Showing posts with label Hamid Drake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hamid Drake. Show all posts

Friday, April 1, 2022

URUK - Ame (Live at Artacts) April 1, 2022 trost records

1. Ame
2. Enkidu
3. Gilgamesh
4. Ianna Ishtar

Isabelle Duthoit – clarinet, voice
Franz Hautzinger – quarter-tone trumpet
Hamid Drake – percussion, frame drum, voice
Michael Zerang – percussion, frame drum

Recorded live at Artacts, Alte Gerberei, St.Johann, March 7th 2020
Mastering by Martin Siewert

Saturday, March 19, 2022

Fred Anderson & Hamid Drake (March 2022 Thrill Jockey Records)

The closest of relationships gives its members space to expand, change, develop, and play. Tenor saxophonist Fred Anderson and drummer Hamid Drake have just that kind of partnership, one that has seen them periodically move apart and work extensively on other fronts – Anderson tending to the recent relocation of his major jazz venue the Velvet Lounge; Drake in a dizzying array of globetrotting ensembles – but always returning to the fold, digging in together and checking out what’s been learned in the interim. Over the course of some three decades, master saxophonist and prodigy percussionist have continued to reconfirm their commitment to their joint project.

Following up on their acclaimed Thrill Jockey 2004 CD Back Together Again, Drake and Anderson set out to show just how much they’d grown, how beautifully their work together has evolved. Drafting an all-star band consisting of fellow-Chicagoans, the twosome entered John McEntire’s Soma Studios and proceeded to record their most relaxed, perfectly balanced date yet. In a discography that has gone from a handful of rare LPs fifteen years ago to a staggering number of discs on various labels today, it may seem hyperbolic to call From the River to the Ocean Fred Anderson’s greatest album yet, but the empathy and cohesiveness of the ensemble, coupled with the saxophonist’s brilliant, searching improvisations, makes it a ringer.

From the River to the Ocean is an especially varied outing, ranging from Anderson’s classic set-closing blues “Strut Time” to the meditative, spiritual, modal track “For Brother Thompson,” dedicated to the late trumpeter Malachi Thompson and featuring bassist Harrison Bankhead on brooding piano and Drake chanting in Arabic. The record’s title track and the closer, “Sakti/Shiva,” find bassist Josh Abrams laying down an astounding bed on guimbri, the three-stringed Moroccan acoustic bass familiar to fans of Gnawa music. Drake knows exactly how to work with guimbri, as evidenced on his CD The Wels Concert (Okka Disk) with guimbri player Mahmoud Gania and saxophonist Peter Brötzmann. Another of the CD’s delights is guitarist Jeff Parker, known to many through his work with Tortoise and Isotope 217 and his prominent place in the current jazz guitar pantheon. Here, Parker displays an immense sensitivity and melodic genius, sharing solo spotlight with Bankhead’s cello on “From the River to the Ocean” and sculpting a stunning array of shapes on the group’s swinging take on Anderson’s “Planet E.”

Underneath is all is Hamid Drake, an intensely creative soul who has continued to challenge himself. Drake’s growth is not measured in how many different instruments he plays – indeed, he’s scaled back his arsenal over the years – but in the depth and musicality of his feeling. On this record he is remarkably light and airy, playing with tremendous delicacy and clarity. It goes to show that you don’t need to muscle your way into someone’s ears. Propulsion can be introduced without a pneumatic drill, and Drake instigates an avalanche of rolling forward momentum on the opening moments, inspiring the two basses and guitarist to move, to make something moving, and in turn to further inspire Fred Anderson to some of his most forceful and imaginative playing yet documented.

If the individual is a small receptacle of expressivity, a mountain spring if you will, then it is in ideal settings like this one that the springs join forces, turning into streams, then bigger and bigger tributaries, finally swelling into rivers that open into the oceanic creative waterways. Thank goodness Anderson and Drake have tapped into that wellspring, drawing directly from the source. 

1. Planet E 14:42
2. Strut Time 21:15
3. For Brother Thompson 07:44
4. From the River to the Ocean 13:35
5. Sakti / Shiva 06:24

FRED ANDERSON Saxophone on all tracks.
HAMID DRAKE Drums on "Planet E," "Strut Time," and "For Brother Thompson." Frame Drum on "From the River to the Ocean."
JEFF PARKER Guitar on "Planet E," "Strut Time," and "From the River to the Ocean."
HARRISON BANKHEAD Cello on "Strut Time," Piano on "For Brother Thompson." Bass on "Planet E" and "From the River to the Ocean."
JOSHUA ABRAMS Bass on "Planet E," "Strut Time," and "For Brother Thompson." Guimbri on "Sakti/Shiva" and "From the River to the Ocean."

Recorded by John McEntire at Soma EMS
Photographs by Jim Newberry
Design by Azita Youssefi and Sheila Sachs

"Planet E" and "Strut Time" written by Fred Anderson.
"For Brother Thompson" written by Harrison Bankhead.
"Sakti/Shiva" written by Fred Anderson, Joshua Abrams with help from Hamid Drake.
"From the River to the Ocean" written by Joshua Abrams and Hamid Drake.

Thursday, November 18, 2021

Peter Brötzmann / Hamid Drake - The Dried Rat​-​Dog (November 18, 2021 trost records)

1. The Dried Rat-Dog 15:53
2. It's an Angel on the Door 06:58
3. Open into the Unknown 05:24
4. Trees Have Roots in the Earth 11:05
5. The Uninvited Entertainer 16:35
6. Dark Wings Carry Off the Sky 07:26

Peter Brötzmann - Tárogató, e-flat Clarinet, Alto/Tenor Saxophone
Hamid Drake - Frame Drum, Tablas, Drums

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Brötzmann / Gania / Drake - The "WELS" Concert (November 2021 trost records)

Recorded at Schlachthof Wels (Austria), 8th november 1996.

This album was released on Okka Disk 1997, OD12013

1. Part 1 25:46
2. Part 2 25:15
3. Part 3 19:16

Peter Brötzmann - tárogató, e-flat clarinet, alto & tenor saxophone
Maleem Mahmoud Gania - guembri, voice
Hamid Drake -frame drum, tablas, drums

Mastered by John McCortney
Artwork by Raimund Van Well

Friday, October 22, 2021

Dan Phillips / Hamid Drake - L’avventura di Vivere (October 22, 2021)

“L’avventura di Vivere” is the second duo collaboration between Dan Phillips and Hamid Drake after 2017’s “Trail of Inevitability” and their fifth work together overall. Other collaborations have included Chicago Edge Ensembles’ “Decaying Orbit” and “Insidious Anthem”as well as the Quartet Next “Dutiful Dissent” album. This eleven track album features Drake and Phillips in a wide variety of moods, shapes textures and colors. From intense duo improvisations to layered minimalist pieces.

Dan Phillips is an American guitarist, composer educator and band leader who has worked professionally in New York, Chicago, Bangkok and Tokyo as well as touring globally. Dan is the leader of the critically acclaimed Chicago Edge Ensemble, Quartet Next, Dan Phillips Trio, Dan Phillips Quartet. Dan has performed with jazz musicians such as Hamid Drake, Gerald Wilson, Danilo Pérez, Hugo Rasmussen, Avreeayl Ra, Matt Darriau, Jim Black, Michael Zerang, Dave Rempis, Jeb Bishop, Mars Williams, Jim Baker, Ben Street, Chris Speed, Mike Sarin and Ed Thigpen and many more.

Hamid Drake is an American jazz drummer and percussionist. By the close of the 1990s, Hamid Drake was widely regarded as one of the best percussionists in jazz and improvised music. Incorporating Afro-Cuban, Indian, and African percussion instruments and “L’avventura di Vivere” is the second duo collaboration between Dan Phillips and Hamid Drake after 2017’s “Trail of Inevitability” and their fifth work together overall. Other collaborations have included Chicago Edge Ensembles’ “Decaying Orbit” and “Insidious Anthem”as well as the Quartet Next “Dutiful Dissent” album. This eleven track album features Drake and Phillips in a wide variety of moods, shapes textures and colors. From intense duo improvisations to layered minimalist pieces.nfluence, in addition to using the standard trap set, Drake has collaborated extensively with top free jazz improvisers. Drake also has performed world music; by the late 1970s, he was a member of Foday Musa Suso's Mandingo Griot Society and has played reggae throughout his career. Drake has worked with trumpeter Don Cherry, pianist Herbie Hancock, saxophonists Pharoah Sanders, Fred Anderson, Archie Shepp and David Murray and bassists Reggie Workman and William Parker (in a large number of lineups). He studied drums extensively, including eastern and Caribbean styles. He frequently plays without sticks, using his hands to develop subtle commanding undertones. His tabla playing is notable for his subtlety and flair. Drake's questing nature and his interest in Caribbean percussion led to a deep involvement with reggae.

1. L'AVVENTURA DI VIVERE Part 1
2. L'AVVENTURA DI VIVERE Part 2
3. L'AVVENTURA DI VIVERE Part 3
4. L'AVVENTURA DI VIVERE PART 4
5. L'AVVENTURA DI VIVERE PART 5
6. L'AVVENTURA DI VIVERE PART 6
7. L'AVVENTURA DI VIVERE PART 7
8. L'AVVENTURA DI VIVERE PART 8
9. L'AVVENTURA DI VIVERE PART 9
10. L'AVVENTURA DI VIVERE PART 10
11. L'AVVENTURA DI VIVERE PART 11

Dan Phillips - Guitar
Hamid Drake - Percussion

Monday, August 2, 2021

William Parker - Painters Winter (2021 Aum Fidelity)

Following on the monumental Migration of Silence Into and Out of The Tone World box set earlier this year, composer, multi-instrumentalist, poet, griot, improviser and community leader William Parker will release an astonishing Pair of brand new trio albums which further expound on his profound and limitless vision: Painters Winter -&- Mayan Space Station. One of the iconic and enduring music leaders to emerge in the world over the last half century, Parker continues to raise the bar higher. As ever, AUM Fidelity is deeply honored & incredibly stoked (!) to present this work to you.

= Noting Here Again that there are strictly limited one-time-press LP editions of both new albums that we have on hand now! Please go to the AUM Fidelity site direct to grip those =

Painters Winter features the reconvened trio communion of Daniel Carter, William Parker , and Hamid Drake. Carter & Parker have been perpetual space-ways traveling companions since first meeting & immediately beginning to channel music together in early 1970s NYC. Their work together in Other Dimensions In Music with Roy Campbell & Rashid Bakr for well over two decades manifest in bountiful music for the ages. They recently featured together in similar majestic open form on the album, Seraphic Light. Here, Carter again brings the full assembly of instruments he has for decades been a master of: trumpet, alto & tenor saxophones, clarinet and flute.

Likewise, Hamid Drake is a musician’s musician; one of the most in-demand drummers in the world. He is in command of a vast lexicon of drum languages, learned and absorbed directly. His frequent flyer miles could get him a ticket to Saturn and back. Drake & Parker launched their devoted “two-man big band” partnership in 2000 and haven’t stopped since. In trio with Daniel Carter, they’ve created one previous album together, Painters Spring, released that same year.

Drake has made mention of his awe that William could pick up any new instrument and make beautiful music with it from jump. The title track features Parker on trombonium, one of those many instruments that he plays beautifully on. The track “Painted Scarf” features Parker on shakuhachi, upon which he has clearly become a master as well.

Regarding this album’s title, Parker elucidates, “It speaks to those who paint with sound, in different landscapes, to celebrate the coming of the seasons: winter spring summer and autumn. Acknowledging the entire universe of world jazz music. Discovering the undiscovered.” And from his liner notes, “The music on this album is a tribute to the flow of rhythm as melody and pulsation. Laced with the joy and the bounce, the dance and the heartbeat. Giving a nod to all the music that has ever passed through us.." 

1. Groove 77 12:21
2. Painters Winter 08:25
3. Happiness 12:36
4. Painted Scarf 10:49
5. A Curley Russell 15:33

William Parker: bass, trombonium, shakuhachi, compositions
Daniel Carter: trumpet, alto & tenor saxophones, clarinet, flute
Hamid Drake: drums

Friday, April 30, 2021

Joshua Abrams & Natural Information Society - Mandatory Reality (2021 eremite records)

Sometime in the early 2000s I went to see the band Town and Country and remember wishing that their tunes went on longer. They were clearly referencing Minimal music, but without its durational aspect. Since that band’s demise, Josh Abrams has made a series of hypnotic albums with his own group, Natural Information Society, in a different, more jazz-based direction than Town and Country. Magnetoception’s double album format allowed for an marked expansion of material; loosening some of the time restrictions let the music’s repetitions really take hold, and now with Mandatory Reality, another double album, he has made what can only be called an epic.

The pieces are structured within a properly Minimalist framework, and the track lengths are extended even more dramatically to do so. Twenty or even forty minute running times are not so unusual for exploratory jazz, where solo space tends to be left open-ended, but there are few solos on Mandatory Reality. NIS is an all-acoustic ensemble here, which reinforces the chamber music vibe; eliminating electric guitars and drum kits this time removes the hints of rock, fusion or African pop music found in prior NIS lineups.

The haunting “Memory’s Prism” starts off with guimbri and autoharp playing a simple repeated scalar figure, in the tradition of many of Don Cherry’s melodies (such guimbri patterns are the foundation of much of NIS’ music). A few sustained notes are chosen to hover above it in succession, recalling Minimalist classics like Philip Glass’ Music With Changing Parts and Frederic Rzewski’s Coming Together; as denser harmonies are added, the figure shifts but the tonal center stays ambiguous. When “Finite” starts, one can’t help but notice how similar its basic melody is to “Memory’s Prism”—it turns out that “Memory’s Prism” grew out of “Finite.” “Finite”’s tempo is slightly faster, but it introduces instruments more gradually. Following the guimbri, the horns disperse the melody, each taking a single note separately, spatialized in the stereo image. At one point they start to stretch the pitches out, sax and piano adding filigrees (the sax quoting a Coltrane solo, from “Spiritual”). 

The guimbri phrase goes through different permutations, with notes being subtly subtracted as the piece goes on; twenty minutes in, the changes become more noticeable as the guimbri figure is now half as long as it was when it started. Over the next twenty minutes the guimbri part is further broken down until it’s a single note, with the instruments playing in unison on every beat. This makes for a natural lead-in to “Shadow Conductor,” a shorter piece of fast, jabbing eighth notes, much like Julius Eastman’s four-piano works from the late 70s and somewhat similar to the beginning of “Ophlucus” from NIS’s Simultonality LP. 

The feeling, though, is more hushed than frantic. There’s a tension in the close intervals, and again some sustained tones are overlaid, as on “Memory’s Prism.” Everyone joins in on wooden flutes for “Agree,” either letting long notes twist microtonally or contributing rapidly chattering high pitches. Its ghostly ambience can also found in John Stevens/Spontaneous Music Orchestra’s ’ “Sustained Piece” or Cornelius Cardew’s The Great Learning, where massed voices carry drone tones in artless concordance.

While Minimalism has roots in modal jazz, among other things, there has been very little crossover --Stevens’ free music/drone pieces c. 1970 (as heard on For You To Share) were an early experiment, Terry Riley’s 1975 concert and radio sessions with Don Cherry in Köln & Marion Brown’s appearance on Harold Budd’s Pavilion of Dreams being rare meetings of the two worlds. Both the Shandar and India Navigation labels released albums by free jazz and Minimalist composers in the 70s, though without connecting the dots.  Mandatory Reality is a bold statement that dives headlong into the possibilities of this largely unknown lineage, a fully realized reckoning of jazz and Minimal methodologies. -- Alan Licht 

1. In Memory's Prism 23:39
2. Finite 39:50
3. Shadow Conductor 12:03
4. Agree 06:07

Abrams: guimbri, flute
Lisa Alvarado: gongs, harmonium, flute
Mikel Patrick Avery: gongs, tam-tam, flute
Ben Boye: electric autoharp, piano, flute
Hamid Drake: tabla, tar, flute
Ben Lamar Gay: cornet, flute
Nick Mazzarella: alto saxophone, flute
Jason Stein: bass clarinet, flute

recorded: Chicago, Electrical Audio, 2017
producers: Abrams & Michael Ehlers
engineer: Greg Norman

Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Irène Schweizer / Hamid Drake - Celebration (April 16, 2021 Intakt Records)

Piano-Drums Duos are the preferred playing arrangement of pianist Irène Schweizer. Her mastery of duets with important drummers of contemporary jazz are documented on numerous Intakt CDs. Han Bennink, Pierre Favre, Louis Moholo, Günter Baby Sommer, Andrew Cyrille and Joey Baron among them.

The Chicago drummer Hamid Drake, born in 1955, and Irène Schweizer, born in 1941, have performed together on numerous occasions both in Europe and Chicago. Together they have appeared on the Intakt CD "Irène Schweizer-Fred Anderson-Hamid Drake". At the 40th anniversary festival "Kontrontationen in Nickelsdorf" (Austria), Schweizer and Drake were the highlight of the event. A celebration of the moment and a declaration of love to South African songs along with their thrilling energy and rhythmic lightness produced a firework of improvisation. A parade of successful interplay.

The CD Celebration is released on the occasion of Irène Schweizer's 80th birthday (2. Juni), accompanied by a catalo- gue of the pianist's works on Intakt Records.
1. A Former Dialogue
2. Hot Sunflowers
3. The Good Life
4. Twister
5. Stringfever
6. Blues for Crelier
7. Nickelsdorf Glow
8. Celebration
9. Song for Johnny – In memory of Johnny Dyani

Irène Schweizer: Piano
Hamid Drake: Drums

Compositions by Irène Schweizer except “a Former dialog” by Schweizer/Drake. Recorded June 26, 2019 at Konfrontationen Nickelsdorf, 40th Festival for Free and Improvised Music, Jazzgallery Nickelsdorf, Austria. Recorded by ORF (Radio Österreich 1). Soundengineer: Gerhard Wald. Recording manager: Jens Jamin. Recording producer: Klaudia Zeininger. Festival organised by Hans Falb and team. Mastered by Michael Brändli at Hardstudios Winterthur, 2020. Cover art: Rosina kuhn. Graphic design: Jonas Schoder. Liner notes: Christian Broecking. Photos: Dawid Laskowski. Produced and published by Intakt Records.

Thursday, February 4, 2021

Peter Brötzmann & Maâlem Moukhtar Gania & Hamid Drake - The Catch of a Ghost (i dischi di angelica 2020)


 “3 names, 3 cultures, 3 continents, 3 different concepts of time and timing – this is the essence of this trio. This is what we have to bring together. I am rather optimistic.” Peter Brötzmann, Wuppertal, 1st April 2019


With these simple words Peter Brötzmann, one of the greatest representatives in the development of a unique European approach to free improvisation since the ‘60s, announced the unprecedented trio lined up for his return to AngelicA festival in 2019. A trio in which, to the trusted Hamid Drake – one of the best living drummers and his historic collaborator since the times of the Die Like a Dog quartet –, he added Maalem Mokhtar Gania, last representative of a legendary line of Gnawa music masters from Essaouira, son of Maalem Boubker Gania and brother of Maalem Mahmoud Gania, who died prematurely and had been the protagonist with Brötzmann and Drake of an explosive trio in Wels in 1996.
The Bologna trio documented in the CD The Catch of a Ghost thrilled and surprised the attending audience with the great energy and liveliness of the sound textures created by the dialogue among the musicians, but also with the continuous ability to (re)invent itself coupled with boundless physical force of Brötzmann’s emission, who proved that at the age of 78 that he has nothing to envy to his younger self of 50 years ago, at the beginning of his career.

1. The Catch of a Ghost 33:29
2. Almost With The Sun 11:12
3. Sound That Shimmers 13:16
4. Dip And Dive 14:13

Premiere recording


Music by Peter Brötzmann, Maâlem Moukhtar Gania, Hamid Drake

Wednesday, October 10, 2018

Mako Sica / Hamid Drake - Ronda (ASTRAL SPIRITS 2018)


Brilliant, inspired and somewhat surprising collaboration between Chicago's premier free-rock trio and the truly legendary percussionist, Hamid Drake, who has played with everyone from Don Cherry to Peter Brotzmann to Lee Perry. 

This collusion was precipitated by Matt Jackowiak, a mutual friend, who thought a merging of their sounds might make for an ecstatic explosion. This feeling became mutual after they played a show together at Constellation. The set mixed Mako Sica tunes with improvisations that took everyone to places they hadn't expected, and the trip was deemed an utter success. 

Ronda was done at two sessions, scheduled around Hamid's insanely busy work schedule. The first was at Jamdek with Douglas Malone at the board, the second was at Electrical Audio with Taylor Hales. The Electrical session allowed the players access to a host of additional instruments, so the sonic palette on “Dance with Waves” and “Emanation” is wider and somehow more cosmic than usual.

But the whole album has an extraordinary depth and width of sound. Even the great songs Mako Sica has had in its set for a while like “The Old Book,” gain whole new levels of otherness here, and the material based in quartet improvisations, like “The Wu Wei,” explores wild new territory for the band. 

Ronda (named after a town in southern Spain with a famous 18th Century bridge crossing a deep gorge) is the first span connecting the disparate musical worlds of Mako Sica and Hamid Drake. Let us hope it is but the first of many. 

Hamid Drake -- Drum Kit, Tablas, Frame Drum 
Przemyslaw Krys Drazek -- Electric Guitar, Classical Guitar, Trumpet 
Brent Fuscaldo -- Vocals, Electric Guitar, Classical Guitar, Thumb Piano, Bass, Harmonica, Gongs, Floor Tom 
Chaetan Newell -- Congas, Electric Piano, Grand Piano, Hi-Hat, Sleigh Bells, Teponaztli, Timpani, Cello, Upright Bass, Viola, Drum Kit, Native American Flute, Organ, Tambourine, Orchestral Bells 

Tracks 1-2 Recorded at Electrical Audio by Taylor Hales. Additional Recording /Mixing at Jamdek by Douglas Malone 

Tracks 3-5 Recorded and Mixed at Jamdek by Douglas Malone. Additional Recording/Mixing at Polytonal Productions by Chaetan Newell. 

All Tracks mastered by Todd Rittmann at Shy Diamond 

Front Cover Painting by Jerry Dunbar


Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Akira Sakata - Fisherman's.com (TROST RECORDS 2018)


We are happy to announce the unearthing of another gem of Japanese jazz maestro Akira Sakata, together with Laswell, Drake and Cosey!

Fisherman’s.com was released originally on CD, Japan-only, by Starlets Records in 2001 – now for the first time on vinyl and available worldwide.   Fisherman’s.com is Sakata’s ode to folksongs of the sea - an intense personal statement on the fluidity of tradition.

Alto Saxophone, Vocals, Synth – Akira Sakata
Bass – Bill Laswell
Drums, Congas – Hamid Drake
Guitar – Pete Cosey

1. Kaigara-Bushi 14:44
2. Ondo No Hunauta 09:51
3. Saitaro-Bushi 08:27
4. Wakare No Ipponsugi 14:12

Recorded and mixed at Orange Music Sound Studio, New Jersey, October 17-19, 2000. 
Mastered October 21, 2000 at Turtletone Studio 
Vinyl-remastering by Martin Siewert

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Frode Gjerstad feat. Hamid Drake and William Parker - Frode Gjerstad with Hamid Drake and William Parker (4-CD box-set) NOT TWO RECORDS 2018


Featuring Frode Gjerstad on alto sax & clarinet, William Parker on contrabass and Hamid Drake on drums & percussion. Norwegian saxist Frode Gjerstad is one of the most prolific and hard working of all European saxists, a career that stretches back some forty plus years, with upwards of 100 releases during his long tenure. Mr. Gjerstad is forever juggling several bands simultaneously: Detail (with John Stevens & Johnny Dyani), Calling Signals (with Nick Stephens), Ultralyd (Scandinavian noise/rock) and his current trio with Jon Rune Strom & Paal Nilssen-Love. Gjerstad always chooses master musicians from around the world to collaborate with: Bobby Bradford, Louis Moholo, Derek Bailey and Peter Brotzmann. One of the best groups that Mr. Gjerstad has organized is with the amazing rhythm team of William Parker and Hamid Drake. 

CD A:Ultima
1. Ultima part1:  15:29
2. Ultima part 2:  12:22
3. Ultima part 3:  18:48
4. Ultima part 4:  11:48

CD B: Remember to Forget
1. Remember: 38:11
part 1: 12:52
part 2: 11:35
part 3: 13:44
2. Forget:  29:26
part 1: 10:54
part 2: 11:10
part 3: 7:22

CD C: The Other Side
1. First cut: 17:42
2. The duo:  9:46
3. This side:  15:38
4. Williams bass:  6:48
5. The other duo:  5:58

CD D:On Reade Street
1. The street:  21:40
2. The houses:  11:17
3. The people:  23:58

​Frode Gjerstad - reeds
Hamid Drake - drums
William Parker - bass

Saturday, February 10, 2018

Aaly Trio / DKV Trio - Double or Nothing (2018)


AALY Trio (Gustafsson, Nordeson, Flaten) on left channel.
DKV Trio (Vandermark, Kessler, Drake) on right channel.
Recorded September 23, 1999 at Airwave Studios, Chicago.

Released by Okka Disk, 2002

1. Left to Right (for Henry Grimes) 13:17
2. Angels 21:11
3. Awake Nu 17:07

Mats Gustafsson - Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone
Ken Vandermark - Clarinet, Bass Clarinet, Tenor Saxophone
Ingebrigt Håker Flaten, Kent Kessler - Double Bass
Hamid Drake, Kjell Nordeson - drums

Tuesday, December 19, 2017

DKV Trio (Hamid Drake / Kent Kessler / Ken Vandermark) - Latitutde 41.88 (NOT TWO RECORDS 2017)



The DKV Trio is one of the most exciting ensembles working in contemporary improvised music. Featuring Hamid Drake (drums), Kent Kessler (bass), and Ken Vandermark, the band has been active since the mid 1990s and has released eleven recordings, including their most recent album, which came out in the autumn of 2016: Collider (that features the trio paired with the Scandinavian group, The Thing).

Their 2014 five CD box set, Sound in Motion in Sound, was reviewed by the Free Jazz Collective as follows, “They are tighter, more explosive, and ingenious than ever. Imagine every DKV Trio’s signature element coming together in a remarkably dazzling, fiery display of musical prowess. There’s an almost palpable quality to the way that the musicians meld their ideas and approaches together. There’s groove propelled by Drake’s funky, loose drumming, there’s melody in the bass lines, there’s dissonance and conflict in Vandermark’s fluid, mercurial playing.

This is a great recording by an unmistakable, intense group of musicians with a sound and feeling of their own. That much is clear now. I would even dare to call this album their best to date. Inspired, full of energy, harmonically, rhythmically, and even melodically rich, capable of wonderfully recreating the joy of listening to DKV Trio live.” 5 stars

2017 promises to be an exceptional year for the band: they will be releasing a new album on the label Not Two, have concerts scheduled in Canada during June, and will tour in Europe with Joe McPhee as a guest for the first time in their career.

01. Faster Than It Would Be (Hamid Drake, Kent Kessler, Ken Vandermark) 20:25
02. 20th Century Myth (Hamid Drake, Kent Kessler, Ken Vandermark) 17:33
03. Uncontrolled Writer (Hamid Drake, Kent Kessler, Ken Vandermark) 21:56

Ken Vandermark: reeds

Kent Kessler: bass

Hamid Drake: drums

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Hamid Drake & Ned Rothenberg - Full Circle (Live in Łódź) FUNDACJA SLUCHAJ 2017



Two great musicians. Two musical Words. First time on CD. Full Circle – new live CD from legendary drummer Hamid Drake and one of the most important American improviser Ned Rothengerg.

1. Beams Full Dazzling 24:33 
2. Tupuri Gifts 15:44 
3. Lotus Blooming in the Heart 11:29 
4. Full Circle 15:05 
5. Amazing Grace 06:10


NED ROTHENBERG clarinet, alto saxophone, shakuhachi
HAMID DRAKE drums, frame drum, vocal

Special Thanks to Michal RUPNIEWSKI, Paweł SOKOŁOWSKI, Anna JOACHIMIAK 
and Tomasz WOLSKI for organizing this concert. 
Thanks for Julia and Justyna KOBIERZYCKIE and Darek ZBRÓG. 
Also a big shout out to Vanessa ROGOWSKA and Norah MCGETTIGAN for inspiring Amazing Grace. 
Thanks to the great audience there in Lodz! 
Recorded live at CIĄGOTY I TĘSKNOTY, Lodz Poland, July 5th, 2016
Recording Engineer Kamil BOBRUKIEWICZ | Mixed and edited by Ned Rothenberg 
All music by Hamid DRAKE (SMILING FORHEAD MUSIC, BMI) and Ned ROTHENBERG (THENRO MUSIC, ASCAP) 
except ‘Lotus Blooming in the Heart’ by Hamid DRAKE and ‘Amazing Grace’ (traditional) 
Photo: Konrad ŻELAZO 
Produced by Ned ROTHENBERG and Maciej KARŁOWSKI 
Executive producer: Maciej KARŁOWSKI 
Cover design: Małgorzata LIPIŃSKA


Friday, November 4, 2016

Mats Gustafsson & Hamid Drake - For Don Cherry (OKKA DISK 2016)



Rhythmic virtuoso Hamid Drake and reeds innovator Mats Gustafsson deliver a jaw-dropping and all-too-brief set recorded in Chicago on Oct. 19, 1995, the day of Don Cherry’s death. 

One of the few live records to make this listener earnestly wish she’d been in attendance, Drake and Gustafsson’s meeting is a perfect example of the phenomenal synergy possible between two musicians. The two in question are an ideal match; both temper the muscularity of their playing with sensitivity and musical sophistication. Neither artist allows the other the option of sitting on his heels at any point; this recording is challenging, intense, and enjoyable from start to finish.

Plus, it seems like they’re having fun; have a listen to the frenetic, playful second piece, wherein Gustafsson presumably forgoes his saxophones for a bit to yelp and whoop in response to Drake’s inspired djembe playing. Gustafsson, frequently touted as a "rising star" of European jazz, is in my opinion rarely matched among powerhouse reedsmen in creativity. Meanwhile, the tireless and infallible Drake delievers one of the more visceral and thrilling percussion solos to make it to records. This is improvisation, and it rocks, to boot; my favorite live record of the year. Only 600 copies entered the world, so you know what that means.

- Susie Jae, ON AIR magazine, WKCR 89.9 FM (New York)


01. 1 04:53
02. 2 06:27
03. 3 17:30
04. 4 11:09


Record Label: Okka Disk 
Recorded at Urbis Orbis, Chicago, IL, October 19, 1995

Produced by: Bruno Johnson 
Recorded by: Jim O’Rourke 
Engineered by: John McCortney/Airwave 

Cover art: William Mohline


Hamid Drake — percussion 
Mats Gustafsson — reeds