiziana Ghiglioni. In 1993, Bley, now a faculty member of the New England Conservatory of Music, released an album of piano solos with overdubbed synthesizers called Synth Thesis. His seemingly inexhaustible appetite for creative interaction with modern improvisers led him to record with trumpeter Kenny Wheeler, saxophonists Lee Konitz, Evan Parker and Ralph Simon; with guitarist Sonny Greenwich, bassists Jay Anderson, Dave Young and Barre Phillips; drummers Stich Wynston, Adam Nussbaum and Bruce Ditmas; pianists Satoko Fuji, Stéphan Oliva and Hans Ludemann and violinist Jean-Luc Ponty, as well as poet and vocalist Paul Haines. In 1997 Bley was heard with an ensemble led by bassist and composer Maarten Altena. During the first decade of the 21st century he recorded with saxophonists Keshavan Maslak, François Carrier and Yuri Honing; guitarist Andreas Willers, bassist Mario Pavone and vocalist Jeanette Lambert. --- All Music
Hyman Paul Bley was born in Montreal, Canada on November 10, 1932. A violin prodigy at five, he began playing piano at eight and studied at the McGill Conservatorium, earning his diploma at age eleven. Before long, Hy "Buzzy" Bley was sitting in with jazz bands and had formed his own group. Already a skilled pianist, he landed a steady gig at the Alberta Lounge soon after Oscar Peterson left to begin working for Norman Granz in 1949. The following year Bley continued his musical education at the Juilliard School in New York while gigging in the clubs with trumpeter Roy Eldridge, trombonist Bill Harris, and saxophonists Ben Webster, Sonny Rollins, and Charlie Parker. While enrolled at Juilliard he played in a group with trumpeter Donald Byrd, saxophonist Jackie McLean, bassist Doug Watkins, and drummer Art Taylor. He also hung out at Lennie Tristano's residential studio, absorbing ideas.
Paul Bley's earliest known recordings survive as soundtracks from Canadian television; the first in 1950 with tenor saxophonist Brew Moore and the second in February 1953 with Charlie Parker, special invited guest of the Montreal Jazz Workshop, an artist-run organization Bley helped to establish. His first studio recording date took place in November 1953 with bassist Charles Mingus and drummer Art Blakey. The young pianist's constant interaction with archetypal and influential musicians was phenomenal; he also sat in with trumpeter Chet Baker and saxophonist Lester Young. In 1954 he led three different recording sessions with bassists Peter Ind and Percy Heath, and drummer Alan Levitt. At this stage of his career Paul Bley was an inspired, extremely adept bop pianist whose first decisively innovative period was just about to commence.
The plot thickened when Bley moved to California in 1957 and began holding down a steady engagement at the Hillcrest Club in Los Angeles, where he was recorded in 1958 with saxophonist Ornette Coleman, trumpeter Don Cherry, bassist Charlie Haden, and drummer Billy Higgins. He also performed with Canadian trumpeter Herb Spanier and recorded an album with vibraphonist Dave Pike, featuring liner notes and one composition by Karen Borg, a brilliant musician who married the pianist in 1957 and changed her name to Carla Bley. In 1959 the Bleys moved to New York City where they continued to interact with musicians who were operating on the cutting edge of modern jazz including multi-instrumentalist Roland Kirk, saxophonist and composer Oliver Nelson; composer and bandleader George Russell; composer, bassist and bandleader Charles Mingus; trumpeter and bandleader Don Ellis; bassists Gary Peacock and Steve Swallow; drummer Pete La Roca and multi-reedman Jimmy Giuffre. In 1961 Paul Bley made his first visit to Europe.
In 1963 Bley toured Japan with Sonny Rollins and participated in the tenor saxophonist's historic jousting session with Coleman Hawkins. The following year Paul and Carla Bley accepted trumpeter Bill Dixon's invitation to join the Jazz Composer's Guild. This brought them into direct contact with Austrian-American composer and trumpeter Michael Mantler; trombonists Bennie Green and Roswell Rudd; saxophonists Archie Shepp and John Tchicai and pianist Cecil Taylor. Bley, who also worked with saxophonist Albert Ayler, taped a session with tenor saxophonist John Gilmore, bassist Gary Peacock and drummer Paul Motian, and then began recording for the independent ESP-Disk label. Barrage featured a quintet with bassist Eddie Gomez, drummer Milford Graves and two who like Gilmore were closely affiliated with Sun Ra: trumpeter Dewey Johnson and altoist Marshall Allen; all of the pieces were composed by Carla Bley. Recorded in 1965 and released as Closer, the first of many albums involving drummer Barry Altschul featured works by Carla Bley, Ornette Coleman and Gary Peacock's wife Annette Peacock. Several trio projects materialized in Scandinavia during the years 1965-1966; from this point on Bley would spend increasing amounts of time performing and recording in Europe.
Soon after he was divorced from Carla Bley in 1967, Paul Bley married composer and vocalist Annette Peacock. As was the case with Carla, the influence of this woman upon Paul Bley was profound and lasting, as he combined his own continuously evolving improvisational methodology with her intriguing tonal formations. She sometimes sang with Bley's groups as he began to experiment with electronic instrumentation including ARP and Moog synthesizers. Recorded in December 1970 and January 1971, an album called the Paul Bley Synthesizer Show spotlighted the futuristic instrument backed by multiple players including drummers Bobby Moses and Han Bennink. In 1972 the Bley/Annette Peacock partnership was dissolved.
Two years later Bley and his new companion, video artist Carol Goss, founded the Improvising Artists record label. Soon they set precedents for the gradually emerging format of music videos. During two back to back sessions in 1974, Paul Bley introduced to the scene a pair of promising young musicians: guitarist Pat Metheny and bassist Jaco Pastorius. Bley and Goss were married in 1980 and soon moved the Improvising Artists operation out of New York City to Cherry Valley in central New York State. The '80s saw Bley reaffirming his links with the Canadian music scene while engaging in recording projects with saxophonist John Surman; guitarists John Abercrombie, John Scofield and Bill Frisell; bassists Jesper Lundgaard, Red Mitchell, Ron McClure and Bob Cranshaw; drummers George Cross MacDonald, Aage Tanggaard, Keith Copeland and Billy Hart.
Throughout the '90s Paul Bley's creative activities became ever more diverse and international in scope. This healthy tendency was epitomized by a hat Art album bearing the title 12 (+6) In a Row, recorded in Boswil, Switzerland during May 1990 with flugelhornist Franz Koglmann and clarinetist/saxophonist Hans Koch. Other collaborations from this period involved vibraphonist Gary Burton, bassist Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen and vocalist Tiziana Ghiglioni. In 1993, Bley, now a faculty member of the New England Conservatory of Music, released an album of piano solos with overdubbed synthesizers called Synth Thesis. His seemingly inexhaustible appetite for creative interaction with modern improvisers led him to record with trumpeter Kenny Wheeler, saxophonists Lee Konitz, Evan Parker and Ralph Simon; with guitarist Sonny Greenwich, bassists Jay Anderson, Dave Young and Barre Phillips; drummers Stich Wynston, Adam Nussbaum and Bruce Ditmas; pianists Satoko Fuji, Stéphan Oliva and Hans Ludemann and violinist Jean-Luc Ponty, as well as poet and vocalist Paul Haines. In 1997 Bley was heard with an ensemble led by bassist and composer Maarten Altena. During the first decade of the 21st century he recorded with saxophonists Keshavan Maslak, François Carrier and Yuri Honing; guitarist Andreas Willers, bassist Mario Pavone and vocalist Jeanette Lambert. --- All Music
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