Anthony Braxton – Four Compositions (Quartet 1983)

here is the NFO file from Indietorrents

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Anthony Braxton – Four Compositions (Quartet 1983)

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Artist……………: Anthony Braxton

Album…………….: Four Compositions (Quartet 1983)

Genre…………….: Jazz

Source……………: NMR

Year……………..: 1983

Ripper……………: NMR

Codec…………….: LAME 3.99

Version…………..: MPEG 1 Layer III

Quality…………..: Extreme, (avg. bitrate: 246kbps)

Channels………….: Joint Stereo / 44100 hz

Tags……………..: , ID3 v2.3

Information……….:

Ripped by…………: NMR

Posted by…………: persona.blah on 17/07/2016

News Server……….:

News Group(s)……..:

Included………….: NFO, LOG

Covers……………: Front Back

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Tracklisting

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1. Anthony Braxton – Composition – No. 105 A [20:02]

2. Anthony Braxton – Composition – No. 69 M [07:14]

3. Anthony Braxton – Composition – No. 69 O [08:43]

4. Anthony Braxton – Composition – No 69 Q [05:23]

Playing Time………: 41:23

Total Size………..: 73.25 MB

NFO generated on…..: 17/07/2016 02:07:26

:: Generated by Music NFO Builder v1.21a – www.nfobuilder.com ::

Black Saint

BSR 0066 CD 1983

AllMusic Review by Nathan Bush [-]

Before getting to the music of this Anthony Braxton recording, the listener is confronted with a highly calculated methodology. The album bears the stark title Four Compositions (Quartet) 1983, and each song (itself merely a cataloged number) is accompanied by its own highly cryptic diagram. This sets up a struggle, whereby musical/emotional ends must be achieved through Braxton’s analytical compositional means. For this 1983 session, Braxton selected materials from his collection of notebooks to provide the focus for quartet improvisations. The resulting performances lack a sense of continuity. Composed themes are tight, awkward structures delivered by the hornmen with mechanical precision. The improvised sections that follow bear little resemblance (in structure or mood) to any point of origin, rendering irrelevant the themes themselves. What saves Four Compositions is that the musicians are willing to see the composer’s ideas through, employing every facility. Braxton gives everyone a great deal of freedom and space. John Lindberg lays down a wonderful bass solo on “Composition No. 69 M,” speaking in tongues with clustered, rumbling notes. Elsewhere he adds undercurrents of throbbing, bowed tones. George Lewis has an equally strong grasp of the trombone’s possibilities. On the vibrant theme to “No. 69 M,” he holds the rhythmic pulses from which Braxton springs forth. Elsewhere, he disguises the horn’s recognizable characteristics, opting for sheer sound. Avoiding scattered flurries of free rhythm, Gerry Hemingway dictates with spacious, careful percussion. On “Composition No. 69 Q,” he even hints at a stiff, snare-led swing. Among these musicians, Braxton is an equal, stretching from vivid, Middle Eastern-flavored clarinet lines on “No. 69 M” to grittier tenor on “No. 69 Q.” According to Braxton, the goal of Four Compositions was to select materials that would comprise a “creative and diversified” album. Yet while the musicians do seem largely free and highly expressive, the Four Compositions themselves feel unbalanced and oddly subdued. Maybe the composer’s forethought established too much structure. It seems like there is always a set of imposed elements holding them back.

All compositions by Anthony Braxton

Recorded at Barigozzi Studio in Milano, Italy on March 9 & 10, 1983

Personnel[edit]

Anthony Braxton – alto saxophone, soprano saxophone, clarinet

George Lewis – trombone

John Lindberg – bass

Gerry Hemingway – percussion