Roland Dahinden

(b. 1962)

mode 62

Naima

$14.99

mode 62 Roland DAHINDEN: Naima – Dahinden (trombones), Anthony Braxton (saxes), Joe Fonda (bass), Art Fuller(drums).

In stock

Naima
Previously released as a compact disc. (viewed Jul. 29, 2011). Performed by Roland Dahinden, Joe Fonda, Art Fuller, Anthony Braxton. Recorded in Tedesco Studios, NJ.

1. Free Lines, part one  (30:25)   by Roland Dahinden

2. Naima  (7:10)   by John Coltrane

3. Composition 136  (16:30)   by Anthony Braxton

4. Free Lines, part two  (19:40)   by Roland Dahinden

Roland Dahinden, tenor & alto trombones
Anthony Braxton, alto & sopranino saxes
Joe Fonda, bass
Art Fuller, drums

Music that blurs the lines between New Music and Jazz…

Swiss musician Roland Dahinden is not your typical trombonist. Equally at home in New Music, Jazz and Improvisation, he is a favorite interpreter of Anthony Braxton, John Cage, Christian Wolff and Alvin Lucier, as well as being acclaimed for performances in the trombone/piano duo with Hildegard Kleeb. On disc, Dahinden is well known for his Hat Art recording devoted to Cage and Wolff. This disc is the first release of his own compositions and interpretations of John Coltrane’s classic Naima and Anthony Braxton’s Composition 136.

To quote Kyle Gann’s liner notes for this disc: “This music isn’t a combination of jazz and classical forms, or something in-between, but a true hybrid. The striking roughness of the timbre, the studied casualness of the rhythmic momentum, remove the music from any feeling of classical performance. The ghost of jazz wanders in during the more frenetic trombone and saxophone moments, but never for long. Dahinden offers a kind of frozen vernacular, an offhand, indigenous style of musical speech caught and abstracted on the canvas of time.”<br


Reviews

Roland DAHINDEN
NAIMA
Roland Dahinden/Anthony Braxton/Joe Fonda/Art Fuller
Mode 62

Odd to see Mode–predominantly a “contemporary classical” label–venturing into free jazz, until you remember that Roland Dahinden has recorded Cage, Wolff and Lucier, and that his sparring partner here, Anthony Braxton, has always sought to straddle the turbulent gulf between improvisation and composition. “Free Lines, part one” finds the two horns working their way–more or less together–through a melodic minefield of angular chromaticism, with drummer Art Fuller tagging along for company. Eventually things take off, Dahinden unleashing a spectacular upper register display, Braxton providing some trademark rubbery flurries, Fuller’s elastic brushwork recalling an earlier Braxton drummer, Barry Altschul on the classic 70s Circle albums. The half-sung multiphonic plunger chords Albert Mangelsdorff first amazed us with twenty years ago are now standard modern trombone technique, and Dahinden has mastered them–check out his quietly intense cover of Coltrane’s “Naima.”

Braxton lays out on his own “Composition 136” (hardly a user-friendly title, but at least he’s abandoned those crazy diagrams), bassist Joe Fonda joining Fuller to make up a dynamite trio unit. “Free Lines, part two” works along the same lines as part one, with melodic lines of a more sustained nature (as result the music feels more pastoral, melancholic); strangely, the edgy dissonances somehow remind me of the harmonic language of Steve Coleman, though Braxton’s fluffy attack and grainy sustain are light years away from M Base’s austere precision. Once more, things pick up with some wicked mute work from Dahinden–on the strength of this album I’d say he was, along with Frenchman Yves Robert, one of the hottest trombonists around right now. Let’s hope the avant garde Mode subscribers use this fine album to springboard into the world of free, and, in the other direction, Braxton fans will see fit to check out other excellent releases on the label.
—Dan Warburton, Paris Transatlantic Review, November 2000


Links

ROLAND DAHINDEN on Mode:
Flying White (mode 175)
Silberen, Lichtweiss (mode 138)

Alvin LUCIER: Navigations for Strings; Small Waves (mode 124)
Christian WOLFF: Tilbury Pieces; Snowdrop (mode 74)

Roland DAHINDEN profile

Joe FONDA profile

Roland Dahinden Online