One, Two, Free is the 12th album past times saxophonist Eric Kloss which was recorded inward 1972 in addition to released on the Muse label.
Although based inward the difficult bop tradition, altoist artist/eric-kloss-mn0000190958">Eric Kloss was ever opened upward to the influence of the avant-garde. This stimulating session features artist/kloss-mn0000190958">Kloss, guitarist artist/pat-martino-mn0000792583">Pat Martino, keyboardist artist/ron-thomas-mn0000290506">Ron Thomas, bassist artist/dave-holland-mn0000585092">Dave Holland, in addition to drummer artist/ron-krasinski-mn0001291098">Ron Krasinski actually stretching out on artist/carole-king-mn0000174557">Carole King's "It's Too Late," "Licea," in addition to the three-part "One, Two, Free." artist/eric-kloss-mn0000190958">Eric Kloss pushes himself in addition to his sidemen throughout the date, in addition to fifty-fifty if the Fender Rhodes sounds a fleck dated, the high musicianship in addition to chance-taking are yet exciting to hear.
Pittsburgh native Eric Kloss (b. 1949) was 1 of the close distinctive, master voices to emerge on alto sax inward the mid-60s. He was exclusively sixteen when the commencement of his 11 Prestige albums was released inward 1965. These records featured the cream of the crop of New York musicians in addition to the immature Kloss to a greater extent than than held his ain amongst heavyweights similar Booker Ervin, Jaki Byard, Chick Corea, Cedar Walton, in addition to close notably, guitarist Pat Martino.
Kloss switched to the Muse label inward 1972 in addition to debuted amongst this outstanding quartet recording, One, Two, Free ; which remains his finest achievement. In a grouping featuring Martino on guitar in addition to Ron Thomas on electrical pianoforte equally good equally bassist Dave Kingdom of the Netherlands in addition to swain Pittsburgher Ron Krasinski on drums, Kloss pushes in addition to pulls his grouping to accept chances that explore the outer edges of bop, fusion in addition to fifty-fifty funky popular music.
The 18-minute, three-part championship rails is clearly influenced past times Bitches Brew (on which bassist Kingdom of the Netherlands also participated). But here, similar on the surprisingly substantial funk of Carole King's "It Too Late," Kloss's arched audio in addition to searing mode movement the ostinato vamp inward a to a greater extent than avant-garde administration (the agency Arthur Blythe later on would). Martino gets a notable part of the solo spotlight in addition to never ceases to amaze inward his mixture of cool chordal comps in addition to fleet runs upward in addition to downwards the fretboard.
Kloss's beautiful ballad, "Licea," guided past times Dave Holland's moody, signature string work, is the gem of this collection in addition to in all probability deserves to live on improve known. Martino waxes lyrically earlier Kloss enters for a rueful countenance that's worth the cost of admission.
32 Jazz was wise to convey One, Two, Free dorsum into circulation - in addition to keep Don Schlitten's beautiful cover-art photography too. Priced good below other recent jazz reissues, One, Two, Free is a pregnant chapter inward 1970s jazz in addition to provides a dandy chance to notice the interesting music of Eric Kloss (who, despite no widespread releases since the early on 1980s, yet performs infrequently at Pittsburgh events amongst his vocalizer wife). Even though there's 42 minutes of music here, 1 wishes creative interaction this skillful kept on going. Recommended.
An extraordinarily gifted altoist, Eric Kloss commencement appeared on the scene at the historic menses of 16, when his debut tape won him critical acclaim equally a blind tike prodigy. By the fourth dimension of this recording, the 23-year-old Kloss had lived upward to his early on promise, growing equally an open-minded participant amongst sense playing amongst such jazz heavy-weights equally Jaki Byard, Booker Ervin, Jack DeJohnette, in addition to Chick Corea.
One, Two, Free is an avant-garde album of often funky music, amongst its potent rhythms rooted inward the driving bass lines of Miles Davis-veteran Dave Holland in addition to the vintage Fender Rhodes sounds of Ron Thomas. Kloss in addition to guitarist artino/">Pat Martino stretch imaginatively on the eighteen infinitesimal championship rails (seamlessly divided into iii parts), crafting a memorable master that approaches the electrical intensity of Miles Davis‘ operate from the same era.
Carol King’s “It’s Too Late” starts off amongst tongue-in-cheek straightness, only 1 time the subject is stated, the pop-song is turned on its caput in addition to transformed into a funky vehicle for exploration. The closing track, “Licea,” is complex in addition to cerebral, only rewards unopen listening. Featuring ii originals in addition to 1 comprehend tune, all over 10 minutes long, One, Two, Free is an adventurous boom from the past times that yet retains its freshness in addition to is definitely worth owning. Buy it, in addition to aid rescue 1 of the unsung heroes of the saxophone from undeserved obscurity.
Although based inward the difficult bop tradition, altoist artist/eric-kloss-mn0000190958">Eric Kloss was ever opened upward to the influence of the avant-garde. This stimulating session features artist/kloss-mn0000190958">Kloss, guitarist artist/pat-martino-mn0000792583">Pat Martino, keyboardist artist/ron-thomas-mn0000290506">Ron Thomas, bassist artist/dave-holland-mn0000585092">Dave Holland, in addition to drummer artist/ron-krasinski-mn0001291098">Ron Krasinski actually stretching out on artist/carole-king-mn0000174557">Carole King's "It's Too Late," "Licea," in addition to the three-part "One, Two, Free." artist/eric-kloss-mn0000190958">Eric Kloss pushes himself in addition to his sidemen throughout the date, in addition to fifty-fifty if the Fender Rhodes sounds a fleck dated, the high musicianship in addition to chance-taking are yet exciting to hear.
Pittsburgh native Eric Kloss (b. 1949) was 1 of the close distinctive, master voices to emerge on alto sax inward the mid-60s. He was exclusively sixteen when the commencement of his 11 Prestige albums was released inward 1965. These records featured the cream of the crop of New York musicians in addition to the immature Kloss to a greater extent than than held his ain amongst heavyweights similar Booker Ervin, Jaki Byard, Chick Corea, Cedar Walton, in addition to close notably, guitarist Pat Martino.
Kloss switched to the Muse label inward 1972 in addition to debuted amongst this outstanding quartet recording, One, Two, Free ; which remains his finest achievement. In a grouping featuring Martino on guitar in addition to Ron Thomas on electrical pianoforte equally good equally bassist Dave Kingdom of the Netherlands in addition to swain Pittsburgher Ron Krasinski on drums, Kloss pushes in addition to pulls his grouping to accept chances that explore the outer edges of bop, fusion in addition to fifty-fifty funky popular music.
The 18-minute, three-part championship rails is clearly influenced past times Bitches Brew (on which bassist Kingdom of the Netherlands also participated). But here, similar on the surprisingly substantial funk of Carole King's "It Too Late," Kloss's arched audio in addition to searing mode movement the ostinato vamp inward a to a greater extent than avant-garde administration (the agency Arthur Blythe later on would). Martino gets a notable part of the solo spotlight in addition to never ceases to amaze inward his mixture of cool chordal comps in addition to fleet runs upward in addition to downwards the fretboard.
Kloss's beautiful ballad, "Licea," guided past times Dave Holland's moody, signature string work, is the gem of this collection in addition to in all probability deserves to live on improve known. Martino waxes lyrically earlier Kloss enters for a rueful countenance that's worth the cost of admission.
32 Jazz was wise to convey One, Two, Free dorsum into circulation - in addition to keep Don Schlitten's beautiful cover-art photography too. Priced good below other recent jazz reissues, One, Two, Free is a pregnant chapter inward 1970s jazz in addition to provides a dandy chance to notice the interesting music of Eric Kloss (who, despite no widespread releases since the early on 1980s, yet performs infrequently at Pittsburgh events amongst his vocalizer wife). Even though there's 42 minutes of music here, 1 wishes creative interaction this skillful kept on going. Recommended.
An extraordinarily gifted altoist, Eric Kloss commencement appeared on the scene at the historic menses of 16, when his debut tape won him critical acclaim equally a blind tike prodigy. By the fourth dimension of this recording, the 23-year-old Kloss had lived upward to his early on promise, growing equally an open-minded participant amongst sense playing amongst such jazz heavy-weights equally Jaki Byard, Booker Ervin, Jack DeJohnette, in addition to Chick Corea.
One, Two, Free is an avant-garde album of often funky music, amongst its potent rhythms rooted inward the driving bass lines of Miles Davis-veteran Dave Holland in addition to the vintage Fender Rhodes sounds of Ron Thomas. Kloss in addition to guitarist artino/">Pat Martino stretch imaginatively on the eighteen infinitesimal championship rails (seamlessly divided into iii parts), crafting a memorable master that approaches the electrical intensity of Miles Davis‘ operate from the same era.
Carol King’s “It’s Too Late” starts off amongst tongue-in-cheek straightness, only 1 time the subject is stated, the pop-song is turned on its caput in addition to transformed into a funky vehicle for exploration. The closing track, “Licea,” is complex in addition to cerebral, only rewards unopen listening. Featuring ii originals in addition to 1 comprehend tune, all over 10 minutes long, One, Two, Free is an adventurous boom from the past times that yet retains its freshness in addition to is definitely worth owning. Buy it, in addition to aid rescue 1 of the unsung heroes of the saxophone from undeserved obscurity.
Track listing
All compositions past times Eric Kloss except equally indicated- "One, Two, Free Suite: One, Two Free/Elegy/The Wizard" (Eric Kloss, Pat Martino, Ron Thomas) - 18:03
- "It's Too Late" (Carole King, Toni Stern) - 13:38
- "Licea" - 10:10
Personnel
- Eric Kloss - alto saxophone
- Ron Thomas - electric piano, tambourine
- artino" title="Learn Eric Kloss - 1972 [1998] One, Two, Free">Pat Martino - guitar
- Dave Holland - bass
- Ron Krasinski - drums

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