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Anthony Braxton, For Alto CD cover artwork

Anthony Braxton, For Alto

Audio CD

Disk ID: 190602

Disk length: 1h 13m 4s (8 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 1969

Label: Unknown

View all albums by Anthony Braxton...

Tracks & Durations

1. Dedicated to multi-instrumentalist Jack Gell (8a) 0:42
2. To Composer John Cage (8f) 9:30
3. To artist Murray De Pillars (8h) 4:17
4. To pianist Cecil Taylor (8a/b) 5:18
5. Dedicated to Ann and Peter Allen (8d)12:54
6. Dedicated to Susan Axelrod (8c)10:24
7. To my friend Kenny McKenny (8g)10:06
8. Dedicated to multi-instrumentalist Leroy Jenkins (8b)19:47

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Review

Originally released as a two-LP set in 1969, For Alto is 73 minutes of unaccompanied saxophone solos by a young musician issuing just his second recording under his own name. Solo saxophone was then a rarefied tradition in jazz. Coleman Hawkins had done it once in the 1940s and Sonny Rollins in the '50s. More to the point, Eric Dolphy and Jimmy Giuffre had done it a few times in the early 1960s. Braxton was being more than brash, however, and doing something very different. He was applying fresh structural concepts to sustain extended improvisations, and he was exploring John Cage and Karlheinz Stockhausen, as well as the jazz tradition, to mark a new direction in the avant-garde.

Forgoing the "energy music" school, Braxton was exploring silence, noise, and forms of serialism with an analytical, almost sculptural, approach to sound. Each piece here explores a different approach or set of materials. There's buzz-saw saxophone on "To Composer John Cage," while "To pianist Cecil Taylor" is heartfelt blues that delves back before bebop for its sources. Tracks 5 and 6 are breathy, extended improvisations, the former exploring pianissimo understatement, and the latter developing elliptical complexity, with both drawing on and redirecting the jazz-ballad tradition. The concluding piece, nearly 20 minutes long, builds dialogue from contrasts between brittle, abrasive overblowing and the merest suggestions of notes. For Alto is one of those rare works that point to new possibilities, and it's been one of the most influential recordings of the past 30 years. It remains brilliant, challenging--perhaps even daunting--music. --Stuart Broomer

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