Matchbook Ralph Towner

Ralph Towner & Gary Burton - Matchbook (1975) {ECM 1056}  Music

Posted by ruskaval at July 26, 2018
Ralph Towner & Gary Burton - Matchbook (1975) {ECM 1056}

Ralph Towner & Gary Burton - Matchbook (1975) {ECM 1056}
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© 1975 ECM Records | ECM 1056 / 835 014-2
Jazz / Post Bop / Folk Jazz / Modern Postbebop / Guitar / Vibes

This set of duets by vibraphonist Gary Burton and guitarist Ralph Towner features a logical matchup, since both musicians are open to folk melodies and are generally quiet improvisers. In addition to six Towner originals and Burton's "Brotherhood," the set has thoughtful versions of "Some Other Time" and "Goodbye Pork Pie Hat." More tempo and mood variation would have uplifted the otherwise fine music.
Ralph Towner & Gary Burton - Slide Show (1985) {ECM 1306 rel 2001}

Ralph Towner & Gary Burton - Slide Show (1985) {ECM 1306 rel 2001}
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© 1986, 2001 ECM Records | ECM 1306 / 827 257-2
Jazz / Post Bop / Folk Jazz / Modern Postbebop / Guitar / Vibes

When one thinks of pairing vibraphonist Gary Burton with another soloist, Chick Corea comes foremost to mind. Burton’s work with guitarist Ralph Towner could hardly be more different, for where the former configuration funnels into a colorful storm of activity, in the latter we find far more intimate gestures articulated in monochrome. Case in point: “Maelstrom,” which starts us on the inside, spinning on its edge like a coin teetering at the promise of rest. Towner is as delicate as ever, fitting his harmonic staircases into Burton’s Escherian architecture with ease. This piece also highlights Towner’s compositional talents, which make up eight of the album’s nine tracks (the only exception being the slice of sonic apple pie that is “Blue In Green”).
Ralph Towner & John Abercrombie - Five Years Later (1982) {ECM 1207}

Ralph Towner & John Abercrombie - Five Years Later (1982) {ECM 1207}
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Genre: Acoustic Guitar Fusion

The long overdue release of Ralph Towner and John Abercrombie's Five Years Later, originally released in 1982, may well be the most eagerly anticipated of the Re:Solutions series that brings into print—on CD (four titles for the first time, Five Years Later previously only available for a limited time in Japan), vinyl and high resolution digital formats—seven historic ECM recordings. Add the three Abercrombie Quartet albums recorded immediately prior to Five Years Later—1979's Arcade, 1980's Abercrombie Quartet and 1981's M, planned for release later this year in an Old & New Masters Edition box—and all of these two seminal guitarists' ECM recordings will finally be in print on CD internationally, and not a moment too soon.

Gary Burton - Works (1984) {ECM Records 823 267-2 rec 1973-1976}  Music

Posted by ruskaval at Oct. 29, 2020
Gary Burton - Works (1984) {ECM Records 823 267-2 rec 1973-1976}

Gary Burton - Works (1984) {ECM Records 823 267-2 rec 1973-1976}
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© 1973-76, 1984 ECM Records / PolyGram | 823 267-2
Jazz / Post Bop / Contemporary Jazz / Vibes

Vibraphonist Gary Burton, one of the defining voices of ECM’s formative years, is worthily honored in this second “Works” series installment. His contributions as virtuoso and interpreter of the instrument are unparalleled, and on ECM both aspects of his career found ample space in which to flourish. This particular era of the 1970s, which followed his RCA blitz, showed him also to be a musician of great patience, as on The New Quartet. The 1973 classic dropped him into a studio with guitarist Mick Goodrick, bassist Abraham Laboriel, and drummer Harry Blazer for a set as gorgeously played as it was conceived. From it we are treated to Keith Jarrett’s “Coral,” of which every spindly leaf is accounted for, and Carla Bley’s “Olhos De Gato,” which waters a groove that is laid back but never subdued. Those chamber sensibilities give way to more luscious details in “Vox Humana,” another Bley tune that references 1976’s quintet outing, Dreams So Real.