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ICP Orchestra - Aan & Uit

Aan & Uit
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Album Details: Aan & Uit

Release Date:01/01/2004
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Track List: Aan & Uit

  1. Aan & Uit (On & Off)
  2. De Sprong, O Romantiek der Hazen...
  3. Picnic: A Beautiful Day
  4. Picnic: Let's Go to the River
  5. Picnic: And Have a Picnic
  6. Picnic: Play Some Badminton
  7. Picnic: Let's Go Home Before
  8. Picnic: The Sparrows Start Wavin...
  9. Tijd Voor de Quadrille (It's Tim...
  1. Barbaric
  2. Back to Lippiza
  3. Va-Et-Vient
  4. Ever Never
  5. Waar Bleef Je? (Where Did You St...
  6. Tuinhek (Garden Fence)
  7. Opa (Grandfather)
  8. Let's Climb a Hill
  9. Aan & Uit (On & Off)

Pro Reviews: Aan & Uit

  • All Music Guide

    Those fortunate to have witnessed a performance by pianist Misha Mengelberg's ICP Orchestra on a night when their beautifully ramshackle conception comes together and pulls apart in perfect disharmony know there is no finer live jazz outfit on the planet. The experience at its best involves all the senses not just the ears as unpredictable set lists and improvisations draw from the languages of swing, bop, free jazz, and classical music. Scores are shuffled around on music stands; hand signals trigger unexpected escapades by the entire band, various subunits, or soloists; bandmembers wander on and offstage. How to capture such a thing in recorded form? While ICP recordings such as Bospaadje Konijnehol I and II, Jubilee Varia, and Oh, My Dog have much to recommend them and belong in the collection of any forwardthinking jazz listener, they are no match for the living, breathing ensemble spread out on a stage in real time. Pieced together from three nights of recording at Amsterdam's B...IMhuis in late 2003 and released in 2004 on the ICP label, Aan Uit (On Off) can't compare to "being there" either, but it is also one of the ensemble's most wonderfully diverting, entertaining, and even beautiful albums. Regardless of whether you have been to an ICP show, the consistently highcaliber musicianship and the integration of sometimes astoundingly diverse musical forms make this quite well suited for experiencing through the necessarily limited medium of a compact disc. Mengelberg's multitrack "Picnic" moves unpredictably yet effortlessly through its various episodes and dialogues incorporating elements of free jazz, structured improvisation, brass band, chamber music, and finally hepcat swing; the perception of flow and momentum is assisted by the linked titles within the suite, which taken together read "A beautiful day...Let's go the river...And have a Picnic...Play some badminton...Let's go home before...The sparrows start waving their pyjamas." Meanwhile, Thomas Heberer's swinging polystylistic "Let's Climb a Hill," which appears later in the disc and features a hot trumpet solo from the composer, suggests a return to the "Picnic" and serves as a further unifying statement. The resolutionfree "Aan Uit" chamber music intro and outro nicely bookend the disc; these are the types of appealing Mengelberg miniatures that can get lost (as in "Een Gewelfde Rugleuning" [A Curved Backrest] in his "De Purperen Sofa" [The Purple Sofa] suite on Bospaadje Konijnehol I) when buried deeply between mad freeblowing segments. On a piece like "Opa," with a subdued "Taps"like trumpet call sounded over extended phased notes from reeds and strings, Mengelberg not just a crazy jazz cat on the lookout for peculiar juxtapositions enters the same composing league as Louis Andriessen. The delicately measured and then jaunty "Tijd Voor de Quadrille" might even have some listeners thinking of Michael Nyman's modern neoclassicist approaches to soundtrack music such as Peter Greenaway's The Draughtsman's Contract which also suggests further comparison to Greenaway collaborator Andriessen (proposed new soundtrack title: M Is for Man, Music, Mengelberg). Even "VaetVient" a threeway improvisation involving Ab Baars, Mary Oliver, and Tobias Delius on clarinet, viol, and tenor often seems inspired by classical stylings and technique rather than jazz, although a screaming, overblown crescendo liable to shatter your windows appears at one point. This is still an ICP disc, after all, and as such is a jazz record poised to leap from the comfort zone, careening from the classical to the avant jazz end of the listening spectrum. Read more Less

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Biography

ICP Orchestra

The ICP, or Instant Composers Pool, Orchestra recorded relatively little, but achieved international acclaim for its sophisticated improvisations, ingenious interpretations of landmark composers such as Duke Ellington and Thelonious Monk and for the band members' extraordinary level of musicianship. The Amsterdam-based group is a blend of European improvised music, jazz... Read more