ALEX MACHACEK - "Eclectic Earwig Reviews Music and More for You!"

   

HOME PAGE, prog rock, jazz fusion, jazz rock, jazz, pysch/trance, space, electronic, ambient, essentially eclectic excellence
EER-MUSIC.com HOME PAGE

GO HOME
EER-MUSIC.com
MEET THE STAFF HERE



Bozzio Preinfalk Machacek (BPM) - Delete And Roll Next Generation Enterprises NGE 021 (2002) Total time: 63:37

ALEX 
MACHACEK

Recorded August 2001 in Austin/TX, engineered by Max Crace. Mixed and mastered April 2002 in Vienna/Austria, by Joerg Mayer and Alex Machacek. Edited and produced by Alex Machacek. The story of this unusual trio began in 1998, when master percussionist Terry Bozzio was invited to perform his "Chamber Works for Drumset, String Quartet and Woodwind Quintet" live in Vienna/Austria. Originally recorded using technology "enabling Terry to literally have an orchestra at his fingertips", the Viennese world premiere of these pieces took place on 26th August 1998 and featured live string and woodwind sections, for which two of Austria's finest musicians, Preinfalk and Machacek wrote scores. To flesh out the evening of chamber ensemble pieces, the trio of Bozzio, Preinfalk and Machacek played a couple of Machacek/Preinfalk penned trio tunes which went down pretty well. Those early versions of "Aug Um Aug", "I Rememeber Edison" and "S150" were settled somewhere between more loose, jazz oriented trio formats (Chico Hamilton's guitar/sax/drums trio from 1993 comes to mind) and formally disciplined, highly structured, Zappa-esque chamber music, with enough room for virtuoso solos by all three musicians. Plans for a trio album soon came up, but didn't materialize before summer 2001, when working schedules allowed a time window to gather at Terry Bozzio's home studio in Austin, Texas. Recorded live to harddisc (which for a couple of days was missing in transit to Austria due to the events of September 11, but fortunately resurfaced later), those recording sessions provided enough material to keep producer Alex Machacek busy with editing and minor overdubs during Fall, Winter and Spring 2001/2002. In late September 2001 the trio (adopting the moniker "BPM") played three shows in Austria, roadtesting the new material. Though their stripped-down trio concept worked overall, it proved somehow difficult to reproduce the balanced soundscape of the studio pieces in a live situation. By the time the CD Delete And Roll (the title hinting at frequent experience during the original recording sessions) was released in May, those problems were solved and BPM embarked on a highly successful two-weeks tour of central Europe, playing solid packed clubs in Austria, Germay and Switzerland. The album Delete And Roll is out and out off-mainstream, an interesting and adventurous amalgam of various musical influences and a brave statement of non-conformist creativity in general. Giving stylistical clues and pointing out to references is always dangerous business (and may even annoy the artist), however I feel it isn't totally wrong to identify elements in BPM's music, that may strongly appeal to listeners who like Zappa's rhythmically complex patterns, atmospheric guitar synth backdrops reminiscent of Nordic ECM releases and fluid legato guitar solos not overly influenced by Allan Holdsworth. Reviewer Dick Heath even mentioned a certain Canterbury/Soft Machine influence in BPM's quirkier moments, namely in Gerald Preinfalk's sax excursions, which indeed evokes a distant Elton Dean feel. As with all his recordings in recent years, Bozzio incorporates elements of his earlier experiments with drum ostinato here too, and he (together with Preinfalk) may also be responsible for occasional flirts with oriental and Eastern European ethno music ("Bulgarianish Folkdance"). Especially in guitarist and main composer Alex Machacek's case it's interesting to see his compositions shifting from the colourful and lavishly arranged jazzrock of his acclaimed 1999 album Featuring Ourselves to more sparse and angular, formally detailed tunes. Even the often mentioned Holdsworth influence in Alex Machacek's guitar playing isn't that evident here. Having always been a great admirer of the late Frank Zappa and a bonafide connoisseur of FZ's complex semi-classical work, Alex Machacek and similar interested drummer Bozzio pay tribute to FZ in the opening section of "Strafe", the main theme in "Austin Powers" (a different arrangement of this tune may end up on Alex Machacek's next solo album) and most notably on "S150", one hell of piece, pushed forward by sick unison runs and solos at breakneck speed. Gerald Preinfalk's "Invisible" displays it's true maturity on the studio recording and stands up as one of the best tunes on the album. A (possibly sequenced) bass clarinet riff accompanies Alex Machacek's soulful electric guitar solo, then gives way to Bozzio's dramatic bass drum kicks over thick guitar synth textures, making up the perfect background for a final melancholic alto solo. A jazzy version of "Auf um Aug" combines xenochronous live recordings from September 2001, with heads and sax solo from Hoechst/Austria (Sept 27) and a fierce guitar solo recorded two days later at Vienna's Porgy & Bess. For me Bozzio's greatest moments can be heard on "I Remember Edison", with an unrelentless bass drum pulse creating a thrilling tension throughout. The man's use of a vast arsenal of percussion instruments is awesome here and demonstrates how far ahead he is in this particular musical area. When the piece reaches it's climax, Terry literally attacks his kit, while Machacek's clean guitar and Preinfalk's wailing soprano sax send shivers down the listener's spine. The album's closing tune is a peaceful Bozzio duo tune, played by Alex and Gerald sans Terry. This includes fleeting hints of Canterbury music, notably the bass clarinet line over the repeated guitar motif recalls the melancholic atmosphere of "Two Rainsbows Daily" by Alan Gowen & Hugh Hopper. Here it is, BPM's Delete And Roll --- an excellent crossover album at the fringe of jazz, fusion, avant garde prog-rock and their numerous sub-genres. The CD can be ordered from Terry Bozzio's webstore at: www.terrybozzio.comand should soon be available at audiophileimports.com ~ Helmut Koch via EER-MUSIC.com request Musicians: Terry Bozzio - Drums, Percussion Gerald Preinfalk - Bass Clarinet, Alto & Soprano Saxes Alex Machacek - Electric Guitar, Guitar Synthesizer Tracks: DICHT (Machacek) STRAFE (Machacek) AUSTIN POWERS (Machacek) INVISIBLE (Preinfalk) AUG UM AUG (Machacek/Preinfalk) BULGARIANISH FOLKDANCE (Bozzio) I REMEMBER EDISON (Machacek/Preinfalk) S150 (Machacek) WHAT SHE NEVER HEARD (Bozzio) Listen to samples & Buy CDs/DVDs here


Mc Hacek: Featuring Ourselves (CD, 50:32); Next Generation Enterprises, NGE 001, 1999 E-mail: sumitra@netway.at Cyberhome: "under construction"?? Think Ed Mann, think Zappa, think vibes, think Holdsworth and Henderson and especially so -- please think pure zany fusion. Alex Machacek is guitars/programming, Tibor Kövesdi is bass/keys, Flip Philipp is awesome vibes/percussion and Harri Ganglberger make one seriously talented Austrian jazz fusion band. I hear Dave Samuels' Gallery days and Ed Mann's superb Get Up release. Things are always surprising here with violin, viola, and cello swooning in on "Liebe, Jazz Und Übermut". They even acknowledge this track sounding like an Allan Holdsworth piece on the liner notes but to me it has its own significant character fully apart. Machacek is one firmly talented guitarist, no doubts here. He has his own style even if he echoes Henderson and Holdsworth. Riffs are riffs. For in-your-face Zappa, hear "Zapzarapp". It is one of my fav tracks as it flows in fits and starts then mellows in a ballad format at times like an old Bruford piece. Philipp's vibe unison runs with Machacek's fleeting melody lines was as good if not better than those sax/guitar tricks on Stern's releases or even Gong's unison vibes/axe runs with Holdsworth way back when . . . A solo bass break nicely pulls this piece out into more room for Machacek to squeal harmonics-laden wailings for the outro. To show off all this band's syncopated bells and whistles you must experience, "Donna Lee -- Easy Viennese Version". This reminded me of game show jingles re-written for fusion keeping in mind the whirlwind effects of a manic Magma intro. Truly whacked!! I luv'd it. "Intro 2 7" leads us very Allan Holdsworthic right into "Allandig" which seems a tribute to Holdsworth. It is an 8:53 mellow flowing piece that builds into room for Machacek to do the butterfly-kiss, light-fingered touch, and then open it up for extended jams in fusion heaven with angelic vibes countering his axe's tortured screams and bluesy-rocked fusion runs. The flurry of notes here is wonderfully placed and without any excess. The bassist does an excellent job on piano on this great cut. They outro with a tight drum solo. "Bänderriss" was a perfect blend of Zappa meets Tribal Tech. Hunh? Yep. It worked. It demonstrated just how much fine jazz riffage Machacek can pull out of his sleeve. Bass solo is just right. Compositions shift and flow and this group just breathe the change-ups unfalteringly. A joy to experience. Class stuff here. Last two tracks were free-form improv, avant garde excursions that reminded me of when Tribal Tech just gets weird and whankish. They did little to help this release. In spite of the anti-climax in these last two cuts, I highly recommend this release for superb fusion of Austria. ~ John W. Patterson

EER-MUSIC.com TOP PICKS 



GO TO PREVIOUS PAGE

GO BACK


RETURN TO:



If you are seeking out-of-print and hard-to-find CDs . . .
try my new eBay page where I post CD finds for sale.
Rare CDs at eBay
"Jazz Fusion Guy" @ eBay page


ALL YOUR CDS ARE BELONG TO US.
Observe how the word
wheel reverses direction
if you try and read words.

EER-MUSIC.com HOME PAGE