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The 18 minutes Poker Dice is a stunning slow developing splendid electric piano-driven piece that also features a fuzz organ, thousands of percussions, and a groovy groove. Most artists would've been content filling their album with Poker Dice alone, but Stomu unleashes another 8-mins+ Keep In Lane track, which is closer to straight jazz and free jazz than the usual jazz-rock, that unfortunately fails to match the other track's perfection.
The flipside also has two tracks, but recorded live in London early 72, the first of which is one rare non- Yamash'ta composition, the 13-mins Xingu, future Brand X drummer penning this one. Starts out in free-jazz mode, before settling down to a very calm moment, slowly rebuilding the track through successive addition of instruments. The track reaches two or three climaxes, but thankfully never reaching the chaotic state of the opening minute of this track. The 12-mins One Way starts on a space whispering, where Stomu's vibraphone will take the lead (neither Moerlen, nor Greenslade style) but he will go mad on other percussion instruments as well. A complete freak-out, stunning track, slowly dying on Thompson's flute death throes. Great stuff.
With Edge and Freedom, Stomu reached the progressive apex of his of his career, while his higher profile Go project would get him much more attention from the public. Stomu's album in the vinyl format should still be available on the second-hand market at reasonable price, as they've never been collectibles.
By Sean Trane
Styles:
Progressive Jazz
Tracks:
01 - Poker Dice (18:03)
02 - Keep In Lane (08:32)
03 - Xingu (13:04)
04 - One Way (11:53)
Line-up:
Stomu Yamash'ta - percussion
Morris Pert - drums, percussion
Andrew Powell - bass (03,04)
Robin Thompson - organ, piano, soprano sax, sho (02-04)
Phil Plant - bass (01,02)
Peter Robinson - piano (01)
Dave White - soprano sax (02)
I.Goffe - trombone (02)
R.Harris - trumpet (02)