The Squid's Ear Magazine


Lotus Crash (Marco von Orelli / Tommy Meier / Luca Sisera / Sheldon Suter): First Visit (ezz-thetics by Hat Hut Records Ltd)

Swiss quartet Lotus Crash — trumpeter Marco von Orelli, saxophonist Tommy Meier, bassist Luca Sisera, and drummer Sheldon Suter — continue their compelling blend of individuality and unity, through refined simplicity that draws on jazz roots while evoking the spirit of Ornette Coleman and Don Cherry in dynamic interplay that rewards repeated and careful listening.
 

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Personnel:



Marco von Orelli-trumpet

Tommy Meier-tenor saxophone, bass clarinet

Luca Sisera-double bass

Sheldon Suter-drums


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Includes two b&w postcards.

UPC: 752156710820

Label: ezz-thetics by Hat Hut Records Ltd
Catalog ID: ezz-thetics 108
Squidco Product Code: 35494

Format: CD
Condition: New
Released: 2024
Country: Switzerland
Packaging: Cardboard Gatefold
Recorded September 30, 2023 at the Sotto Il Mare Studio, Povegliano Veronese, by Raffaele Stefani; Mastering by Michael Brändli, Hardstudios AG.

Descriptions, Reviews, &c.

"Ezra Pound said that all criticism was comparison. Ezra Pound said lots of other unhelpful things, but this one, at least, can be quoted safely, whether one agrees or not. His point was that to make a helpful judgement about a poem (his speciality) or piece of music or painting, one somehow had to place it within a long line of prior and similar work. One also owed it to thve reader or listener to offer a clue as to what might be expected.

Critics know very well that this is the case, and the more self-aware try to avoid falling into certain clichéd comparisons. Presented with an album of tenor saxophone and drums, it will take a superhuman effort not to mention Trane and Ali and Interstellar Space. Piano, guitar and bass? There's a little more choice, but one or more of Nat Cole, Ahmad Jamal or Oscar Peterson is likely to figure in the published notice. Perhaps most egregious of all is one now almost as common. Encounter a group consisting of trumpet, sax, bass and drums, conspicuously no orthodox harmony instrument, and you are liable to run into an early reference to the great Ornette Coleman - Don Cherry quartet of the late 1950s, arguably one of the most influential line-ups in modern jazz.

A nicely disingenuous way to say that you are holding just such a recording and group at this moment. For here are Marco von Orelli, Tommy Meier, Luca Sisera and Sheldon Suter, making a return appearance, and even with the gentle comparative leverage provided by a previous album - is this one similar? the same? radically different? - we have to find something to say about it. If Pound is to be believed that means finding a logical comparison, and that leads us inexorably to Coleman and Cherry, whether we resist it or not.

Sometimes it's more graceful to just bend and go with the inevitable. This recording, and especially something like the wonderful "Before And The Ghost Dance", reminds me of the Coleman-Cherry group. But how so? Not surely just because the instrumentation is so similar? Mercifully, it's more than that. The welcome emergence of Lotus Crash has interesting and wider parallels with what was happening in jazz at the end of the 1950s. Most art forms tend to oscillate between periods of what can casually be called primitivism and what on the surface looks like high sophistication, of technique, content and presentation. Famously, punk came along to sweep away the accumulated pretensions - vast keyboard arrays, Persian carpets, triple-decker fantasy concept albums - of "prog rock". Bebop had earlier come along to suggest a different path to the increasingly corporatized sound of swing, and Ornette Coleman came along to ask serious questions of the generic dullness and deadness of a great deal of so-called hard bop.

Are Lotus Crash doing the same? These men are too sophisticated, as musicians and thinkers, to be labelled primitives. But they do what all radical innovators do and reach back, not to the last or the last-but-one stylistic fashion, but to the roots of jazz itself. In a world of conservatory-trained jazz musicians, with careers meticulously planned (some even have MBAs!) and their music carefully rationalised in an effort to anticipate and second-guess the eventual reviews, one starts to feel as if the music scene has turned into a vast IKEA: accessible, affordable, eternally unsurprising, consumable in bulk.

Lotus Crash overturn all that. They play with a radical simplicity that feels crafted rather than mass-produced. These few thoughts for the liner have been delayed quite simply by the number of times I have listened to these tracks, not because they are puzzling or so obscure that they require multiple auditions, but simply because what the band does is as refreshing as seltzer after a cloying meal. We listen to them - and I guarantee you will - with frequent pleasure in the same way that we turn to Parker, to Mozart, even, and to Ornette Coleman and Don Cherry, because they clear away the plaque of predictability that threatens our aesthetic heartbeat. Every time I have listened to this music, it provides a different spin on itself, not because it is densely layered and complex, but because it deals with musical fundamentals in an engaged and humane manner. And that's the other thing about it: these guys may go out under an enigmatic group name, but they come across as personalities, very different, possibly sometimes even contentious, but absolutely united in purpose.

A final question lurks. We would now say, without much fear of contradiction, that the Coleman-Cherry quartet was "important" in the evolution of post-bop jazz. One would have to add other groups that took the same radical simplicity as a guideline. One obvious example, familiar from this same label, is Albert Ayler's work, again with Don Cherry, where the rawness of two individual voices, speaking directly from the spirit, comes across with almost frightening intensity. Or the somewhat quieter and more considered work of clarinettist John Carter with cornetist Bobby Bradford, two men almost permanently marginalised in the history of modern jazz. All of these groups drew on a similar spirit, and not incidentally on the sense of a quartet as containing shifting axes of understanding: horns together, "rhythm" instruments together, saxophone and drums, trumpet and bass; and then the full ensemble sound.

Is it possible to make similar claims for Lotus Crash? Mercifully, that is for others to decide and only at some moment in the future. What is important is that they restore the most important practice of all, that of basic listening. It's wonderful to hear great music for the first time, and greybeards deeply envy the moment when a young person hears Armstrong or Bird or Coltrane or Miles for the very first time. But here's the thing; there's an even greater pleasure in music that seems new and fresh every time you hear it. And that's what you are just about to enjoy. Be ready to make your own comparisons, but knowing that none of them will ever quite do the job!"-Brian Morton, September 2024


Includes two b&w postcards.

Artist Biographies

"Marco von Orelli was born and raised in Basel, Switzerland. He completed his musical studies at the University of Music and Theatre Winterthur Zürich (HMT) and the University of Music Basel, where he majored in trumpet and improvisation. Additional study programmes: Jazz, New Music (Neue Musik) and free improvised music. Furthermore he took study trips to Den Haag (NL) in 1997 and two years later to Vienna (A). Since 1997 Marco von Orelli occupies himself with composition. He has given Solo concerts (e.g. for the 20-year anniversary of the cultural magazine "Programmzeitung", for the "Global Landmarks Illumination Initiative" in Bern or for Basel's celebrations for being a part of Switzerland for 500 years in 2001).

Marco von Orelli has enjoyed success on stage with the street scene musical by Kurt Weill under the direction of André Bellmont, Werner Düggelin and Heinz Spoerli, as well as with acts such as the George Gruntz Workshop Big Band or with various orchestras like the basel sinfonietta, the Swiss Improvisers Orchestra, TOMMY MEIER - ROOT DOWN, musique brute or Marco von Orelli 5. He is playing in different styles and has been seen giving concerts at such established events as the Jazzfestival Willisau (CH), Jazz à Mulhouse - météo (F) or music unlimited 22 in Wels (A). In 2002 Marco von Orelli toured with the swiss Circus Monti (Music composed by Ben Jeger) and from January 2003 right to the end of 2004 he acted as live musician for the Theatre Puravida in Basel. Marco von Orelli is also known for his collaborations with artists like Flavia Ghisalberti (Butoh-Dancer), Sheldon Suter, Daniel Ott, Jan Schlegel, Christoph Baumann, Co Streiff, Frances Marie Uitti, Johan van Kreij, Béatrice Götz (miR Company), Peter Schärli, Tommy Meier, Omri Ziegele, Michel Wintsch, Christian Weber, Irène Schweizer, Paul Hubweber, Luìs Lopes, Marc Unternährer, Isa Wiss, Luca Sisera, Travassos, Carles Peris, Alex Huber, Frantz Loriot and many more!"

-Marco von Orelli Website (http://marcovonorelli.ch/about/biography/)
11/29/2024

Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.

Tommy Meier plays tenor and soprano sax, bass clarinet, percussion.

As an improviser and composer, he has been working in the areas of Jazz, Rock and African music for decades. He was a member of the band BROM, pioneers in punk jazz, free rock and industrial noise; with BROM he toured in Europe, the former GDR, Hungary and Russia. As a member of the CIRCUS THEATER FEDERLOS, the group's extensive travels have taken him to Nigeria, Benin, Ghana, Namibia and Zimbabwe, and - with KADASH - to Egypt and Central Asia; he has travelled on three European tours with Kadash & The Nile Troup and recorded with them. Additionally, Tommy Meier has played and composed in Co Streiff's Sextet; he is the leader of ROOT DOWN, a large ensemble that brings together 14 outstanding improvisers; the band combines free music and structures from New Music with African music. ROOT DOWN has played on many international festivals and has recorded three highly acclaimed CDs.

-Tommy Meier Website (https://www.tommymeier.ch/bio/)
11/29/2024

Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.

"Luca Sisera (b. 27/08/1975, Chur)

For a good 15 years, Luca Sisera has been a sought-after bassist in the Swiss jazz and improvisation scene. Musically, he likes to operate in the charged environment between composition and improvisation. He is frequently seen on stage at various festivals and jazz clubs across Europe in well over 100 concerts each year, whereby some tours and concerts have already taken him to Egypt, China and America. To date, he has been involved in over 30 audio releases, often produced in cooperation with Swiss Radio SRF 2. Most recently, Luca Sisera has also started working as a composer for his own quintet "ROOFER". As interdisciplinary projects have always interested him, Luca Sisera has also worked with authors, cabaret artists, dancers and visual artists, among others, as well as on theatre and film productions.

Collaborations:

Plays and played with: Michael Jaeger, Yves Theiler, Silvio Cadotsch, Michi Stulz, VincentMembrez, Norbert Pfammatter, Urs Leimgruber, Sheldon Suter, Dario Sisera, Franz Hellmüller, Tony Renold, Isa Wiss, Carles Peris, Axel Dörner, Tommy Meier, IrèneSchweizer, Co Streiff, Peter Landis, Greg Osby, Chris Jaeger Brown, Valentin Kessler,Manuel Mengis, Tobi Schramm, Lisette Spinnler, Alex Hendriksen, Nadja Stoller, Oli Kuster,Marco von Orelli, Russ Johnson, Philipp Schaufelberger, Kurt Rosenwinkel, Reto Senn,Dave Gisler, Marc Halbheer, Christoph Irniger, Stefan Rusconi, Christoph Baumann, Valeria Zangger, Christoph Gallio, Alex Huber, Flurin Caviezel, Patricia Draeger, Albin Brun,Georges Kazazian, Bahur Ghazi, Sheila Runa, Jacinta Candinas, Andri Perl, Lukas Mantel, Guy Bettini, Fabio Martini, Alexander von Schlippenbach, Gerry Hemingway and many more"

-Luca Sisera Website (https://lucasisera.com/biography/)
11/29/2024

Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.

Drummer Sheldon Suter, born on 22/2/1971 in Locarno, TI, Switzerland, is a member of Musique Brute, Big Bold Back Bone, Marco von Orelli 6, Jurg Wickihalder Orchestra.

-Squidco 11/29/2024

Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.


Track Listing:



1. Before And The Ghost Dance 8:50 2. Desert Bird 7:51

3. Fate 2:53

4. The Forest People 6:29

5. Marsala's Strandgut 5:47

6. Ogoni 5:56

7. She Always Takes Us Back 7:50

8. Split Master 7:47

9. Totem 5:11

Related Categories of Interest:


Hat Art
Improvised Music
Jazz
Free Improvisation
European Improvisation, Composition and Experimental Forms
Quartet Recordings
New in Improvised Music
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