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about
About-face.
About remembering the face of a sound.
Too easy to forget one earlier apex of creative music - the mid-
and late-70s, when records like Steve Lacy's capers and David Murray's
3-D Family and Julius Hemphill's Raw Materials and Residuals rocked
our world. Trio records. Ensembles built of triangulation, uncanny
ability to size things up from a distance via magic number three.
Same number whose powers were tested on ur-texts of free music like
Ayler's Spiritual Unity
and Ornette's Golden Circle recordings.
About three.
Conference calls, triplicate lines converging at one switchboard,
the trio Day & Taxi becoming a living entity of its own, a three-bodied
operator directing the communication. Christoph Gallio's tunes,
the hard cables of such communication, controlling the flow of information
rather than defining its content. The head to "Madagaskar"
- a single connective thread linking about to its six-year-old predecessor
All - supports a lilting line with simple seeming tricky timing,
but it opens up for improvisations all around, loose limbed and
joyous. Dieter Ulrich's spare, crisp, uncluttered drumming both
coloring and powering the threesome. Leader Gallio eking out a short,
sweet solo, "Kurt's Tune," his Lacy-ish tone positively
blooming. Irony of "Lindsay's New Tune" (written for former
bassist Lindsay L. Cooper) that it's played by the new bassist,
confident Dominique Girod, whose work with J-F Jenny Clark has left
him full of ideas and entirely capable of expressing them in the
context of composed and improvised structures.
About structures.
Straightforward structures, like: A section B section and out. The
happy sound of a mean ostinato groove under a horn line. More thoughts
of '70s trios, like Air. "K's Dream" recalls the fluidity
of that group with seamless, unforced exchange between scripted
and free play. Gallio and crew reserve a place for the predetermined
by including several through-composed pieces ("Dior,"
"And Thine," even the saxophonist's "Kurt's Tune")
that the group refers to as postcards - quick take on an idea, no
elaboration, just the one or two lines jotted down and sent along
as such. (Reminds me that Lacy was very upset when his record Straws
came out and the producers at Cramps records had mistakenly left
the improvised section out of "Feline," his portrait of
Marilyn Monroe, so the theme just repeated a few times, then stopped;
in the context of the otherwise wooly, experimental record the minimalist
result is fascinating in spite of itself.) "Fall In Ellipses"
is a slightly more involved postcard, more like a quick letter or
love note. Free? Written? What matter is it? Doing what's called
for, no fear - that's the job. What's happened to the gains made
in that era of new architecture? The legacy is left to a few diligent
souls, who try to push it ahead, working towards another apex of
creative music while remembering the earlier one's face.
About time.
No refusal of pulse. Gentle embrace of meters, some suggested by
Girod and thwarted by Ulrich ("Stars"), some openly promulgated
by the three-bodied beast ("Inside M"). About taking time,
relaxing, not rushing but feeling the space of the music.
1. All
2. about
Feeling the space of the music.
That's
about all.
What it's all
about.
John Corbett, Chicago, July 1998
DAY & TAXI , ein Jazz-Trio aus der Schweiz, welches musikalisch
miteinander kommuniziert. Aktiver Austausch von Rhythmik und Dynamik,
fernab jeglicher Melodie. Die Stücke wirken wie Skizzen. Schöpferische
Entwürfe, welche abstrakte Klangkörper entstehen lassen
und erneut Raum für Inspiration geben. Spannend, weil unvorhersehbar.
Unvorhersehbar, weil die Kompositionen nicht einengen, sondern den
Dingen freien Lauf lassen. Erinnerungen an den Jazz der Siebziger
weden wach: Albert Ayler, Steve Lacy, Sam Rivers, Ornette Coleman.
Musik, so zeitlos, dass sie immer wieder neu und unerwartet wirkt.
Wie DAY & TAXI.**heiss**
music scene, Lukas Götz
Dosierte Leidenschaft. Sorgfältig und ausdauernd sind sie schon
seit längerem am Werk, der Zürcher Saxophonist Christoph
Gallio, der Schlagzeuger Dieter Ulrich und das neue junge Bassist-Talent
Dominique Girod. Einst inspiriert von Konzeptkunst und melodischen
Architekten wie Steve Lacy und Ornette Coleman, hat Gallio einen
persönlichen, sehr gesanglichen Sound gefunden und balanciert
zwischen zwischen der Gemessenheit rigider Form und freier Fortspinnung.
Die eigenwilligen Themen verwachsen mit der kammermusikalischen
Improvisation, die verschiedene unerwartete Wegen gehen. Unter dieser
Gemessenheit brodelt es, und zuweilen bricht das Saxophon in leidenschaftliche
Rufgesänge auf. Nicht "ernste" Musik und auch nicht
"sauglatte", aber transparent und tief.
RADIOMAGAZIN, Jürg Solothurnmann
Der Saxophonist Christoph Gallio hegt und pflegt sein Eigenlabel
"percaso" über Jahre mit grösster Hingabe und
Sorge. Doch damit alleine ist die Musik nicht gerechtfertigt oder
gar gerettet. Sie ist es letztlich, die den Zuhörer zu überzeugen
hat. Das vollbringt die Einspielung von "about" auf dermassen
überzeugende Art und Weise, Frische und Originalität,
dass man fast zu glauben beginnt die klassische Trio-Form im Jazz
sei eben erst erfunden worden. Zudem garantieren die drei Musiker
alleine mit ihrem Namen für Qualität.
DIE SÜDOSTSCHWEIZ, Domenic Buchli
Die Schweiz bringt immer wieder Kapazunder hervor, die in Österreich
nicht gar so bekannt sind, jedoch durch kontinuierliche Arbeit beeindrucken.
So betreibt Christoph Gallio das feine, kleine Label percaso production,
das mit DAY & TAXI „about“ die siebzehnte Produktion
seit 1986 vorlegt. Wobei das Cover, das Gesichter junger Menschen
aus Enghien-les-Bains abbildet, vermutlich auf die Offenheit der
Musik verweisen will. Gallio, Girod und Ulrich werfen kurze Ideenskizzen
ein, spielen aber auch längere, notierte Stücke mit Improvisationsabzweigungen;
etwa „Lindsay‘s New Tune“, das Lindsay L. Cooper,
dem früheren Bassisten von DAY & TAXI, gewidmet ist und
wie einige weitere Cuts den Geist der aus den frühen 70ern
stammenden Trio-Arbeiten von Steve Lacy, David Murray und Julius
Hemphill beschwört.
SKUG, Alfred Pranzl
Prima o poi tutte le certezze sono destinate a cadere come foglie
morte. Fino a oggi ero convinto che una brutta copertina non poteva
contenere un bel disco ed ecco tra le mani una confezione orrenda
come la fame che racchiude una piccola delizia. Day & Taxi è
la creatura di Christoph Gallio, un soprano/altosassofonista di
Zurigo già collaboratore eccellente di Irene Schweizer, Peter
Kowald, Bern Nix, Fred Frith, Kazutoki Umezu, Phil Minton, Samm
Bennett, William Parker, Uchihashi Kazuhisa... La musica di Gallio
(in questa occasione accompagnato dal contrabbasso di Dominique
Girod e dal set percussivo di Dieter Ulrich) è un jazz descrivibile
con la parola dis-in-canto, che già i due minuti scarsi della
prima bellissima traccia Dior mettono a fuoco alla perfezione. Queste
ance sono animate dallo stesso spirito che a suo tempo aveva dettato
le limpide geometrie di Julius Hemphill, Steve Lacy e del misconosciuto
Byron Allen. Non mancano influenze classiche, in questo senso possiamo
usare la parola cool, ma le atmosfere sono hot, anche se i tre si
muovono con circospezione, senza abbandonarsi a baccanali da festa
paesana e puntando senz'altro all'oblio, e diffondono about una
tiepida sensazione di disgelo. (7/8)BLOW UP, Etero Genio
Day & Taxi: ABOUT – Ev’ry time I get new music in
from Christoph Gallio (th’ soprano & alto saxophonist
& sorta’ “leader” of Day & Taxi), it’s
cause for excitement & celebration! Trio format on this CD go-round,
featuring Christoph’s supreme blowin’ against Dominique
Girod on double bass & Dieter Ulrich on drums. If ever there
were musical menage-a-trois – this is IT – it’s
a marriage made in improvisor heaven! Christoph’s playing
this year sounds much more mature somehow… phrases are clear
throughout, longer sustained sermons, if you will. I missed him
on his 1998 tour (due to th’trialz/tribz of that ol’
“day-job”, somethin’ we’re all plagued with),
but you can BET I’ll be at th’ new one in 2000! This
CD is only a sign of better things to come from Christoph. Not only
gets our MOST HIGHLY RECOMMENDED rating – it’s also
the PICK of this issue for “best improv saxophone”!
SOLID improvisation with real BODY!
IMPROVIJAZZATION NATION, Rotcod Zzaj, aka Dick Metcalf
.......Ein ganz anderer Saxophonist begegnet einem auf about, Christoph
Gallio, absolut cool, lässig und lacyesk, mit seinem in Zürich
beheimateten Trio DAY & TAXI. Der Titel „about“
suggeriert eine Haltung des Als-ob, ein Darüberstehen, eine
Metaebene, eine gewisse Distanz. Aber dieses Über-den-Dingen-Schweben
ist keine Oberflächlichkeit, keine Unverbindlichkeit. Der Prozess
des Schwebens verlangt vielmehr eine eigene grosse Kunstfertigkeit,
eine flüssige Beweglichkeit, wie sie vielleicht einem fragilen
Dreieck ohne klares oben und unten, ohne Basis und Spitze, zueigen
ist. Für den jungen Girod ist es das Debut. Ulrich hat etwa
mit Sunnymoon, Jacques Siron oder Daniel Mouthon getrommelt und
war schon 1988 in der DAY & TAXI-Urformation mit Blöchlinger
und L.L. Cooper dabeigewesen. Stationen von Gallios eigener Karriere
lassen sich am besten anhand seiner Veröffentlichungen, die
auf dem in Eigenregie betriebenen Percasolabel erschienen sind,
nachzeichnen. Alles an „about“ strahlt Souveränität
aus und die Heiterkeit des scheinbar anstrengungslosen Gelingens.
Gerade diese Musik, die sich ihrer selbst so bewusst ist, ist keine
Musik ,über‘ etwas, ist kein Cezannescher Meta-Apfel,
keine bloss gemalte Pfeiffe von Magritte, keine kommentarbedürftige
,aboutness‘ von Artur C. Danto, sondern wie ein direkter Blick,
den du auf der Haut spürst und den du gern spürst, aber
nicht festhalten kannst. Gallios Sopran- und Altosaxlinien, Ulrich
Percussionstupfer und Giros Bassswing wirken wie japanische Kalligraphie
oder wie Picassos Lichtskitzze, gleichzeitig flüchtig hingeworfen
und definitiv, jetzt ein Stier in der Luft, im nächsten Augenblick
schon verglühte Vergangenheit. Allerdings eine Art Vergangenheit,
die im Gedächtnis bleibt: Ornette im Golden Circle, Jimmy Giuffre,
Steve Lacy...das beste Wort dafür ist ,schön‘.
BAD ALCHEMY, Rigo Dittmann
.......Enfin, finissons notre tournée des éclopés
multi-createurs par „About“ de DAY & TAXI dont la
pochette, magnifique,est illustrée par Beat Streuli le shooter
des rues, le traqueur de midinettes rousses et de jeunes blacks
bagouzés. Le trio helvète sait tuer ses pères
(Maslak, Lacy), manger leurs chairs humaines et faire péter
la baraque du free avec des mélodies sensibles „comme
ça!“. De là à réconcilier la caillera
des cités avec l‘anti-thèse de Sydney Bechet,
pourquoi pas. Ils ont beau avoir des yeux qu‘ils ont pas sourd
pour autant.
REVUE & CORRIGEE, Marie-Pierre Bonniol
Two exeptional trio albums from littleknown labels........DAY &
TAXI are on a Swiss label but the trio‘s background is unknown
to me. Their music is mostly less muscular, often melancholic but
still propulsive. Christoph Gallio on soprano and alto is influenced
by Steve Lacy‘s line and note choices, but his tone is lighter
and fluffier. Dominique Girod on bass and Dieter Ulrich on drums
complete the trio. Great compositions by Gallio and an immensely
assured set of performances make this an outstanding release.
THE WIRE, Andy Hamilton
Having been around for over a decade, this Swiss-basedtrio plays
intelligent jazz with a loose, supple feel. The compositions –
all but one are by Gallio – move with a gentle lope through
large intervallic leaps and mild dissonances, although they often
mix metres to excellent effect. These provide jumping-off points
for improvisations which are firmly based on the solo-plus-accompaniment
model but which are just as firmly removed from considerations of
changes playing or modal forms. This is,as John Corbett implies
in his uncharacteristically sketchy sleeve notes, creative music
which remembers its own history without being enslaved to it. Gallio’s
tone is nasal but light, as if he were playing some kind of Middle-Eastern
oboe. His playing is angular but always logical, and rarely given
to fireworks. Indeed, Gallio seems to prefer to follow notes around
at a leisurely pace, with his slow vibrato and tendency to scoop
his notes up and toss them into the air. This doesn’t mean
he avoids extremes, however; indeed, he’s clearly well-versed
in the more “extended” techniques available on the saxophone.
He uses them sparingly, integrating them into his playing with the
intention of creating an organic connection with his straighter
style. It works: on “Lindsay’s New Tune”, Gallio
can be heard mixing up all kinds of techniques without ever dropping
the thread he so carefully spins out when playing.
Girod sounds full and sumptuous here, and his playing is full of
ideas. Virtually everything he plays, even the most casual gesture,
has a studied funkiness about it; virtually every bar could be a
riff in its own right. When he picks up the bow, he takes a more
abstract turn (as is so often the case), but never turns his back
completely on the melodic and rhythmic world which the trio likes
to inhabit. Fortunately, he gets a lot of solo space, playing alongside
Ulrich, whose springy rhythms suit him perfectly. Mostly Ulrich
plays time, but he does so with such a relaxed swing that often
it’s implied rather than stated, or else the ride cymbal provides
the only apparent reference-point in a swirl of complex but seemingly
effortless polyrhythms.This is a sharp, clever trio who can play
this rather quiet sort of free jazz – rather than the energy
music which is so popular among revivalists today – with absolute
conviction, making it feel very contemporary. Gallio especially
is a player who I hope we’ll hear more from in the future.
musings, Richard Cochrane
Although all compositions are by saxophonist Gallio, the unusually
named DAY & TAXI are a trio of equals. Each member has his defined
side of the triangle and no one musician dominates. Gallio‘s
pieces are structured mindfull of the openness the trio format can
provide. The trio is also aware of the value of space. They are
not afraid to have inordinately lengthy moments of silence. (I think
it‘s no accident that the time between tracks seems unusually
long.) The opener, „Dior“ consists of a series of unison
phrases with rests of varying duration between them. „K‘s
Dream“ is a ballad set in almost suspended animation. But
About isn‘t all silence and abstraction. „Madagaskar“
chugs along on a unique African-derived pulse. „Stars“
is in a wide-open free rhythm. Gallio is equally facile on both
horns. If his soprano shows an indebtendness to Steve Lacy in tone
and phrasing, his alto is clearly his own. The keening tone and
a well-placed (and not overused) vibrato make for a very effective
voice. Girod‘s bass roams loose and limber through the musical
landscape. Ulrich‘s drumming is open enough to give the music
its sublety and spaciousness. But it‘s also assertive enough
to give it a powerful drive and forward momentum. DAY & TAXI
is a unique group and About is strongly recommended.
Cadence, Robert Iannapollo
C'est dans des termes laudatifs que le travail du saxophoniste alto
et soprano Gallio avait été remarqué dans les
colonnes d'Improjazz (janvier 1995, p. 17 / julliet-août 95,
p.10 / mai 96, p.22). Pour ma part, mon premier contact avec sa
musique est tout récent.
Cet enregistrement s'ouvre par une pièce atmospherique dont
lŒintérêt réside dans le mélange,
sur un rythme simple, des sonorités sales de l'alto avec
celles produites à lŒarchet. Belle façon de vous
couper le souffle...et le long silence qui la prolonge renforce
l'allure dansante et cadencée du très lacyen morceau
qui suit. C'est d'ailleurs à plusieures reprises, dans les
excellentes notes du livret, que John Corbett mentionne Lacy, et
tout particulièrement ses formidables „Carpers„
avec R. Boykins et D. Charles, enregistrement dont l'influence semble
très forte ici. Rien de mal a cela: une tradition orale se
perpétue, entre autres, par l'imitation. L'influence de Lacy
(et par lui, celle de Nichols et de Monk), au-delà même
de la sonorité du saxophone soprano, se ressent dans la façon
qu'a Gallio de vouloir intégrer dans ses morceaux la composition
(la tête) à l'intérieur de l'improvisation (le
porps). Il ne s'agit donc pas d'une improvisation libre, détachée
du thème, qui ne ferait que revenir à ce dernier pour
clore le propos, mais plutôt d'une exploration inspirée
des potentialités intrinsèques de la composition.
La souplesse et la musicalité du batteur et du bassiste sont
évidemment de puissante alliées de la contrebasse
procurent aux saxophones un cadre tridimensionnel. La basse est
particulièrement mise en valeur dans „Lindsa's New
Tune„: le thème est organisé comme une suite,
avec d'étranges répétitions irrégulières.
Le solo du jeune Dominique Girod, accompagné aux balais par
le batteur, déborde d'idées (découlant de sa
formation académique) et Gallio développe un discours
intense, avec une sonorité déchirée, parfois
proche d'Ayler par le timbre de la distorsion des hauteurs. Au début
du dernier morceau, le batteur Dieter Ulrich, par sa gestion de
l'espace, adapte à merveille son style discret et mélodique
à l'atmosphère de la pièce.
La première étape, dans cette musique, réside
dans l'imitation des modèles, mais l'instant de vérité
arrive lorsque cette imitation devient le tremplin vers quelque
chose de nouveau, ou plutôt vers quelque chose de réellement
personnel. Ces musiciens sont déterminés à
travailler sur la substance de la musique, sans truc ni clichés.
Dans cette configurations classique, si attirante pour les improvisateurs
de tous bords, ils parviennent à atteindre un très
haut niveau d'intégration et participent de la sorte à
un développement en cours.
Son et production sont vraiment excellents, les brèves pièces
composées sont disposées à des endroits stratégiques,
comme des poteaux indicateurs, et les longs silences qui sépares
les morceaux permettent de laisser la musique respirer.
IMPROJAZZ, Francesco Martinelli (Traduction de Guillaume Tarche)
DAY & TAXI, a long-running Swiss group, features Christoph Gallio,
Dieter Ulrich and newcomer Dominique Girod, who replaces Lindsay
Cooper ( the bass-playing one). Girod studied with Jean-François
Jenny-Clark, a pretty good recommendation. He contributes much to
a well-rounded trio sound, where short compositional vignettes are
mixed in with looser, more open pieces. I'll allways find room fo
a good sax-bass-drum trio, and this quietly persuasive CD (nicely-packaged,
liner notes by the ubiquitous John Corbett), comes highly recommended.
RUBBERNECK 29 (June 1999), Gerard F Tierney
Gallio hat mit dem Schlagzeuger Dieter Ulrich und dem Kontrabassisten
Dominique Girod ein anregendes Konzept entwickelt, in dem komponierte
Teile und Improvisationen nahtlos ineinander übergehen. Die
Musiker des ausgesprochen transparenten Trios tasten sich entlang
vorgegebener Strukturen immer weiter in freiere Gefielde vor. Bei
allen Freiheiten bleibt aber immer ein klarer Bezug zum thematischen
und rhythmischen Ausgangsmaterial bestehen, bei aller Flexibilität
folgt man einem roten Faden. Gerade das Fehlen eines beengenden
Harmonieinstrument erlaubt es dem Trio, die vielfach an zeitgenössische
Musik erinnernden Melodien in überraschende Richtungen zu biegen.
Der Zuhörer begleitet die drei Musiker, die aus einer Aufnahmesitzung
gleich zwei spannende CD („about„ percaso/RecRec, „less
and more„ UNIT/Musikvertrieb) produziert haben, gerne auf
ihren kurvernreichen Pfaden, die gewissermassen einen Hör-Lernweg
darstellen.
Neue Zürcher Zeitung, Nick Liebmann
Day & Taxi are a Swiss jazz trio that puts out records that
avant-jazz fans can give to their friends that might ordinarily
be scared off by the likes of Peter Brotzmann or David S. Ware.
Gallio's style draws on Ornette Coleman and Marion Brown for his
alto playing and Steve Lacy for the straight horn, but he brings
a uniquely bittersweet melodious quality to his playing that keeps
him far from Copycattown. Like old Thelonious, he doesn't blitz
the listener with a barrage of notes when a few well-spaced, well-placed
notes will do just fine. Girod's playing is firm, probing and sinuous.
Ulrich is a virtual cross between Roy Haynes and Milford Graves:
swing and space, freedom and rhythm in one package. Gallio writes
real compositions, not merely frameworks for "blowing"
- tunes that actually invite you back for 2nd helpings. For those
who think the avant garde doesn't swing/groove/have cohesiveness
enough, there's Day & Taxi. Five stars, two thumbs, etc.
jazzreview.com, Mark Keresman
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