John Hiseman English Stalwart JL 4.vi.11

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  • aka Calum Da Jazbo
    Late member
    • Nov 2010
    • 9173

    John Hiseman English Stalwart JL 4.vi.11

    John Hiseman

    talks over his recordings with Alyn ... a treat for fans of Graham Bond and other English jazz rock figures ..
    According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
  • Serial_Apologist
    Full Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 37814

    #2
    Well done Alyn for encouraging Jon to come up with so much fascinating anecdotal material about working with Graham Bond and Dick Heckstall-Smith - and thanks for an excellent programme. If you read Ian Carr's Music Outside, Dick's The Safest Place in the World, and Jon's own new book Playing the Band - a strongly recommended read imv - you'll see that Jon effectively took over the management of the GBO during his tenure. The guy's got phenomenal instant recall. Wish I could still remember names, situations etc that easily! The programme showed more of the rock side of Hiseman's preoccupations; interesting though when he talked about the way Colosseum worked up material without using charts. But for me it was more enjoyable listening to the early, more interactive stuff, and would have been nice to have heard more of his work with Paraphernalia, where he's more about sensitivity and less the powerhouse. As he said that was the most important part of his career. So sad to hear about Barbara Thompson.

    S-A
    Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 04-06-11, 17:20. Reason: I kept on hitting G (not my favourite key)

    Comment

    • Old Grumpy
      Full Member
      • Jan 2011
      • 3643

      #3
      Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
      would have been nice to have heard more of his work with Paraphernalia, where he's more about sensitivity and less the powerhouse
      Agree, but the programme was about Jon Hiseman. Perhaps a JL about Barbara Thompson would feature more of this.

      Paraphernalia were my first introduction to Jazz - fond memories!

      Comment

      • Ian Thumwood
        Full Member
        • Dec 2010
        • 4223

        #4
        An interesting programme but very much a "game of two halves." The first half was brilliant insofar that this was the first time that I have heard the music of the likes of Mike Taylor and Graham Bond who have enjoyed a lot of praise on both this board and the old BBC one. I had no idea what Graham Bond's music sounded like and was very surprised to discover that it was gutsy r n' b. The New Jazz Orchestra was also extremely impressive - Neil Ardley being someone whose music always seems pf the highest merit whenever it gets an airing on programmes such as this or JRR. The first half was extremely fascinating and included some really good choices of music. I felt that Jon Hiseman's comment about many contemporary drummers in jazz not properly interacting with the other musicians in ensembles to be particularly salient. It is an increasing problem and , perhaps, indicative of groups like Brad Mehldau's trio where Jorge Rossy made this approach extremely popular. In some respects, it is almost an indemic problem with European players but it doesn't manifest istelf in the States too.

        As for Colosseum, I definately felt that the selection of tracks seemed to demonstrate that the music got progressively worse through time. The first, more acoustic tracks were ok without really standing out but, by the end, the music seemed to have only a very tenuous link with jazz if at all. There seemed to be far more "rock" in this music than "jazz" - a shame that the question was never asked as to how John Hiseman saw his groups in relation to the then-popular Prog-Rock bands. Curious to hear John Hiseman's comments about the album cover - definately an animal of his era! The track with Alan Holdsworth was exactly the kind of stuff that bores me to tears and is indicative of why so much music from the 1970's has such a lousy reputation. Just sounds like tasteless shreading to me. I think that each generation looks back to the art / culture of the previous one and finds it wanting in many oeuvres not just jazz. Growing up in the 1980's I was aware of jazz-rock being popular from books and articles I had read but as soon as I became attuned to the contemporary scene it was bands like Colosseum who were held in contempt as the music staggered back on track in that decade to recover from some of the abominations committed in the name of jazz in the previous decade. When you are about 16, the music of ten years ago is as remote as 30-40 years. Some of the choices , to my ears, sounded little different to the kind of stuff Rick Wakeman was putting out in the early 70's and I would suggest, far closer to style and content to rock than as say the likes of Parker, Ellington or Coltrane. Despite the stellar line up, even the United Jazz and Rock Ensemble sounded perilously dated. Amazing that such a line up could sound so leaden and square. I suppose that your reaction to much of the second half will depend on your defination of what is or isn't jazz as well as being a generation thing. I would be surprised if anyone under 50 would be quite so enthusiastic of the jazz-rock tracks as those who grew up with this music in their youth.

        Sad to learn about Barbara Thompson. I found Paraphernalia to be entertaining enough if somewhat lightweight. The strength in this groups music always seemed to be in the compositions but the influence seemed to be coming from other styles as well as jazz.

        Judging by some of the comments posted already, there are plenty of fans and advocates of this kind of music who would have enjoyed the second half seemingly more than the first. However, some of the latter tracks seemed to be almost as contoversial in their relationship to jazz as the choices made in earlier programmes dedicated to Bing Crosby (which I didn't like) and Joni Mitchell (which I did!.)

        Curious to see that the subject of next week's "Jazz Library" is the late Esbjorn Svensson as his approach seems to be a more contemporary approach to mixing the jazz tradition with a similar "popularist" approach to Jon Hiseman. I think that EST were marginally more successful but I somewhat wonder if history will be any more kind to their unqiue vision of jazz than the 1970's offerings of this week's guest.

        Comment

        • Serial_Apologist
          Full Member
          • Dec 2010
          • 37814

          #5
          Originally posted by Ian Thumwood View Post
          I think that each generation looks back to the art / culture of the previous one and finds it wanting in many oeuvres not just jazz.
          Well, certainly not in my case, Ian. But then I guess some of us were fantastically lucky to have been growing up in the late 50s/early 60s, when in the modern classical field we had Messiaen, Boulez, Berio, Cage, Stockhausen, serialism, post-serialism, collage and electronics to familiarise ourselves with, and in jazz bebop, hard bop, modalism and the shock (for such it was) of free jazz. Maybe not for all of us, but for me, definitely, the jazz of the time was as aurally indispensable a part of the alternative lifestyle that attracted me as blues and psychedelic rock, and one pursued a *critical* interest in how the latter went forward into progrock and fusion. By the time of and up to the middle 70s British jazz-rock absorbed a good many influences that were indigenous, hardly at all influenced by American musicians and bands, and it was only as the music on the other side of the pond became increasingly formularised that we can look back on bands such as Paraphernalia, Nucleus, Isotope, Gilgamesh, Major Surgery, Away, Amalgam, Turning Point, Hatfield & The North, National Health, and musicians of the calibre of Ray Russell, Harry Beckett (Joy Unlimited) Robert Wyatt and Hugh Hopper, that we get an idea of just how good the "home product" could be. Handsomefortune kindly found a load of youtube clips when some of these bands and musicians were discussed towards the end of the old R3 bored - bless her, (where is she now??) - so I won't go to all that trouble again; I'm sure they can still be found. But I do tend to agree with you about what eventually happened to Colosseum, Ian. On a series on R3 outlining some of the course of British jazz-rock I remember Hiseman claiming Colosseum to have been one of the very first jazz-rock groups anywhere. Bands and musicians did a lot of mutual checking out to see what was working and what was going down well with audiences - the latter probably more than today when audiences are more niched - to invent a word. Overwhelming musical spectacles chimed with the substances in use - everyone wanted something not too jarring howver - as I well recall trying to listen to the Bartok string quartets on spliff: the music was just too fast, but above all too complex!! I think once that unit got underway and was doing the Prog circuit its own momentum and self-confidence kept it going until lack of time due to constant touring to produce new materials brought it to a halt. Can't agree with you about Allan Holdsworth, however. In many respects I think he still remains unsurpassed in the post-Mclaughlin field.

          S-A

          Comment

          • Ian Thumwood
            Full Member
            • Dec 2010
            • 4223

            #6
            S-A

            Hmmmmm, not quite sure I agree with your assessment. Some of the Classical composer's you have named have already started to fall out of vogue and I am sure I heard someone on Radio 3 a few months back laying into the minimalist composers of the 1980's with the suggestion that the composers writing today have returned to form whereas the likes of Goreckski probably enjoyed an inflated reputation for too long. Check through history and you will find all sorts of composers slating their immediate predecessors whether it is Messaien reacting against "Les six," Poulenc reacting against Debussy or the Impressionists rejecting the Romantics of the eariest century. Ditto for jazz....


            The JL programme served to demonstrate very convincingly that by the mid-sixties British jazz had managed to forge it's own identity and whilst I agree with your comments that the likes of Robert Wyatt (not too familiar with his work but understand how appreciative the "jazz community" in Europe is of his music) or Paraphernalia do not sound at all influenced by American music, they are similarly more closely aligned to the rock music of the time. The only groups on your list I would say were more jazz -influenced were the likes of Nucleus and Soft machine. There are clips of the latter on Youtube which are demonstrably jazz but a lot of the JL programme was given over to music where the distinction was very blurred. In fact, I don't think that there has been any movement in the history of jazz where the separation of oeuvres has been quite so opaque. Even Rock music has moved on from this ethos as much as it exists at all these days. You won't find too many rock bands looking at improvising these days!

            I feel that the issue is more fundemental that you have argued. Whilst I agree that the post-war era you talk about resulted in some interesting, incredible, eccentric and not always successful ideas, I feel that jazz has been one of the key developments in the musical developments in the 20th Century. However, during the 70's it seems like there was a lack of confidence in the music and musicians sought to align themselves with more rock-orientated styles as this was (perhaps) seen as "where the music was then happening." The problem for me is that it got so far into bed with rock that it lost it's identity and the music became bloated, self-indulgent and so modish that much of this music sounds ridiculous to anyone of my generation who discovered jazz in the more conservative 1980's. As someone who generally appreciates all kinds of jazz, I find the kind of jazz-rock that emerged in the UK at this time to be one of the least interesting aspects of the music's history. It seems marooneed by the subsequent developments in the music which somewhat left this kind of music behind. You mention John McLaughlin and he is precisely one of the musicians about whom I am ambivalent.

            Reference in the programme was made by Alyn as to the "Electronic Revolution" which transformed the music by the mid-70's. With the hindsight of 35+ years of development, it is possible, I believe, to appreciate that this stuff wasn't quite as sophisticated as it then sounded. The technology was not really quite there as it is these days. It is fascinating to contrast the music of a group like "Colosseum" with something like the Pat Metheny Group which similarly borrows ideas from rock / pop but manages to still have it's feet rooted in jazz. Metheny is far more of a subtle composer and has a knack of creating pop-like melodies (granted with a huge dollop of "Americana") in a fashion that many UK musicians could only have dream't about in the 1970's. As the technology has developed, I think Metheny's ability to think on an orchestral level has grown too. His music is far more ambitious than some of the music you have lauded although I can understand why someone like Metheny may be a problem for you too. The problem with electronic kit is that it quickly dates and defines the era in which it is made. However, for a guitar-led solution to a jazz group which is savvy enough to recognise the difference between tasteful and tasteless, I would put to you that Metheny's groups have offered a far more musically successful alternative. The interesting thing is how this music will date but if you consider that PM's earliest records are now over 30 years old, I would suggest that he has had more success in this than the British groups you mention.

            Interesting, as ever, you read your well thought out response, but am afraid I am not with you on this one!!

            Cheers

            Ian

            Comment

            • Serial_Apologist
              Full Member
              • Dec 2010
              • 37814

              #7
              Canterbury fusion stuff from the 1970s:

              Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.


              Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.


              Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

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              • Old Grumpy
                Full Member
                • Jan 2011
                • 3643

                #8
                Sorry IT/S-A, I can't match the erudition of either of your posts - but does it actually matter if some jazz becomes too rock influenced or vice versa? It is all music after all - you either like it or you don't!

                I personally do.

                Comment

                • Serial_Apologist
                  Full Member
                  • Dec 2010
                  • 37814

                  #9
                  None of my links in #7 worked for some reason

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                  • BLUESNIK'S REVOX
                    Full Member
                    • Dec 2010
                    • 4314

                    #10
                    Sorry to play "Mr Grumpy" again but not for me. Prog rock at its nadir and calling it jazz don't help. Anyone. God awful guitar solos. ditto vocals - how could Jon say Graham Bond was the essence of the blues when (vocally) he was a sad sub "Ray" joke? "I caught that ol' Grayhound bus to Cheltenham, got lost in Slough, O Wow". (or similar). OK, I had a nightmare driving experience with Bond etc. once in his band bus so I'm VERY biased. He was a general pain.

                    BUT, (NB IAN) Mike Taylor's "Trio" album" (1965) with Jon and Jack Bruce is very special. I was re-listening to Cecil Taylor's (truly fantastic) "World of" recently on Candid (1960) and that's exactly where Taylor came from on that date in dealing with standards. Jon is fine, but as he said, " looking for a way in" and a second behind.

                    MUCH moved by Jon''s comments on Barbara so my thoughts are really not all negative.

                    BN.

                    Ian - Mike Taylor's "Trio" album (even on re-released RE-Dial CD) is very rare, but if you would like a copy (mine), go thro Jazz Corner and I will post on. 'Sure you will find it fsacinating. Even tho he was up a tree on acid during most of the sessions and had to be induced down.

                    Comment

                    • burning dog
                      Full Member
                      • Dec 2010
                      • 1511

                      #11
                      First of I dislike most records Colluseum except some pretty early stuff. There is no problem with jazz borrowing from rock n roll and R&B, or funk and soul or whatever, they are all related, but a strand of later fusion followed the prog/pomp path of Yes and co and was pretty dire IMO, to paraphrase Roy Hattersley's opinion on New Labour it wasnt progressive enough or Rock enough, middle period Soft Machine excepted (but wasn't that really jazz?).

                      Having said that Ian's comparisons are pretty unfair IMO, Pat Metheney's career covers more years than existed between Louis Armstrong's Hot Sevens and Ornette, so there's a bit of Ians occassional historicism going on alongside his usual considered analysis.

                      Jazz developed at breakneck speed between King Oilver and Agharta/SME while it could be argued that advanced post bop of today bears more than as passing resemblence to Conference of the Birds, Circle, Jarrett's US and European Quintets etc. of the early '70s, surprising considering they were nearly 40 years ago

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                      • aka Calum Da Jazbo
                        Late member
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 9173

                        #12
                        loft scene in NYC anyone ....

                        with El Senor Blues on this one ... but also with S_A on the 50/60's scenery .... when the avant garde was more out than an academic career campaign .... and we were young .... most of the brit r'n'b scene in those days was a pale imitation of Harlem Jump Bands and not very interesting, given the choice between a GBO gig and a night with the Joe Harriot Quintet or the Tubby Hayes Quartet i know where i went ..... and no one could live with Rollins and Tracy .... and then there was the Fairfield Hall gig .... sorry but the later Wyatt, Thompson and the rest were rather pale and watery in comparison .... precursors of the Guildford school eh ...

                        [must own to not having listened to the prog so just spouting off ... apologies]
                        According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.

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                        • BLUESNIK'S REVOX
                          Full Member
                          • Dec 2010
                          • 4314

                          #13
                          I may have been a bit harsh on Hisemann because so much of the stuff played reminds me of Gong and Yes etc. At least the US had a decent (black) tradition to draw on - in the crisis 70s elements of Britain seemed to infantalise to (fekin) hobbits, round tables and general inner-earth b/s and jazz wasn't immune. Collier and others also went down that dipsy thematic road to avoid reality. Something in the "smoke" in more ways than one. Political significance of...discuss. Brit liberals eh?

                          And while Graham Bond and his Org was (I confess) fine for many a bluesy speed fueled nght down the Flamingo in the '60s, in the cold dawn it was a load of warmed over pastiche and absurd posture. Even "Roarin" with Don Rendell is a grossly over-rated album. Just because Bond is "rough" doesn't make him authentic, still less Ornette. And he was a totally dislikeable piece of work on and OFF stage from my experience. "Girls" really meant girls. DHS was however always worth a listen and his book is a very good take on the scene then.

                          BN. less grumpy, more thumpy by the day.

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                          • johncorrigan
                            Full Member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 10412

                            #14
                            Me and my pals went to see Colosseum a couple of times in the maryland Blues club in Glasgow and a cinema in Paisley in '70/'71. They remain memorable - hearing Hiseman was wonderful; we were all in awe of Heckstal-Smith and Chris Farlowe's soaring vocals.

                            Following the notes on this string and the R3 programme I had a listen to 'Colosseum Live' yesterday in the car - 'Rope Ladder to the Moon' still sounds magnificent, and in particular 'Lost Angeles' quite wonderful. It's not the kind of thing I would normally listen to now, but the guitar is pretty epic, and there can be few better vocalists to have come out of England than Farlowe, in my opinion.

                            But driving it on was Hiseman's drums - it certainly felt groundbreaking at the time, though what it broke the ground for was far less satisfying for me.

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                            • burning dog
                              Full Member
                              • Dec 2010
                              • 1511

                              #15
                              I dare you all to open this link

                              Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

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