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Misha Mengelberg - Misha Mengelberg

Misha Mengelberg
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Album Details: Misha Mengelberg

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Track List: Misha Mengelberg

  1. Viva Angelica
  2. Sulla Strada: I. Va Avanti/II. A...
  1. Concerto Per Sassofono E Orchest...
  2. Salta, Oh il Romanticismo Della ...

Pro Reviews: Misha Mengelberg

  • All Music Guide

    Recorded live at Bologna's Angelica Festival in May 1996, this disc presents an opportunity to appreciate Misha Mengelberg as both pianist (in two typical incarnations: one, an extended improvisation, the other one of his charmingly angular jazz compositions) and composer (the orchestral piece "Sulla Strada" and the saxophone concerto. "Viva Angelica" is one of Misha's rambling halfhour solo improvisations (similar in length and format to the two released on "Mix" on his ICP label), in which the pianist investigates everything from Feldmanesque clusters to quasibaroque polyphony. Mengelberg is a bona fide Professor of Harmony and Counterpoint in Amsterdam, and knows full well what he's doing, but takes impish delight in bending the rules of voiceleading, with quietly anarchic results. The closing ballad, whose title translates as "Romantic Leap of Hares", is Misha at his most delightfully Monkish. "Sulla Strada" written back in 1973 and originally entitled "Onderweg": all of Mengelber...g's Dutch titles have here been translated into Italian is a sixmovement suite that nods affectionately at Satie, Stravinsky and Nino Rota, but its additional unconventional percussion and fondness for getting stuck in a rut (Mengelberg might be the only composer and improviser who actively courts boredom) are positively Dadaistic. The "Concerto for Saxophone and Orchestra", dating from 1982, starts out in the same vein, alternating banal, directionless melody with Ligetilike clusters until what can only be described as a loud farting noise ushers in the trumpets, who repeat their annoying little fanfare long enough for you to begin seriously questioning the composer's sanity. The third movement starts out like a Haydn slow movement, but you know things are going to go off the rails at some point (they do, when saxophonist Ed Boogaard suddenly becomes Anthony Braxton). There's even a cadenza, which ends up stuck on a single note for over two minutes (an exercise in Schoenbergian klangfarbenmelodie, or a nose thumbed at Giacinto Scelsi?), by which time the fauxclassical point of departure has disappeared without a trace. The somewhat melancholy finale leaves more questions hanging in the air of a musical nature, of course; of Misha Mengelberg's originality and talent there can be no doubt. - Dan Warburton, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Misha Mengelberg

Acclaimed pianist Misha Mengelberg is the respected leader of the Dutch ensemble ICP Orchestra, yet is equally known for his integral role in the development of the jazz-influenced creative music that sprang up in the Netherlands starting around the 1960s. Most often found in lineups with drummer Han Bennink, Mengelberg has been mixing composition and improvisation sinc... Read more