
Bx-0 No-47A (Deluxe Edition)
The birth of the Association for The Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM) in Chicago was a significant cultural event at the tail end of the 60s. As the name suggests, it was a grouping of artists who prioritized originality, and multi- instrumentalist composer Anthony Braxton was one of the most significant individuals in its ranks.
For the subsequent 50 years he would prove daringly adventurous in his concepts and performances, and B-X0 NO- 47A remains a classic title in his vast discography.
The album saw him lead a group that included fellow AACM members, trumpeter Leo Smith (before he took the name Wadada), drummer Steve McCall and violinist Leroy Jenkins, yet there was such a wide array of instruments used in the session that the small group had a big sound. Anything from chimes and logs to harmonica and darbuka, as well as the intriguingly named âsound machineâ, enabled the quartet to fashion a singular textural palette. Braxton and his colleagues were set to become pivotal figures in the avant-garde or âNew thingâ movement that had broken with the prevailing conventions of the jazz industry.
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Bx-0 No-47A (Deluxe Edition)
The birth of the Association for The Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM) in Chicago was a significant cultural event at the tail end of the 60s. As the name suggests, it was a grouping of artists who prioritized originality, and multi- instrumentalist composer Anthony Braxton was one of the most significant individuals in its ranks.
For the subsequent 50 years he would prove daringly adventurous in his concepts and performances, and B-X0 NO- 47A remains a classic title in his vast discography.
The album saw him lead a group that included fellow AACM members, trumpeter Leo Smith (before he took the name Wadada), drummer Steve McCall and violinist Leroy Jenkins, yet there was such a wide array of instruments used in the session that the small group had a big sound. Anything from chimes and logs to harmonica and darbuka, as well as the intriguingly named âsound machineâ, enabled the quartet to fashion a singular textural palette. Braxton and his colleagues were set to become pivotal figures in the avant-garde or âNew thingâ movement that had broken with the prevailing conventions of the jazz industry.
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The birth of the Association for The Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM) in Chicago was a significant cultural event at the tail end of the 60s. As the name suggests, it was a grouping of artists who prioritized originality, and multi- instrumentalist composer Anthony Braxton was one of the most significant individuals in its ranks.
For the subsequent 50 years he would prove daringly adventurous in his concepts and performances, and B-X0 NO- 47A remains a classic title in his vast discography.
The album saw him lead a group that included fellow AACM members, trumpeter Leo Smith (before he took the name Wadada), drummer Steve McCall and violinist Leroy Jenkins, yet there was such a wide array of instruments used in the session that the small group had a big sound. Anything from chimes and logs to harmonica and darbuka, as well as the intriguingly named âsound machineâ, enabled the quartet to fashion a singular textural palette. Braxton and his colleagues were set to become pivotal figures in the avant-garde or âNew thingâ movement that had broken with the prevailing conventions of the jazz industry.











