Trevor
Watts & Peter Knight
Reunion: Live in London (Hi4Head CD)
'This was recorded
in July 1999 in a room over a pub in Islington with
an audience of some 20 souls. That sounds like a very
large proportion of the gigs I went to during my years
in London. At some of them the group really did outnumber
the customers, many of whom usually turned out to
be family or friends of the musicians anyway. From
the standpoint of financial viability that's all bad,
but it does mean that there is a special intimacy
about your average Improv gig, a quality which is
strongly in evidence here. The two men had known each
other and often performed together in the late 70s
and through most of the 80s, when Knight was the fiddler
with Steeleye Span and Watts was nurturing Moire Music
and the Drum Orchestra after stints with such influential
bands as The Spontaneous Music Ensemble, Stan Tracey's
Tentakles and his own elastic-sized group Amalgam.
At this reunion, after a ten year gap, they decided
not to rehearse or even discuss the music beforehand
- to engage in pure Improv, in fact.
Despite the very
different types of music each man was mainly associated
with, their playing at this session is astonishingly
homogenous, and their command of the entire range
of their instruments' technical possibilities is impressive.
There are many moments when it is very difficult to
determine who is playing what - perhaps not so surprising
if you remember that Adolphe Sax developed the saxophone
family in order to provide marching bands with a substitute
for strings.
Reunion is
a single 56 minute performance but, seamless though
it is, it passes through several different territories,
including fairly standard Improv mutterings, abstract
sonic soundscapes, caustic post-bop, episodes of beautiful,
elegant, emotionally affecting melodic invention,
and almost mystical passages of mesmerising rhythms,
which meld echoes of minimalism with African and Asian
traditions. In short, master musicians at the height
of their powers.'
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