Hugh Hopper/Matt Howarth
The Stolen Hour
(Burning Shed)
About two years ago, the newly released album by Hugh Hopper, Jazzloops,
had surprised me quite a bit. First, because of its "on demand"
formula: you asked for it (and paid for it, obviously…), they mastered
it for you. Then, for the technical aspects: lotsa loops, some flesh-and-blood
players putting the icing on the cake, computers galore. As I wrote
in my review, it was only a case of getting used to the album, and then
finding its merits was quite easy. It goes without saying that Jazzloops
was not the first album that I would suggest to somebody who has never
heard Hopper’s music. And it’s quite obvious that listening to that
album while having in mind most of Hopper’s recorded output makes for
a different listening experience from those coming in cold. Anyway,
it was nice to see that he had used those means wisely and in a musical
way.
Titled The Stolen Hour, the new chapter is one for whose music Hopper
is the sole author, in so differently from In A Dubious Manner, a CD
whose music authorship he had shared with Julian Whitfield. Matt Howarth,
in fact, is the creator of a comic strip that is part of this CD as
a PDF file that’s accessible via Acrobat Reader. The work sounds just
as fresh as Jazzloops, with some of the players who had enriched that
album showing up again here – for in., the very good and versatile Pierre-Olivier
Govin on saxophones and Robert Wyatt on cornet and vocal loops. The
album is very varied, with some nice fuzz bass and a closing track that
superficially resembles Sex And Drugs And Rock’n’Roll but that’s more
likely to be related to Charlie Haden’s bass solo on Ornette Coleman’s
Ramblin’.
I really don’t know who will buy this album. But I’d bet that in
a blind listening test many reviewers would find those qualities that
are customarily overlooked as soon as it’s known that this album was
made by a "historic name".
Beppe Colli
© Beppe Colli 2004
CloudsandClocks.net | Dec. 12, 2004