Freedom in Fragments
Freedom in Fragments | ||||
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Studio album by Fred Frith | ||||
Released | 2002 (2002) | |||
Recorded | Feb 1999 – Jan 2000 | |||
Studio | Mr. Toad's, San Francisco | |||
Genre |
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Length | 48:21 | |||
Label | Tzadik (US) | |||
Fred Frith chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
Pitchfork Media | 8.3/10[2] |
Freedom in Fragments is a studio album by English guitarist, composer and improvisor Fred Frith. It was composed by Frith in 1993 as "a suite of 23 pieces for saxophone quartet",[3] and was performed by the Rova Saxophone Quartet between February 1999 and January 2000 in San Francisco. The album was released on Tzadik Records' Composer Series in 2002. Frith does not perform on this album.
The Freedom in Fragments suite was also recorded in January 2008 by the ARTE Quartett, and released by Intakt Records (Switzerland) in January 2009 on a CD entitled The Big Picture by Fred Frith and ARTE Quartett.[4] One of the tracks from the suite, "Freedom Is Your Friends II" was performed by the Fred Frith Guitar Quartet on their 1997 album Ayaya Moses.
Background
Freedom in Fragments was commissioned by the San Francisco-based Rova Saxophone Quartet and was composed by Frith specifically for them while he was living at Big Sur, California. He wrote it as a suite of 23 short pieces, or "stories", that can be played as a whole, or in part, and in any given sequence. Frith wanted a composition "which could reach their narrative potential by a force of accumulation ... small stories that, when heard together, become big stories."[5]
Frith also composed the suite in a way that the music could be improvised: "The determining factor was the understanding that Rova wanted material which they could transform through improvisation. Most of the stories, therefore, involve some question about what might constitute musical freedom."[5] One reviewer of the album stated that "[t]he suite's greatest strength is the way it lets Rova crawl around their instruments, from the melodic ballads to noisy skronk."[2]
The "story" sequence performed here by Rova was created by Frith, although it is just one configuration of the work, and only 16 of the 23 pieces appear on the album. The entire work was dedicated to the memory of Charles Mingus, with certain pieces inspired by Frank Zappa, Jimmy Giuffre and Ikue Mori.
Track listing
All tracks written by Fred Frith.
- "Freedom Is Your Friends" / "Some Assembly Required" – 3:42
- "Advertising" – 0:17
- "Song and Dance" – 4:05
- "Void Where Prohibited" / "The Up and Up" – 4:50
- "Boyan's Problem" – 3:26
- "Ikue's Song" – 1:00
- "T Square Park Lark (for Frank Zappa)" – 9:15
- "Significant Restrictions Apply" – 1:17
- "Hey René" – 0:17
- "Chained to the Skyway" – 5:51
- "Batteries Not Included" / " Nostalgia" – 3:16
- "Water Under the Bridge (for Jimmy Giuffre)" – 5:05
- "Freedom Is Your Friends II" – 6:00
Personnel
- Rova Saxophone Quartet
- Bruce Ackley – soprano saxophone
- Steve Adams – alto saxophone
- Jon Raskin – baritone saxophone
- Larry Ochs – tenor saxophone, sopranino saxophone
Sound and artwork
- Recorded at Mr. Toad's, San Francisco, February 1999 – January 2000
- Mixed by Jeff Byrd and Larry Ochs
- Cover artwork by Heike Liss
References
- ^ "Freedom in Fragments". AllMusic.com. Retrieved 20 June 2011.
- ^ a b Dahlen, Chris. "Fred Frith, Freedom in Fragments". Pitchfork. Retrieved 21 December 2019.
- ^ Frith, Fred. "Fred Frith compositions". Fred Frith homepage. Archived from the original on 12 March 2011. Retrieved 26 February 2007.
- ^ "Fred Frith and ARTE Quartett". Intakt Records. Retrieved 4 February 2009.
- ^ a b Frith, Fred. Freedom in Fragments (Tzadik Records, 2002). CD booklet.
- v
- t
- e
- Henry Cow
- Art Bears
- Massacre
- Skeleton Crew
- Keep the Dog
- Cosa Brava
- Fred Frith Trio
- Henry Now
- The Orckestra
- Duck and Cover
- French Frith Kaiser Thompson
- Death Ambient
- Fred Frith Guitar Quartet
- Maybe Monday
- Aksak Maboul
- Material
- Naked City
- Guitar Solos
- Gravity
- Speechless
- Cheap at Half the Price
- Quartets
- Clearing
- Prints
- Eleventh Hour
- To Sail, to Sail
- Clearing Customs
- Guitar Solos / Fifty
Music for Dance |
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Music for Film |
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Composer only |
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- Live in Japan
- Stone, Brick, Glass, Wood, Wire
- Impur II
- Storytelling
- All Is Always Now – Live at The Stone
- Woodwork
Composer only |
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- With Friends Like These (with Henry Kaiser)
- Voice of America (with Bob Ostertag and Phil Minton)
- Live in Prague and Washington (with Chris Cutler)
- French Gigs (with Lol Coxhill)
- Who Needs Enemies? (with Henry Kaiser)
- Nous Autres (with René Lussier)
- Attention Span (with Bob Ostertag and John Zorn)
- Dropera (with Ferdinand Richard)
- Live Improvisations (with Tim Hodgkinson)
- Helter Skelter (with François-Michel Pesenti)
- Live in Trondheim, Berlin & Limoges, Vol. 2 (with Chris Cutler)
- The Art of Memory (with John Zorn)
- Traffic Continues (with Ensemble Modern)
- 2 Gentlemen in Verona (with Chris Cutler)
- Dalaba Frith Glick Rieman Kihlstedt (with Lesli Dalaba, Eric Glick Rieman and Carla Kihlstedt)
- What Leave Behind (with Toychestra)
- 50th Birthday Celebration Volume 5 (with John Zorn)
- The Compass, Log and Lead (with Carla Kihlstedt and Stevie Wishart)
- Duo (Victoriaville) 2005 (with Anthony Braxton)
- Ironic Universe (with Janet Feder)
- The Stone: Issue Two (with Chris Cutler)
- The Sugar Factory (with Evelyn Glennie)
- The Art of Memory II (with John Zorn)
- Still Urban (with ARTE Quartett)
- The Big Picture (with ARTE Quartett)
- Late Works (with John Zorn)
- Angels on the Edge of Time (with Lindsay Cooper, Gianni Gebbia and Lars Hollmer)
- Cut Up the Border (with Nicolas Humbert and Marc Parisotto)
- Laying Demons to Rest (with Susana Santos Silva)
Compilations |
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- Category