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Al dente
Soft Heap
első megjelenés éve: 2008
(2008)

CD
4.610 Ft 

 

IMPORT!
Kosaramba teszem
1.  Fara
2.  Sleeping House
3.  C.R.R.C.
4.  Circle Line
5.  Remain So
6.  One for Lee
Jazz

Alan Gowen Synthesizer, Piano (Electric)
Elton Dean Saxophone, Sax (Alto)
Hugh Hopper Liner Notes, Bass
Miki Dandy Sound Advisor
Pip Pyle Drums

Soft Heap was the personal acronym for an assemblage of old friends throughout 1978. Bass guitarist Hugh Hopper and saxophonist Elton Dean began their long musical partnership during their days with the classic Soft Machine quartet. Keyboardist Alan Gowen and drummer Pip Pyle became friends when their respective bands, Gilgamesh and Hatfield The North, coalesced for special concerts in 1973. Apart from this eponymous record, Soft Heap only gave two concerts in London prior to Alan and Pip reconvening to carry on as National Health. This full length CD is one tasty listening experience for those with a soft spot for Soft Heap to sink their teeth into.


From the remnants of Soft Machine, electric bass guitarist Hugh Hopper and saxophonist Elton Dean formed the quartet Soft Heap to further advance their progressive jazz-fusion oriented ideas. As keyboardist Mike Ratledge, multi-instrumentalist Karl Jenkins, and electric guitarist Allan Holdsworth took Soft Machine into a different, louder arena, Hopper and Dean were more intrigued with the intuitive creative improvised side of the music away from their initially strict Canterbury orientation. This sounds like they were more prone to the styles of the Return to Forever/Weather Report/National Health strain, spurred on with a healthy dose of Dick Heckstall-Smith's or John Surman's influence. With the brilliant electric pianist Alan Gowen and stellar rock drumming of Pip Pyle, Soft Heap set in motion a stance where Dean and Hopper could create an identity on their own. It is Gowen's presence that is particularly arresting, as his sound permeates, penetrates, and cuts through every aspect of their collective sound, except that of Dean. Whether on alto sax or his unique saxello, the extraordinary Dean is the straw that stirs these lengthy jams, live at the Phoenix Club in London, England. Recorded on a reel-to-reel tape recorder at the slowest 3 3/4" per second speed, the production is remarkably resilient, preserved, and well balanced, making for an enjoyable listening experience. Gowen is credited as having written three of these extensive discourses. His amazing introduction sets up the endless fab jam "Sleeping House," varying from idea streams to calmed free floating stepped up into bop, all with Dean's terse saxello driving the band. The jagged edged "Remain So" is another hard swinging vehicle for Dean's Eric Dolphy-like alto, but it is Pyle's Latin rock feel piling on stark kinetic energy. The 17-minute "C.R.R.C." starts in ballad style, but you can't keep them introspective for long, as rock volume and clockwork rhythms invade the serenity. Dean's "Fara" also starts relatively tranquil, as it is clear the alto saxophonist has clearly listened to ultra-melodic standards such as "I Remember Clifford" and "We'll Be Together Again." Pyle increases the tempo a half step under Gowen's shimmering keyboards, setting off a maniacally stratospheric woodwind solo. A composition first heard on Happy Daze by Elton Dean's Ninesense, "Seven for Lee" in 7/8 time is pure modal excitement, buoyed via an ostinato line only Hopper can deliver, while the lone original penned by the bassist, "Circle Line," is a throaty, throbbing line, more spacy than earthy, accented by Gowen's free synthesizer, Dean's poignant saxello, and eventually set ablaze by Pyle's bashing. Far from undercooked, this opportunity to hear a spin-off of what was a pioneering fusion ensemble proved this foursome still had plenty left in terms of their own original music. Gowen passed away three years after these recordings, so this album is very important to his legacy, a fine representation of his excellent musicianship. ~ Michael G. Nastos, All Music Guide



Soft Heap

Active Decades: '70s and '80s
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Prog-Rock/Art Rock, Jazz-Rock, Avant-Garde Jazz, Canterbury Scene

British group Soft Heap was a short-lived group composed of former members of Soft Machine and Hatfield and the North. The lineup of the group was Elton Dean (saxophone; Soft Machine), the late Alan Gowen (keyboards; Hatfield and the North), Hugh Hopper (bass; Soft Machine), and Pip Pyle (drums; Hatfield and the North). The group released one album, creatively entitled Soft Heap, in 1979. A second album, A Veritable Centaur, was released in 1995. However, that album was not comprised of any additional recordings, but instead is a live album recorded during their touring.
---Gary Hill, All Music Guide

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