John Surman
John Surman is often thought of as a “superstar” of contemporary European jazz, and is notable as one of the few musicians to choose bass clarinet and baritone saxophone as his primary weapons. (Surman is also frequently heard on soprano saxophone, but the classic image of Surman is his gruff bearded frame bent over one of his larger, less wieldy horns.)
Born in Tavistock in Devon in 1944, Surman has made a career of reflecting his English heritage through the prism of jazz and improvised music – a theme that started with his work in the Mike Westbrook Concert Band in the 1960s, and continued on albums such as Westering Home (Future Music Records FMRCD 16) and The Amazing Adventures of Simon Simon (ECM 1193).
Two contrasting selections today: Alignment is a solo improvisation recorded in Oslo in September 1991. No Twilight features Surman with John Taylor on organ and the Salisbury Festival Chorus, and was recorded live at Salisbury Cathedral in June 1996. The text is a reference to the Old Testament book of Job.
John Surman – Alignment
From In the Evenings Out There: ECM 1488 [Buy]
John Surman – No Twilight
From Proverbs and Songs: ECM 1639 [Buy]
Let it look for light but find none
Neither let it see the eyelids of the morning
(The Book of Job, Chapter 3)
2 Comments »
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL

Exellent music. I love that organ. And the mix of sopran and organ is brilliant. And THEN the choir… very cool! His solo improv is great as well!
Thanx man. Great selections today!
Great tunes, thanks a lot Etnobofin.
Never heard a track from these two albums.
Beautiful.
I now realise his sound and way of storytelling are in fact always very close to some kind of prayer or calling.
Peaceful hermit !
Cheers.