The Sevens

On this CD:

1. Repulsion, for saxophone quartet
Composed by Tim Berne
with ARTE Quartet

2. Sequel Why, for guitar
Composed by Tim Berne
with Marc Ducret

3. Reversion
Composed by Tim Berne, David Torn

4. Quicksand, for soprano saxophone, saxophone quartet & guitar
Composed by Tim Berne
with Marc Ducret, Tim Berne, ARTE Quartet

5. Tonguefarmer
Composed by Tim Berne, Marc Ducret, David Torn

6. Sequel Ex, for guitar
Composed by Tim Berne
with Marc Ducret

Editorial Reviews

Product Description
The Sevens is Tim Berne’s most explicitly "compositional" statement in some time. The album’s core, a pair of through-composed movements performed by the ARTE saxophone quartet, could serve as an apotheosis of Tim Berne’s chamber writing. "Repulsion" features four melodies (or is it one melody in four voices?), variously in dialogue or in chorus. Moving through a range of tonal colors, the piece reflects both Berne’s fondness for friction and his less-celebrated sensitivity. In fact, certain sections sound almost wistful, as Berne cloaks his dissonances in subtle shadows.

In "Quicksand," the centerpiece of the album, the ARTE Quartett is joined by Berne and Marc Ducret, both of whom provide improvised commentary above and around what’s on the page. Here, in one piece, is a fulfillment of the yin-yang ethos inherent in Berne’s work, the tensile balance between composition and improvisation.

On The Sevens, the process of interpretation assumes several different shapes. First, there’s the conventional notion of improvisation on a theme. Then there’s the subtler way in which Ducret personalizes the solo miniatures "Sequel Why" and "Sequel Ex"—two fairly divergent takes of the same hauntingly pretty song. Finally, there’s the more radical manner of interpretation seen in "Reversion" and "Tonguefarmer"—both of which are the product of studio manipulation at the hands of guitarist/programmer David Torn. This last procedure, a collaborative effort, stretches the bounds of "composition" in clearly contemporary ways. "Reversion," the first of these pieces, is essentially a remix of "Repulsion," with significant modifications. "Tonguefarmer," the second of Torn’s remixes, is essentially a palimpsest consisting of successive layers of exposition.

For Berne, The Sevens, with its various interpretive assignations, was "probably the hardest one to make, of records I’ve made, in a long time." For an artist steeped in self-jurisdiction, surrendering even a portion of the product can be a terrifying prospect. Which is exactly why he did it. "Whatever the thing is that I’m least secure with, I tend to want to expose that and face it, in a way." Accordingly, The Sevens ultimately resembles neither his eighties albums nor the live recordings of the nineties—instead defining a new Tim Berne paradigm, an uncertain but surprisingly smooth continuum expressing what the composer calls "unity through contrast."

The Sevens,Tim Berne,Tim Berne,Tim / Ducret, Marc / Torn, David Berne,Tim / Torn, David Berne,ARTE Quartet,Marc Ducret,New World Records,Avant-Garde Jazz,Chamber,Chamber Music,Electronic/Avant-Garde/Minimalist Music,Electronica,Jazz,Jazz Music,Modern Composition,Modern Creative,Pop

Jazz Music:

  1. The Visibility of Thought
  2. Three Minds [Import]
  3. Tokyo 1996
  4. Traffic Jam
  5. Urban Griot
  6. Volume 6--Charlie Parker - All Bird
  7. You Talkin' to Me?!
  8. A child is born
  9. A little space
  10. After the Morning [Import]

Jazz Music

jazz music

Jazz Music

Polara

George Walker: American Virtuoso

Cool & Sparkling [Import]

Music: Time on My Hands

Forever Freestyle: 2nd Edition

Essential Collection [Import]

Gottlieb Live [Import] [Live]

High Civilization [Import]

Follow the Flock, Step in Shit [CD-single]

Dvorak: Symphonies Nos. 7-9; Smetana: The Moldau

Getz/Gilberto [Import]

Equal Interest

De Nueva Cuenta

Vicente Fernandez/El Tahur, Vol. 4

The Best of Caetano Veloso