And so I begin another of my occasional series on groups of recordings I particularly enjoy. Perhaps you may like them too...then again perhaps not.
I own four Azimuth LPs from ECM - the first four they released, in order:
Azimuth (ECM 1099)
The Touchstone (ECM 1130)
Départ (ECM 1163)
Azimuth '85 (ECM 1298)
Everyone here will know the members of the trio: John Taylor (piano, organ, synthesiser), Norma Winstone (voice, lyrics) and Kenny Wheeler (trumpet, fluegelhorn). On Départ guitarist Ralph Towner joins them to form a quartet. I'll say now that Azimuth is one of my favourite ECM formations - they're not trying to emulate American artists but do draw on European influences mostly. They don't swing. The music is minimalist in places (particularly on the first LP). All three (four) are excellent musicians.
The centre of the group is John Taylor's piano. A typical Azimuth piece may start with a solo piano intro, then joined in by one of the others, then both, as the music is built up in layers. In a group with no rhythm "section" there's heavy use of vamps, mostly on the ivories but sometimes electronic. They also take advantage of studio multi-tracking to build up whole sections of voice or trumpets, and on some tracks the piano and synth or organ are played simultaneously.
The harmonies are complex, the textures are rich, the overarching atmosphere one of melancholia, perhaps nostalgia. That may be an ECM cliché but I would argue that this group carries it off with great success - there's a pervading feeling of loss but no pointless noodling. One reason is Norma Winstone's singing, and her lyrics. In the liner notes to the three CD boxset which includes the first three LPs, Steve Lake compares them to haiku; they're certainly poetic, and remind me a bit of the work of the late Seamus Heaney. Some of them are the saddest I can recall - particularly on the title track of Départ:
Feel the freshening wind
Vapour trails leave a long goodbye
One more backward glance and they're gone
Then you see no-one
Or this from The Tunnel
Travelling forever in the dark
Darkness into blackness
There and back, it's always black
Flying along on a rhythm track
So, beginning in reverse order, here's an example from Azimuth '85 - the amazing "Breathtaking":
I own four Azimuth LPs from ECM - the first four they released, in order:
Azimuth (ECM 1099)
The Touchstone (ECM 1130)
Départ (ECM 1163)
Azimuth '85 (ECM 1298)
Everyone here will know the members of the trio: John Taylor (piano, organ, synthesiser), Norma Winstone (voice, lyrics) and Kenny Wheeler (trumpet, fluegelhorn). On Départ guitarist Ralph Towner joins them to form a quartet. I'll say now that Azimuth is one of my favourite ECM formations - they're not trying to emulate American artists but do draw on European influences mostly. They don't swing. The music is minimalist in places (particularly on the first LP). All three (four) are excellent musicians.
The centre of the group is John Taylor's piano. A typical Azimuth piece may start with a solo piano intro, then joined in by one of the others, then both, as the music is built up in layers. In a group with no rhythm "section" there's heavy use of vamps, mostly on the ivories but sometimes electronic. They also take advantage of studio multi-tracking to build up whole sections of voice or trumpets, and on some tracks the piano and synth or organ are played simultaneously.
The harmonies are complex, the textures are rich, the overarching atmosphere one of melancholia, perhaps nostalgia. That may be an ECM cliché but I would argue that this group carries it off with great success - there's a pervading feeling of loss but no pointless noodling. One reason is Norma Winstone's singing, and her lyrics. In the liner notes to the three CD boxset which includes the first three LPs, Steve Lake compares them to haiku; they're certainly poetic, and remind me a bit of the work of the late Seamus Heaney. Some of them are the saddest I can recall - particularly on the title track of Départ:
Feel the freshening wind
Vapour trails leave a long goodbye
One more backward glance and they're gone
Then you see no-one
Or this from The Tunnel
Travelling forever in the dark
Darkness into blackness
There and back, it's always black
Flying along on a rhythm track
So, beginning in reverse order, here's an example from Azimuth '85 - the amazing "Breathtaking":
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