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A.R.C.: A.R.C.
ByCorea, who, after a short solo turn would soon break the realm with Return to Forever is especially feisty here, as too is Holland, who would a year hence record Conference of the Birds (ECM, 1972) with Braxton, Altschul and saxophone/flautist Sam Rivers. It isn't Circle, but then again few things were, are, or could be.
Altshcul, whose ragtime to no-time temperament puts a distinctive charge into A.R.C's six wily and loose limbed tracks, sits back in the beginning of "Nefertiti," while Corea has his way. But he's soon pushing Holland and vice versa and the horse has broken from the barn. On his first set for ECM, Holland churns as Corea races and runs. It is one of those runaway tracks that stirs the blood.
Affinity, reality, communication: those were the concepts behind the namesake, and each player is more than hip to the score, each delivering his particular nuance to the first of four Corea originals, the loosely embroidered, "Ballad for Tillie." The title track runs circles around itself, as the trio blends, breaks away, and hands the torch to the next in the relay. Borders trade, merge, blur, and dissipate on Holland's impassioned "Vedana" and Corea's closing "Games." Definitely worth a return listen.
Track Listing
Nefertiti; Ballad for Tillie; A.R.C.; Vedana; Thanatos; Games.
Personnel
Album information
Title: A.R.C. | Year Released: 2023 | Record Label: ECM Records
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A.R.C.
Album Review
Mike Jurkovic
DL Media
ECM Records
anthony braxton
Chick Corea
Dave Holland
Barry Altschul
Circle
Return To Forever
Sam Rivers