Isipingo was one of the many bands evolving out of the South-African expat scene in the UK in the 70s. Led by bassist Harry Miller, it existed in an on and off stage through most of the 70s. Isipingo only made one record during its lifetime, "Family Affair" released on the Ogun label in 1977. Fortunately, a concert in Bremen in 1975 was recorded by Radio Bremen and the Cuneiform label put out a cd of these tapes in 2006. This is to my knowledge the third recording of the band (and let's hope there's more out there).
This is a pretty rough audience recording from the 100 Club in London, but even if the sound leaves something to be desired, the music dosn't. What's here is a very lively one hour at the club, accompanied by chatter and the occasional tinkling of glasses. Three long pieces, basically, the last unfortunately cut off after eight minutes or so.
I've yet to figure out the title(s) of the first half-hour piece. It's a medley of sorts, starting off with what sounds like Clifford Thornton's work with the Jazz Composers Orchestra on "Gardens of Harlem" and then segues into (at about the 14-minute mark) a tune very much in the township style of the Blue Notes and other SA spin-offs. The second piece is "Eli's Song" which can be found on both of the official Isipingo records and the last (truncated) piece is "Family Affair", again on both of the records.
Tracks:
1. Medley - unknown/to be determined
2. Eli's Song
3. Family Affair
The line-up for this gig is:
Harry Miller - bass
Mike Osborne - alto sax
Malcolm Griffiths - trombone
Mark Charig - trumpet
Keith Tippett - piano
Louis Moholo - drums
By this time, Malcolm Griffiths had replaced Nick Evans on trombone and Mark Charig the deceased Mongezi Feza.
This is a fairly tight outfit and not as raucous and anarchic as the Brotherhood of Breath could be in full flight. While the South African influence is there, this band also has the full breadth and depth of the mainstream jazz tradition well down. Disciplined, yet free and explosive. Miller and Dyani as well has that particular rooted bass sound, "he plays that sort of bass that is felt in the pulses, throat, temples, wrists, he plays you (Brian Case from the liner notes to "Family Affair"). Rooted, yet high-flying.
Thanks to "Bernard" for seeding this one at Dime. It was posted as a tribute to Mike Osborne. And so it is, too.
I've converted the files to mp3s as I don't think flacs are going to make much difference in this case.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.divshare.com/download/2630628-ac8
Thanks very much for sharing this rare recording kinabalu. All the better for featuring Osborne and Malcolm Griffiths.
ReplyDelete"Pound for a brown" blog posted a number of Harry Miller recordings several months ago, if the links are still active.
yes, i found those last night funnily enough... scouting through some links i hadn't visited in a while. i believe the links are still active (at least one of them is!): http://tinyurl.com/32kbnx
ReplyDelete(some of the albums may be in print..?)
seems to have been the guy's last entry, certainly for the time being...
Yes, those were from the Harry Miller Collection, a small box set issued by Ogun in 1999, to mark the 25th anniversary of the label, I guess. Harry Miller was the founder of the label and it's now run by his widow, Hazel Miller. The pic I used in the header is from the front cover of the box, suitably cropped to leave out the text bits.
ReplyDeleteMany thanks for this wonderful music. This scene in this era pretty much can't be beat.
ReplyDeleten.b. link not currently usable..!
ReplyDeleteWell, there is a 50 gb limit per month on downloads on DivShare and those 50 gbs were depleted in less than two weeks! Apparently downloaders have access to the entire catalogue, including older postings to the C#9 blog, now closed. So, in order for others to get to the new postings, please don't grab everything at once (or I might start deleting some of the older postings).
ReplyDeleteMany thanks for this recording, as well as for other great music on this blog, especially from SA / British jazz musicians. I was listening to this Ispipingo concert a lot and finally recognized second piece in 1st track medley - it is Touch Hungry, later recorded for Family Affair album, but main theme (which starts nicely somewhere after 14th minute here) is played nearly at end of this tune in studio version. Great music!
ReplyDeleteplease friends, any chance for a re-up?
ReplyDeletethanks!
PLEASE please please any chance for a re-upload
ReplyDeleteNew link: MP3 @ ulozto.net
ReplyDeleteBIG THX!...
ReplyDelete