| Discography of Joe Fonda | 1983 |
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Lineup
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Recorded November 15, 1983
Released September 2001 by OTIC Records [OTIC 2002]
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CD Reviews
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April 14, 2007 by Chris Rich for his blog I have long been a fan of this most African of instruments. From the balaphone of the West African forest lands it spun into marimba, xylophone and vibes. Bobby Naughton has to be one of the most under appreciated mallet masters of our time. It will resound to the credit of the Connecticut Commission on the Arts that someone there saw fit to fund this recording on November 15th, 1983. And it was pretty cool of Yale to provide a chapel for the recording. He recently launched his own website, www.bobbynaughton.com where you can purchase his work directly from him and one of the joys of having this sort of blog is that luminaries of this caliber sometimes come out of the cyber woodwork to participate in it. His site offers this bit of background for the unfamiliar. "Bobby Naughton is self-taught as a performer and composer. After playing in rock-and-roll groups he took up the vibraphone in 1966, and in the late 1960s played with Perry Robinson, Sheila Jordan, and others. He continued to work intermittently with Robinson while recording as a leader from 1969 on his own label, Otic; in 1971 he wrote a score for Hans Richter's silent film Everyday (1929). He played with the Jazz Composer's Orchestra in 1972 and Leo Smith (from the mid 1970s), and joined the Creative Music Improvisers Forum in New Haven, Connecticut. Naughton's vibraphone playing, like that of Gunter Hampel, emphasizes the instrument's role in group improvisation rather than its possibilities as a solo vehicle. He plays fluently with four sticks, exploits the vibraphone's overtones, and sometimes controls manually the instrument's vanes (which vary its sound intensity). His piano playing (which may be heard on the first of his own albums) has a melodic strength and terseness reminiscent of Paul Bley." Pretty impressive, no? So much of jazz biz is a yucky arbitrary thing. Joe Public with some vague handle on the idiom is far more likely to know of the soporific Gary Burton who is the sonic equivalent to a whitebread tuna sandwich way overloaded with mayo. And Zoar is proof that jazz deserves to be examined in some depth to avoid the fate of mistaking it for Weather Channel Forecast background music, the new and proper home for Pat Metheney. 1. Pomperaug Diversions (Bobby Naughton) 2. Vashkar (Carla Bley) 3. RPDD (Ornette Coleman) 4. Shepaug Strut (Bobby Naughton) 5. Zoar (Bobby Naughton) It is a particularly good spot to hear the versatility and imagination of Randy Kaye as he gets a pretty fat bit of time/space to run a solo. His approach is to make the hat/cymbal/snare core a consistent center for free time pulsed excursions all over the kit. 6. Goodbye (Gordon Jenkins) Reprinted with permission. Copyright © 2002 Chris Rich |
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