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SPACES

by Doug Hammond,

supported by
Florian Arbenz
Florian Arbenz thumbnail
Florian Arbenz Jazz history! Doug & Fatah may not be too known today, but are fathers of contemporary Jazz and early influences of Steve Coleman. I had the luck to work with Muneer and to meet Doug several times. Very inspiring people and strong characters!

I'm always so impressed by Lightsey too; although best known for his work with Dexter Gordon, he proves his curiosity by keeping up with the young cats.

A great thing about Jazz: the elders inspire younger generation who take it to the next level! Favorite track: Rizz Biz.
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To my family 03:51
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Cud Bar-Rith 03:38
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Rizz Biz 04:37
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Uhren 02:27
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Murdxas 05:16
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Figit Time 02:24

about

Released in 1982, "Spaces" features alto saxophonist Steve Coleman and cellist Muneer Abdul Fataah writing with Hammond as the Doug Hammond Trio, with guests Byard Lancaster (Alto Saxophone, Flute) and Kirk Lightsey (piano).
It's an almbum full of strong, succinct statements that, according to Musician Magazine (Cliff Tinder, 1982), belie an abstract, soulful approach to free jazz. The exhilarating cello and angular horns show each player's experience and artistry while the heady, asymmetrical rhythmic concepts of Hammond and Steve Coleman add a playfulness to the dissonance. Creative, dynamic, modern, Tinder notes that "Spaces" gives any jazz master a run for their money.

THIS IS THE FIRST RE-RELEASE OF THE ORIGINAL MIX SINCE 1982
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AQUARIUM DRUNKARD Magazine
a gavrilovska
Posted on November 20, 2019

"Drummer Doug Hammond’s 1982 album Spaces was recorded on the day of Thelonious Monk’s funeral, a cosmic coincidence that meant pianist Kirk Lightsey had to pop in and out of the session to attend the proceedings. To consider it now, a psychic loop seems to connect the two events: at Crossfire Studio, Hammond and his players were recording an album showcasing the continued innovation of jazz, while at St. Peter’s Church, the public mourned the death of one of the genre’s most beloved innovators.

The ‘60s and ‘70s were heady, impressive times for creativity within jazz, and while some of the freest expressions of this unbound force would never be commercially viable, it’s also true that the decade saw shifting winds. As traditionalists took the reigns, charged expression became even less tolerated. Nevertheless, the innovation didn’t cease, as if it even could. Hammond’s Spaces is proof positive that true believers were still doing the damn thing—and not just doing the thing, but motivating some of the original innovators in the process. Case in point: the album opens with a suite, broadly called “Spaces and Things,” split up into three movements. Hammond premiered this piece at Amherst College, where one Max Roach was in attendance. After the performance, Roach exclaimed that he was inspired; it made him want to start touring again.

Little surprise that this was the case, as those tracks are furiously wonderful, buoyed on this recording by the appearance of avant-garde saxophonist/flutist Byard Lancaster, who Hammond wanted to work with not because of his avant-garde leanings, but because of his melody and lyricism, qualities which are immediately evident on the album. (His chaotic rhapsody is still there though, it’s just not the star of the show—or doesn’t need to be.) But let’s go back for a moment: as it is now decades later, and we are lucky that the current revival of interest in cult jazz figures means that some of their lesser-known recordings, of which this is one, are now seeing the light of day.

Reissued on vinyl for the first time by Manufactured Recordings, Spaces is a compelling trip with an upbeat mood that never ceases looking forward. Jazz fans will know Hammond from Reflections in the Sea of Nurnen, on which he was co-leader with David Durrah, released on Tribe, Detroit’s seminal but short-lived ‘70s black-owned jazz collective. Spaces exists in a similarly spiritual, ahead-of-its-time vein, without the trippiness of Reflections’ synths. Hammond’s drums carefully hold down the rhythm while also filling in the spaces between the freeness of the solos.

A favorite track is “Rizz Bizz,” featuring a solo acknowledged by Hammond as one of the most difficult he ever played. Hammond’s incandescent drumming ripples through the sonic environment, a beat-upon wildfire that lights up the path ahead as it simultaneously destroys that which it leaves behind, before Steve Coleman’s alto sax jumps back in to remind us that never mind the destruction, it is all creation, and it is powerful, and it is ours, and the spirit is real, and to realize it has nothing to do with thought, and don’t you forget it."

aquariumdrunkard.com/2019/11/20/doug-hammond-spaces/

credits

released February 3, 2020

Doug Hammond compositions GEMA
Published by Jodgoa Publishing Corp. ASCAP/GEMA
Steve Coleman compositions published by Goeman Pub. Co. SESAC/GEMA
Recorded at Crossfire Sudio, New York City 1982
Mixed by Doug Hammond, Peter Darmi and Steve Coleman

Produced by Doug Hammond and Charlie Robinson
Cover photograph by H. Lukas Lindenmaier

© + ℗ by Douglas Hammond Jr.
Harper Woods, Michigan

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Doug Hammond Harper Woods, Michigan

Doug Hammond is a drummer, singer, composer, producer, and coordinator. Best know as a composer for "Moves"on Charles Mingus LP,
MINGUS MOVES 1974; for the Doug Hammond Trio featuring Steve Coleman and Muneer B. Fennell 1980-82 on ground breaking LP "Spaces", D.H. Trio with Dwight Adams and Pablo Nahar LP Singing Smiles 2005; and Doug Hammond Tentet "ROSE"2011.
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