By Don Phipps
    Free music. Unconstrained, unlimited, uncompromised, and  uncommercial. That
    is what listeners value about the jazz music of the avant  garde. Music as
    something more than a crass buck. And on Parlour Games,  recorded
    live at The Parlour, June 16, 1991, Tim Berne and Michael Formanek gave
    attendees a true vision of freedom – music that sounds as fresh today as it
    must have 33 (quickly passing) years ago.
    Right from the get-go, Berne (on alto and baritone sax) and  Formanek (bass)
    command attention. The first number, “Beam Me Up.”  begins with both players
    racing along in  sweet unison. Then Berne’s baritone skips about as Formanek
    hurtles along with  double-triple time bass walks that explode like
    fireworks. Both musicians generate  heat without squeezing notes – Berne
    does not pinch the reed and Formanek – for  all the speed and spiky leaps he
    makes on bass – exhibits an exceptionally  light and fluid touch.
    But the music here is more than a wild romp. There are  bluesy elements –
    case in point – the oddly titled but aptly conceived “O My  Bitter Hen.”
    The music has the hallmarks  of a David Lynch soundtrack from some dark gray
    detective film noir. Berne  brings it on baritone – creating gentle rolling
    sequences – only to have the  pair suddenly emerge with sax and galloping
    bass line that would leave a  Montana stallion in the dust – before
    reverting to a walking conclusion.
    On the lighter side, there is the clownish “Quicksand,”  where Berne gently
    whines and twines above Formanek’s funky bass sequences. The  piece is
    delightful and full of fluttering nuance and lyrical abstractions. And  on
    the jaunty masterpiece “Not what you think,” Berne and Formanek create magic
    from the opening. The joyful conversations are wide open. Berne flies about
    on  alto – speeding up and down the register – while Formanek keeps the
    bottom  active with jagged syncopation and well-placed plucks. Simply said –
    this is  compositional improvisation at its best!!!
    But it is the final number, “Bass Voodoo,” that makes the  album
    unforgettable. It opens like a slithering snake, as Formanek plucks and bows
    beneath Berne’s slowly waking alto. Then Formanek’s bowing combines with
    Berne’s  zipping lines to increase the intensity. Formanek follows with a
    bass solo that  rips it – rips it good (apologies to Devo). The solo
    migrates through various  speeds, fast-slow-medium – as Formanek displays
    his mastery along the neck. Berne  joins in with tongue-attack stuttering
    syncopated lines and slurs that feel  like a dolphin skirting the seas. Two
    words – damn amazing! The musical bonfire  progresses – heat comes and goes,
    the wind blows through the flames, the  cinders blow about in the wind.
    There is a stuttering climax and then a joint  effort as the music
    concludes.
    Supreme musicianship, brisk and challenging interaction,  compositions that
    strike just the right degree of formalism and spontaneity, it  is all
    present in Parlour Games. Two masters, Berne and Formanek, early
    in their careers – captured in prime-time form in concert. Highly, highly
    recommended.


 
                                    