Tony Oxley: Beaming

In brief:
"There is a clear rhythm to these pieces, but it can’t be counted in any conventional way ... it’s always there and that’s what makes what might otherwise be offputtingly abstract music so compelling"

Tony Oxley came to prominence in the late 60s with The Baptised Traveller and Four Compositions For Sextet, both of which were improbably put out by CBS. He’d worked with Derek Bailey and Gavin Bryars in Joseph Holbrooke and had served an apprenticeship in pub bands and in the Black Watch.

What distinguished him from any other drummer on the scene was his interest in amplified percussion, a feel for charged and sensitised surfaces that delivered a sound that was as haunting as it was unique.

Advertisement

Oxley has continued to explore electronics throughout his career and on this new disc he leaves the acoustic percussion to Stefan Hölker, who sounds very much like the younger Oxley. There is some indication that this material – presented as a series of “frames” – was created back in 1972, though the album notes are pretty scanty.

The music is presented in a sequence of six shimmering episodes, bookended by the two longest tracks. So carefully and coherently programmed is the electronic component that it’s hard to hear this as two voices at all. The sounds seem to emerge quite naturally from Hölker’s kit, rich overtones that loop around themselves before turning into something else, percussive attacks that almost deliquesce in the air.

It’s a remarkable performance. Oxley’s brilliance as a time drummer, often overlooked, is implicit in every sequence. The old recourse to “pulse” as opposed to strict time, doesn’t quite work here. There is a clear rhythm to these pieces, but it can’t be counted in any conventional way. Sometimes it’s accumulative; sometimes fragmented into metrical cells; but it’s always there and that’s what makes what might otherwise be offputtingly abstract music so compelling.

Hear/buy Tony Oxley: Beaming at confrontrecordings.com

Discography
Frame I-VI (49.00)
Oxley (elec, concept); Stefan Hölker (pc). Viersen, Germany, November 2019.
Confront Core 13

Latest audio reviews

Advertisement

More from this author

Advertisement

Jazz Journal articles by month

Advertisement

Mike Clark: Kosen Rufu

Veteran Headhunters drummer leads Eddie Henderson, Bill Summers and others in a varied set ranging from funk to straightahead
Advertisement

Obituary: Ellis Marsalis Jr.

Born in New Orleans on 14 November 1934, Ellis Louis Marsalis, pianist and jazz educator, died from complications of Covid-19 in his home town...
Advertisement

Helen O’Connell, one of the finest

The good news is we’re living smack dab in the heart of Centenary Central, the really good news is how many centenarians are of...
Advertisement

Un Noël de Jelly Roll Morton

Alain Gerber is a noted writer on jazz but also, to the wider French public, a highly acclaimed writer of fiction. He has already...
Advertisement

Sarah Vaughan: Live

Aged 50 at the time, 1974, Sarah Vaughan is in her vocal prime here. This release presents two television shows that were under the...
Advertisement

JJ 04/61: Bob Brookmeyer – Portrait Of The Artist

The portrait of Mr. Brookmeyer painted here with the aid of large masses of talented musicians is tedious, cliché-ridden and apathetic. His lengthy "Blues...
"There is a clear rhythm to these pieces, but it can’t be counted in any conventional way ... it’s always there and that’s what makes what might otherwise be offputtingly abstract music so compelling"Tony Oxley: Beaming