The Octet Broadcasts 1969 and 1979 (Remastered) Alan Wakeman

Album info

Album-Release:
2020

HRA-Release:
21.08.2020

Label: Gearbox Records

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Free Jazz

Artist: Alan Wakeman

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 Dreams (Intro) 00:06
  • 2 Dreams 10:10
  • 3 Forever (Intro) 01:00
  • 4 Forever 08:09
  • 5 Merry-Go-Round (Intro) 00:53
  • 6 Merry-Go-Round 08:51
  • 7 Charles Fox Introduction 02:54
  • 8 Chaturanga 06:41
  • 9 Manhattan Variation 07:59
  • 10 Vienna 05:38
  • 11 Robatsch Defense 01:09
  • 12 Kingside Breakthrough 05:58
  • 13 Charles Fox Conclusion 00:32
  • Total Runtime 01:00:00

Info for The Octet Broadcasts 1969 and 1979 (Remastered)



“The next young generation of British jazz” has been applied many times to London’s current jazz scene, but this headline from Melody Maker was also used to describe Alan Wakeman and his band back in 1970. And if a prototype for Binker and Moses' viscerally energetic, semi-free sound is sought, you would be hard pressed to find a closer relative than the second part of climactic Disc 1 highlight 'Dreams'.

The Octet Broadcasts is made up of two BBC sessions from 1969 and 1979 respectively. Taken and mastered from the original analogue tapes by Gearbox, the album offers a snapshot of a time when British jazz was at another high, featuring such names as John Taylor, Alan Skidmore, Paul Lytton, and Art Themen, who themselves were contemporaries of and collaborated with the likes of Evan Parker, Michael Garrick, Ian Carr, and Roscoe Mitchell.

Wakeman, influenced by Duke Ellington and Charles Mingus and mentored by Mike Westbrook, was composing singular, large ensemble pieces at a time when jazz had long left the limelight and rock was in the foreground. His brand of warm, pastoral jazz, reminiscent of brass bands and traditional chorales whilst also fit to bursting with free improvisation and dramatic motifs, is representative of a magical period in British jazz which deserves to be unearthed and heard again.

"British jazz at its best" (Stuart Nicholson, Jazzwise)

"There is no-one who can touch us quite so deeply on a ballad, or raise the temperature on stage with such reckless abandon when the mood takes him." (Mike Westbrook)

Jazz Workshop 1969:

Alan Wakeman, tenor saxophone, clarinet
Alan Skidmore, tenor saxophone, flute, two gongs at once
Mike Osborne, alto saxophone, clarinet, tambourine
Paul Rutherford, trombone, small Chinese gong
Paul Nieman, trombone, small Chinese gong
John Taylor, piano, castanets
Lindsay Cooper, bass, sleigh bells
Paul Lytton, drums

Recorded at BBC Aeolian Studio 2 between 7.00 and 10.30pm on Friday 21st November 1969
Mastered by Caspar Sutton-Jones and Darrel Sheinman at Gearbox Records
Produced by Roger Eames

Jazz in Britain 1979:

Alan Wakeman, tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone
Alan Skidmore, tenor saxophone
Art Themen, tenor saxophone
Henry Lowther, trumpet
Paul Rutherford, trombone
Gordon Beck, piano
Chris Lawrence, bass
Nigel Morris, drums

Recorded at BBC Maida Vale Studio 5 between 2.30 and 6.00 pm on Wednesday 23rd May 1979
Mastered by Caspar Sutton-Jones and Darrel Sheinman at Gearbox Records
Produced by Pete Ritzema

Digitally remastered

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This album contains no booklet.

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