John Tchicai's Infinitesimal Flash

John Tchicai's Infinitesimal Flash

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Though ostensibly tenor saxophonist John Tchicai's date, no doubt resulting from his well-deserved elder-statesman status, Infinitesimal Flash is a 68-minute collaborative effort through and through. Fellow saxophonist Francis Wong, bassist Adam Lane, and drummer Matt Marucci each add a strong voice and compositions, merging with Tchicai's distinctive style in a meaningful way. The combination of Wong's burly tone with Tchicai's warm clarity gives richness to the tandem sax voicings, particularly apparent on Marrucci's "T's Groove." The addition of flute on several cuts only adds to the textural variety. Many of the compositions have an engaging Ornette Coleman-like feel to them, allowing Wong and Tchicai plenty of harmonic room to explore. In fact, there's an openness to exchanging energies and ideas throughout the music that gives it buoyancy and spirit, much in keeping with Tchicai's inspiring body of work. --Wally Shoup

From Jazziz
This quartet featuring Danish-Congolese saxophonist John Tchicai and Chinese-American tenor saxophonist Francis Wong works at the cross- roads of Asian-American and African-American jazz, where some of the most provocative American music is happening today. The tunes - split among Wong's Chinese-influenced originals, Tchicai's African-flavored tunes, and musical abstractions accompanying metaphysical poetry - tackle big cultural and spiritual issues, but they dance and swing, too.

The broad reach of the music offers plenty of opportunities for cross-pollination of ideas, a variety of rhythmic approaches, and democratic music making in which everyone contributes equally. Tchicai and Wong are well-matched, with just enough in common to work naturally together and enough individual interests to provide contrast. Tchicai, a veteran of the '60s New York avant garde who is enjoying a resurgence of interest in the states, builds solos in small increments, starting from short melodic kernels. On "Kippiology" and "Melvin Truss," his strangely logical constructions with their speechlike phrasing, sound eerily like the human voice.

Wong plays with a strong, clear tone and favors longer lines with more complex contours than the stark outlines of Tchicai. On tunes like "T's Groove" and "The Boat Is Ready," he works with the underlying beat or cross cuts against it in beautifully paced solos that build to explosive climaxes. Their complementary styles blend well in fluid, interlocking collective improvisations on "Persistence" and "Alisha." Bassist Adam Lane and drummer Mat Marucci are relaxed and quick-witted; they tackle the grooves and vamps in Tchicai's compositions and the more spacious abstractions of the word-and-music pieces with equal relish, and help the music flow wherever it needs to. This is a small group with large ambitions, and they make music for mind and body alike.

--- Ed Hazell, JAZZIZ Magazine Copyright © 2000, Milor Entertainment, Inc.

John Tchicai's Infinitesimal Flash,John Tchicai,Buzz (Allegro),Avant-Garde Jazz,Free Jazz,Jazz,Jazz Music,Pop

Jazz Music:

  1. Junaokissei
  2. Lazy Afternoon
  3. License To Play
  4. Like Young
  5. Live at Birdland Neuberg [Live]
  6. Live at the Birdland [Import]
  7. Live Concert: Humboldt State, 1959 [Live]
  8. Live [Live]
  9. Manhattan Serenade
  10. Menza Lines [Live]

Jazz Music

jazz music

Jazz Music

Cool V.3 [Import]

Ciaikovsky & Brahms: Concerti per Violino

In His Premier American Recording

Music: Bach (arr. Ton Koopman): St. Mark Passion

Impact Worship Band

For My Thugz [Explicit Lyrics]

Heaven

Healing Sounds of AnaMata: Cosmic Feminine Energy

Folklore et Musique Gypsie [Import]

Eric Satie Piano Works [Import]

Hands Down [Import]

G-Fire II [Enhanced]

Fred Ones' Phobia Of Doors: A Collection Of Short Stories [Explicit Lyrics]

What's In That Bag

World's Greatest Jazz Concert #1