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Chris Speed - Yeah No '1997

Yeah No
ArtistChris Speed Related artists
Album name Yeah No
Country
Date 1997
GenreJazz
Play time 44:05 min
Format / Bitrate Stereo 1420 Kbps / 44.1 kHz
MP3 320 Kbps
Media CD
Size 232 MB
PriceDownload $1.95
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Tracks list

“Speed’s music is one of the freshest and most attractive newer
strains in jazz — moving, driving, blending, shaking and evapoating in
glassy plumes…And what a quartet…Speed himself flows subtly through
moods ranging from static drift to Baklan whirl…Emphatically
recommended.”

— Greg Burk, L.A. Weekly

Chris Speed’s first CD as a leader is an extension of his work with Human
Feel and Tim Berne’s Bloodcount, and reveals an alternative approach to
making jazz today. The music was conceived out of improvisation: no repertoire,
no hierarchy, just whatever the band created on its own. After transcribing
hours of these jams, Speed finally brought in his compositions: “We had an
organic and unique sound happening as well as a democratic space from which to
approach the tunes. Then I felt I could organize more specifically what I
wanted, because the band itself was the source of my compositions.” Speed
draws on contemporary classical and Balkan forms as well as jazz and
groove-based styles for his themes and rhythms. There’s a subtle,
simmering kind of freedom to much of this music but the range is wide, from
joyful splurges of free jazz (“Scribble Bliss”) to explorations of
texture (“The Dream and Memory Store”), variations on collective
improvisation (the ironically-named “Not an Option”), and folk jazz
in a crooked time zone of eleven (“Merge”). “I wanted to make
a jazz record where everyone felt free to push the boundaries beyond the typical
roles, and still sound like a collective voice; it’s pretty clear that we
all trust each other and feel comfortable enough to really improvise, which
basically is the point of all this anyway.”

Bio-wise, Chris writes: “Born in Seattle…raised on
‘classical’ music, performing on both clarinet and
piano…bitten by jazz and the tenor sax in high school…later seduced
by Eastern European ‘folk’ music…served penance in Boston at
New England Conservatory and escaped to NYC in 1992.’ He has since worked
with Anthony Braxton, John Zorn (Bar Kokhba, Tzadik), Mark Helias, Dave Douglas
(In Our Lifetime, New World, and Sanctuary, Avant), Michael Formanek (Nature of
the Beast, Enja), Orange Then Blue (While You Were Out, GM), and is currently
touring and recording with Tim Berne (Memory Select, Poisoned Minds, and
Lowlife, JMT, and Unwound, 3-CD set, Screwgun), Myra Melford (The Same River,
Twice, Gramavision), Erik Friedlander (Chimera, Avant, and The Watchman,
Tzadik), Mark Dresser, Ben Perowsky, Briggan Krauss (Good Kitty, Knitting
Factory), and the coop groups Pachora (Knitting Factory) and Human Feel (Human
Feel and Scatter, GM, Welcome to Malpesta, New World, and Speak to It,
Songlines). Chris received an NEA composition grant in 1994 for which he
composed a piece dedicated to Albert Ayler.

Cuong Vu plays/records with Dave Douglas’ Sanctuary (Avant), Bobby
Previte (Too Close to the Pole, Enja), Orange Then Blue (While You Were Out),
Andy Laster (Interpretations of Lessness, Songlines), and Mark Helias. He leads
the group Punk and the Junk in his Brain, and co-leads Saft/Vu (Ragged Jack,
Avant) with Jamie Saft.

Skuli Sverrisson has appeared on over 30 records with Icelandic artists,
including his group Pax Vobis, and with Mo Boma (formed with Carsten Tiedemann).
He tours and records with Allan Holdsworth (Hard Hat Area, Cream), and has
appeared with Leo Smith, Derek Bailey, Peter Brotzmann, and Tim Berne,
collaborated with Arto Lindsay, Towa Tei and Peter Scherer, and currently plays
with Pachora, Erik Friedlander and Gregg Bendian. He and Jim Black are on the
just-released Theo Bleckmann/Ben Monder CD No Boat (Songlines). His first solo
record (Sermonie, Extreme) features tape compositions showing his interest in
electronics and extended techniques of his instrument.

Jim Black grew up in Seattle, moved to Boston (he and Chris were founding
members of Human Feel in 1987), then to NYC in 1991. He has toured and/or
recorded widely, including with Bloodcount, Dave Douglas’s Tiny Bell Trio
(Songlines, hatART and Arabesque), Ellery Eskelin (Songlines and hatART), Ben
Monder (Songlines), Saft/Vu (Avant), Michael Formanek (Enja), Ned Rothenberg
(Moers), and Ed Schuller (Tutu). Recently he has worked with Mark Dresser, Ray
Anderson, Kenny Wheeler, Tomasz Stanko, Lee Konitz, and Dewey Redman. A founding
member of Pachora, his own quartet includes Speed, Anthony Coleman and Tony
Scherr.

Writers Choice 1997, Steve Vickery, Coda

“…a crucial newer voice doing what he does with fire, soul and a big
brain.” — Spike Taylor, Exclaim!

“With equal parts rhapsodic lyricism, compositional integrity, and
freak-jazz freedom Speed’s quartet delivers invigorating new music which
hints at the shape of jazz to come.” — Trey Hatch, The Stranger

“At the heart of Speed’s band is the near-telepathic rapport the
saxophonist shares with drummer Jim Black…Yeah No has a coherence that
many improvisationally oriented discs lack, yet each tune is a passport into a
unique sonic world. Whether playing Balkan-influenced stomps or hallucinatory
soundscapes, the musicians bring Speed’s concepts to beautiful
life…Speed’s keen grasp of structure combined with his emotional
approach to his horn makes what is often thought of as ‘difficult’
music seem simply intelligent and adventurous.” — Alexander Varty,
The Georgia Straight

“Using close phrasing and a serrated tone, Speed can project a nearly
classical restraint and precision…Yet, while the vocabulary may not be
blues based the feeling conveyed speaks in a distinctive delta blues
patois…Modern impressionist gutbucket…” — Joseph
Murphy, 5/4 Magazine

“Speed’s sound still snakes amid Vu’s trumpet, cradled in
the curvature of harmony and then crossing it like a discordant X-factor only
seconds later…But his new ensemble digs in soulfully and trades solos in
the spirit of Ornette Coleman’s early quartet and even the Baroque
romanticist jazz of Gerry Mulligan and Chet Baker…The search has long been
on for the killer next generation of jazz that will charge up the contemporary
indie/alt-rock and DJ scenes, but Yeah No points to a spot where listeners can
converge. And when they meet, they’ll be swinging their hips, or just
head-tripping through the band’s extended, harmonic tone poems and
ambient extremities.” — Andrew Bartlett, Seattle Weekly

“Speed’s music spreads and swirls like kyrilloscopic screens into
novel textures, tones, and spaces. — Fred Bouchard, CD Review

“Speed has long been making intelligent tenor sax contributions to various
NY-based groups. In both his writing and his playing he favours long, repetitive
lines, with a breathy tone and an ear open to rock and Arabic music. Cuong Vu
makes an imaginative and quirky companion…Intriguing stuff.”
— Will Montgomery, The Wire

Chris Speed, tenor saxophone, clarinet
Cuong Vu, trumpet
Skuli Sverrisson, electric bass
Jim Black, drums
All compositions by Chris Speed except 6 which is an improvisation

Tracklist:
01. Chris Speed - Scribble Bliss (4:03)
02. Chris Speed - The Dream and Memory Store (4:19)
03. Chris Speed - Merge (7:14)
04. Chris Speed - Nap Clarity (5:49)
05. Chris Speed - Planing (7:15)
06. Chris Speed - Finale (7:49)
07. Chris Speed - Not an Option (7:36)

Chris Speed


Album