Free Jazz Tenor Sax Titan 
  
  
IVO PERELMAN 
  
   
Joins     
Joe Morris & Balazs Pandi   
on Provocative Improv Outing   
  
  
ONE 
  
  
AVAILABLE IN STORES AND ONLINE OCTOBER 1st, 2013 
AND THROUGH RARE NOISE RECORDS 
ON CD, VINYL AND HI-RES DIGITAL DOWNLOAD 
  
 
 
 
ABOUT THE LABEL - RareNoise Records was founded in late 2008 by two Italians, guitarist/arranger/ producer Eraldo Bernocchi and all-round music nut Giacomo Bruzzo. Located
 in London, the label was created to present a platform to musicians and
 listeners alike who think beyond musical boundaries of genre. For 
further information and to listen please go to www.rarenoiserecords.com. 
  
PLEASE NOTE - For further information on Ivo Perelman's releases Enigma and A Violent Dose Of Anything out on Leo Records on October 1st, 2013 or to obtain a promotional copy, please contact Don Lucoff at DL Media. See his contact info below. www.leorecords.com  
  
  
   
    
  
  
New York, August 19, 2013 - One brings together the potent forces of Brazilian tenor saxophonist and prolific free jazz icon Ivo Perelman, veteran bassist-guitarist Joe Morris
 (a ubiquitous figure on the avant garde jazz scene, making his recorded
 debut on electric bass guitar here) and Hungarian hardcore drummer Balazs Pandi
 (Slobber Pup, Obake, Metallic Taste of Blood, Merzbow). With no 
rehearsals, no charts, no sketches or musical road maps whatsoever, the 
three risk-taking musicians entered the studio and made a joyful noise 
in daring, unadulterated fashion, pulling no punches while following 
their instincts from start to finish. Fueled by the hard and fast beats 
of Pandi, who also demonstrates his remarkably versatile skills and keen
 listening instincts throughout the session, One
 is a highly interactive studio encounter that borders on the telepathic
 at times. And with Perelman's cathartic, Albert Ayler-inspired tenor 
sax blowing on top and Morris' electric bass lines bubbling underneath, 
sparks ensue on this turbulent project. 
  
From
 the opening strains of the kinetic and aptly-titled "Freedom," which 
kicks off the potent improv outing, to the dynamic 17-minute closer 
"Stigma," it is clear that these three kindred spirits are going for it 
with reckless abandon. Along with the blowtorch intensity of Perelman's 
sax playing and Pandi's thunderous drumming, there are moments of tender
 reflection on One.  
  
"What
 Love Can Lead To" has Pandi playing in more understated fashion on 
mallets while Perelman pursues a poignant, searching melody. "To 
Remember What Never Existed" builds from a lightly swinging intro to a 
tumultuous crescendo capped by Ivo's mighty overblowing and Balazs' 
bashing. The title track is an intimate, conversational duet that has 
Morris playing contrapuntal bass guitar lines to Perelman's angular and 
skittish sax lines. "Universal Truth," a frantic barrage fueled by 
Pandi's dynamic polyrhythmic pulse and Morris' bubbling bass lines, 
comes across like Ivo's white-hot homage to Albert Ayler. And the 
visceral, suite-like closer, "Stigma," travels across a myriad of moods 
while serving as a perfect microcosm of what these three such potent 
forces can do together. 
  
While
 Perelman, Morris and Pandi had all previously recorded before (Perelman
 most recently on two trio projects with drummer Gerald Cleaver for Leo 
Records - 2012's Family Ties and Living Jelly) and Morris had previously played with Pandi in Slobber Pup (on their 2013 debut Black Aces for RareNoise Records), One
 marks the first time that Ivo and Balazs had ever played together. 
"Balazs clearly comes from a rock or hardcore background," says 
Perelman, "but you can still hear some Elvin Jones in his playing, which
 I really love. So the idea of playing with Pandi was very exciting to 
me." 
  
At
 Pandi's invitation, Perelman came down to The Stone, John Zorn's 
experimental music club on Manhattan's Lower East Side, to hear the 
drummer play with Slobber Pup, a thunderously intense band featuring 
Morris on distortion-laced guitar, Trevor Dunn on electric bass and 
Jamie Saft on keyboards. "I totally enjoyed Balazs' playing, although I 
had to cover my ears at times because I wasn't used to hearing such 
intense music. And as I watched them I thought that if we played 
together it would sound great with Joe on electric bass, just to give it
 that punch to match Balazs' intense backbeats." 
  
As
 Pandi recalls of that first encounter with Perelmen, "After the show at
 The Stone, Ivo ran up screaming and told me pretty much that I can't 
leave the States without us recording. Within three days, we were in the
 studio." 
  
And so, a power trio was born. They went into the studio carte blanche and pressed the record button. And the result is One.
 What you hear is what they played that day in the studio. "This has 
pretty much been the way on mostly all the recordings I have done," says
 Ivo. "I really like not playing with a particular person before I go 
into the studio because I want the first reaction to be documented right
 there, right then." 
  
 
While Perelman was well aware of Pandi's thunderous nature, he was not surprised by the sheer versatility the drummer exhibited from track to track on One.
 "I wasn't surprised by the quality of his other kind of playing because
 I could tell he was a sensitive listener and would adapt to the 
environment and bring something tasteful to the plate." Adds the 
Hungarian drummer. "Playing lightly is nothing new to me. I used to play
 timpani in an orchestra when I was nine years old, so I grew up dealing
 with all kinds of tempos and dynamics and playing, from playing solo to
 playing with up to 60 musicians. People know me more from playing 
intense and loud music, but in the end my goal is not to kill anyone at 
the session or to be the most intense performer ever. Also, it is 
possible to play heavy music with light dynamics. Sun Ra is the best 
example of this. So it is possible to play at a lower dynamic but still 
destroy." 
 
  
Balazs
 is definitely a unique drummer," adds Perelman. "I don't even know how 
to name what he does because it's so unique, but I definitely never 
played with anybody with that intensity, really. When I played with 
Rashied Ali, to me that was beautiful and very intense. But Balazs has 
something unique. So he forces me to play in a different way as well." 
Morris concurs. "Balazs does a lot of different things. He's somebody 
who has a rock and metal sort of feel, this sort of head-banging kind of
 thing, but he has incredible ears and really good technique and he's 
very pliable and flexible. So he's really easy to play with. And I think
 Ivo was blown away at how different it was and yet how good it was." 
  
Though
 Perelman has amassed an extensive catalog of free jazz recordings over 
the years, he says it is never easy to remain in that place of pure 
improvisation. "Easy is never a good word, I think, because every day 
it's a different set of parameters. You're dealing with the situation, 
whether it's studio or live, the psychological, the social, the 
spiritual. So many factors play into this so every day is a challenge to
 say something meaningful, fresh, honest and good. So it wasn't easy 
improvising with Joe but it was familiar in the sense that I relate to 
him in a beautiful way. He's a keen listener and he gives me back ideas,
 so it's a back-and-forth type mutual collaboration. And now I feel like
 I'm developing that same kind of communication with Balazs. So I'm 
looking forward to collaborating with him again to see if we can take it
 to the next level. 
  
Ivo adds that he was pleasantly surprised by the results of Morris' first-time use of electric bass guitar on One:
 "I've played and recorded with Joe both on acoustic bass and electric 
guitar. And for me, the electric bass is like a great mixture of both. 
So on this recording I got a bit of his 'bass thinking hat' and I got a 
bit of his 'guitar playing hat.' I really dug that and I have a feeling 
that Joe will expand and be asked to play electric bass guitar more and 
more when people hear what I'm hearing. This is the beginning of a new 
language for him, a new axe. Between the chording, the things he does 
with his pick, the nuances and speed he can generate on the 
instrument...I don't hear electric bass players doing that. So I think 
Joe bumped into something great. I'm happy that I brought it up to him." 
  
Says
 Morris, "I had never done a gig on electric bass before. I do play bass
 and I've done a lot of gigs and records on upright bass. And I've 
played electric bass at home but I've never done any kind of performance
 on electric bass. So this was the first one that I did. In fact, I had 
to borrow my son's Fender Jazz bass for this session. And for a while I 
was thinking about being a bass player on it but then I started 
thinking, 'Well, it's really a bass guitar.' So at that point in the 
session I sort of shifted to being a guitar player and just thinking of 
it as being a bass guitarist. And that's when it sort of went to a 
different place because that realization gave me an opportunity to shape
 the form a little bit differently." 
  
With the release of the powerhouse triumvirate's One, Perelman, Morris and Pandi 
are
 poised to destroy. And each night that they play together on tour to 
promote their RareNoise debut, it's bound to be a new and different and 
undeniably intense experience. As Morris put it, "Every time I pick up 
my instrument, whether it's the guitar, upright bass or electric bass, 
it's my obligation to do something different than what I did last night.
 And it's great when you play with people like Ivo and Balazs, who both 
have the same attitude. They're both seem to be innate musicians who 
have tons of energy, who are great listeners and who don't get stuck 
because they can change and go with the flow. They're great improvisers.
 And together, we have something real special." 
  
The three master improvisers will have their stateside debut in December at Shapeshifter Lab in Brooklyn.   
  
  
More on Ivo Perelman HERE.  
  
  
 |