Showing posts with label Stevan Kovacs Tickmayer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stevan Kovacs Tickmayer. Show all posts

April 13, 2025

Bob Drake – Medallion Animal Carpet (1999, CD, Usa)



Tracklist:
Part I
1 Hideous Shrub 1:53
2 Crude Internal Organ 0:40
3 Detrimental Robot 1:29
4 Maybe It's ..... 1:39
5 Concrete Husky 0:46
6 How Was It 1:37
7 Where There Is Nothing 1:03
8 Mound 2:33
9 Bedraggled Things 3:18
10 Flashy Smog Wolf Person 1:05
11 Do You See, Hear, Ammonia 1:09
12 Slab 3:53
13 One Night, In An Old Fashioned ..... 0:45
14 Light Seen In Empty ..... 0:55
15 Dehydrated 1:59
16 I'm Afraid There Are Results 1:44
Part II
17 Over In The Glory Land 1:37
18 Seven Cents 1:57
19 Title Unknown (1) 2:14
20 Angel Band 2:19
21 Title Unknown (2) 2:40
22 I Wish It Had Been A Dream 3:10
23 Hand Me My Walking Cane 2:28
Part III
24 Dunwich Confidential 1:05

Musicians:
Drums, Percussion – Mark Fuller, Mark McCoin, Chris Cutler
Saxophone – Jason Dumars
Percussion [Hand Drums] – Mark Fuller, Mark McCoin
Voice – Mark Fuller, Mark McCoin
Voice, Keyboards, Other – Mark Bradford, Sharon Bradford
Keyboards, Samples – Stevan Tickmayer
Lead Vocals, Acoustic Guitar – Tim Gadd
Guitar, Bass, Drums, Vocals, Violin, Synthesizer, Tambourine, Cymbal, Pedal Steel Guitar – Bob Drake

March 31, 2018

Grencsó Tickmayer Duo ‎– Chamber Music (1990, LP, Ex-Jugoslavia)

This rare 1990 LP is the fruit of a collaboration between several individuals related to the Vojvodina area in Serbia, then a part of Yugoslavia. Pianist and composer István Kovács-Tickmayer, aka Stevan Kovacs Tickmayer, was born in 1963 of Hungarian origin in Nový Sad, the capital of Vojvodina. Kovacs Tickmayer founded Tickmayer Formatio in 1986 and relocated to France in 1991 to become the official composer of Josef Nadj’s dance performances in Orleans, France, and on tour, along members of the Formatio. The producer of this disc, choreographer Nagy József, aka Josef Nadj, was born in 1957 in Kanjiža, a Magyar-speaking town of Vojvodina. Kovács-Tickmayer met Hungarian saxophonist GrencsóIstván, aka Stevan Grencso, born 1956, during the 1980s, while playing with Hungarian improvisers from Nový Sad and Budapest. At the time, Stevan Grencso played in Hungarian free jazz bands Masina Jazz Group, founded in 1979, and Kollektiva, founded in 1984.

This meeting between Grencso and Kovacs Tickmayer took place during a live performance at Club Petőfi Sándor in Nový Sad (Újvidék in Magyar) on April 27, 1988. The LP was published in France on a short-lived label called Libelulla, of which it is apparently the sole release. The longuest piece here, Chamber Music IVis also the album’s piece de resistance. It starts with a wonderful saxophone+clarinet duet before Kovacs Tickmayer turns to melodica for a wonderfully unusual coupling with the saxophone. The track eschews any reference to free jazz and is indeed close to chamber or contemporary music, if only more timely and meditative.

Side A
A1 Chamber Music I
A2 Chamber Music II
A3 Chamber Music III

Side B 
B1 Chamber Music IV
B2 Chamber Music V

Credits:
István Grencsó: Alto Saxophone, Percussion, Vocals, Piano
 István Kovác Tickmayer: Piano, Harpsichord, Melodica, Bass, Clarinet, Percussionn Kovács 
Engineer: István Koncz
Producer: Josef Nadj
Note: Recorded live 27 April 1988 at Club Petőfi Sándor in Újvidék / Novi Sad