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Manfred Schoof β€Ž- European Echoes (1969) FULL ALBUM


Playing Next: Family - Family Entertainment (1969) [Full Album]


FMP β€Žβ€“ FMP 0010 (Germany, 1969)

https://www.discogs.com/Manfred-Schoof-European-Echoes/release/3222228

Purchase reissue: http://bit.ly/2vhYo92



00:00 A. European Echoes Part 1

15:24 B. European Echoes Part 2



Personnel:

Enrico Rava – trumpet

Manfred Schoof – trumpet

Hugh Steinmetz – trumpet

Peter BrΓΆtzmann – tenor saxophone

Gerd Dudek – tenor saxophone

Evan Parker – soprano saxophone

Paul Rutherford – trombone

Derek Baily – guitar

Fred Van Hove – piano

Alexander von Schlippenbach – piano

IrΓ¨ne Schweizer – piano

Arjen Gorter – double bass

Peter Kowald – double bass

Buschi Niebergall – double bass

Han Bennink – drums

Pierre Favre - drums



Recorded by an unknown engineer in June 1969 in Bremen. Produced by Jost Gebers.



German trumpeter Manfred Schoof, whose work in the '60s focused on the possibilities of the big band in a free jazz context, presented a half-hour free improvisation for German radio in June 1969 that was later released by the FMP label as European Echoes and still later unearthed by Atavistic as part of their estimable Unheard Music reissue series. European Echoes is primarily of interest to free jazz historians and fanciers of the extreme. The historians will be dazzled by the all-star lineup of this 16-member band, featuring guitarist Derek Bailey, saxophonists Evan Parker and Peter BrΓΆtzmann, and pianists Fred Van Hove and Alexander von Schlippenbach, all of whom would lead landmark avant jazz sessions of their own. But will the noiseniks be?Well, let's just let the figures speak for themselves: three trumpets, three saxes, two trombones (one of whom doubles on bass), Derek Bailey's proto-Sonic Youth freakout guitar, three pianos, two dedicated bassists (besides the guy who's doubling on bass trombone), and two drummers. All of them going at it full tilt for close to 15 minutes before breaking off into their instrumental groupings for no-less-intense duos and trios. It sounds like it should be a free jazzer's paradise, and there's no denying that the intensity level throughout is amazingly high.

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