Label: Columbia Records (Austria), 493342 2
Style: Free Jazz, Avant-garde
Country: Lydden, Kent, England (28 January 1945)
Time: 47:01
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 258 Mb
In
the glorious machine-powered future, we can look forward to AI-created
music conceived “in the style of Robert Wyatt” and nod approvingly as a
jumble of drums, horns and piano come tumbling from our computer
speakers. In the drug-fueled past, of course, we had to make due with
the electrical connections contained in our own craniums. Metal or soft
machine is splitting hairs, you may say, and I (with none of my own to
split) might argue otherwise, but we are the true author of neither.
Music like this exists because it must, because the rules of chaos
dictate that even clouds will occasionally take the perfect form of a
cat, and that even whacked-out moles like Robert Wyatt will discover
genius in chaos (or that chaos will discover the genius in Robert
Wyatt).
The End of an Ear begins and ends with Wyatt’s bizarre
interpretation of Gil Evans’ Las Vegas Tango. Wyatt largely replaces the
horns with gibberish, creating a strange tapestry of sound that comes
surprisingly close to the original while at the same time seeming
nothing like it. The remaining “songs” feature the same
instrumentation—drums, horns, keyboards, bass, voice—that take Wyatt’s
dadaism to new heights (depths?). Frank Zappa made music like this, only
he made it on purpose. Wyatt is less rigid, though perhaps no less
intentional. Sometimes, The End of an Ear sounds like music. To Saintly
Bridget is alien space jazz. To Carla Marsha and Caroline is
simultaneously melodic and oddly disquieting. To Caravan and Brother Jim
starts out relatively normal before becoming enveloped in cryptic
cacophony. I’m not sure what Columbia thought they had signed on for
with this album, but that they didn’t sign up for a sequel probably says
a lot. Wyatt’s first solo album has all the earmarks of a contract
breaker. More likely, he was letting off steam as Soft Machine devolved
into a “normal” jazz fusion band (the quotes implying normal relative to
the strange world of Soft Machine). If you’re into Zappa’s stranger
experiments or just enjoy listening to a Dadaist drummer thumb his nose
at the world for forty minutes, The End of an Ear could be the beginning
of a beautiful relationship. It’s not for everyone, and possibly not
for anyone (despite its dedications), but in a world where art can now
be condensed into a set of algorithms, it’s refreshing to hear someone
making music while breaking so many rules.
(progrography.com/robert-wyatt/review-robert-wyatt-the-end-of-an-ear-1971/)
01. Las Vegas Tango Part One (Repeat) (08:13)
02. To Mark Everywhere (02:26)
03. To Saintly Bridget (02:21)
04. To oz Alien Daevyd And Gilly (02:09)
05. To Nick Everyone (09:12)
06. To Caravan And Brother Jim (05:20)
07. To The Old World (Thank You For The Use of Your Body, Goodbye) (03:17)
08. To Carla, Marsha And Caroline (For Making Everything Beautifuller) (02:47)
09. Las Vegas Tango Part 1 (11:13)

No comments:
Post a Comment