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George Burt

George Burt started out as a folkie with the noted songwriters Andy Shanks and Jim Russell. He has played double bass and guitar in many folk and ceilidh bands. He has left the High Society Jazz Band in 2002 after playing with them for ten years, and has toured England and France. He has collaborated with Tom Bancroft and Bill Wells in the improvisation power-trio Bill, George and Tom's Suburban Adventure. His main group is the band he co-leads with Raymond MacDonald. Together, they have produced seven commercially available CDs, four of these with the great Lol Coxhill, and one with Keith Tippett
Marilyn Crispell: Fearless, Deeply Sensitive and Shaping the Moment

by Dean Nardi
As Marilyn Crispell talked about her multitude of recent recordings, either solo or with this trio or that quartet, she mentioned needing to pack her bags before going out on tour. She has lived in Woodstock, New York since 1977 and is comfortable there. When I'm at home, not out recording, I look out in the ...
Glasgow Improvisers Orchestra: GIO Sevens

by Duncan Heining
Back in the 60s, there was a pop show on British TV called Thank Your Lucky Stars. It featured a spin-a-disc" segment, where a DJ and three teenagers scored a clutch of 45s on a scale of one to five. One of these was a girl from the West Midlands called Janice Nicholls, who delighted audiences ...
Barry Guy: Back to the Drawing-Board (Part 3)

by Duncan Heining
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 One of the things which may strike the listener on hearing the London Jazz Composers' Orchestra for the first time is just how much volume Guy is able to draw from just seventeen to twenty players. Some other big bands sound almost insipid in comparison. There ...
Raymond MacDonald: Man with Two Brains

by Duncan Heining
By way of introduction... Saxophonist Raymond MacDonald is a busy man. He balances the life of a gigging, recording musician with a high-flying academic career and, in both respects, his reputation has grown far beyond his Glasgow home. As a musician, he is perhaps best known for his work with the George Burt/Raymond MacDonald ...
A Madman’s Approach To Music And Why Can't Music Be Like A Tree?

by Duncan Heining
"Art alone makes life possible." --Joseph Beuys. The Glasgow Improvisers' Orchestra is unique. It's an over-used word, I know, but in this case fully justified. GIO are unique in so many ways--in the way they formed, the way they make decisions, in their make-up, how they work and most importantly how they sound. They ...
Glasgow Improvisers Orchestra: Artificial Life

by Duncan Heining
The importance of ensembles such as the Glasgow Improvisers Orchestra cannot be underestimated. Their work since their formation defines a distinctive approach to large-scale, free improvisation rooted in a well-defined philosophy of collective music-making. As George Lewis, trombonist and 'composer' of Artificial Life, remarks in the record's sleevenotes: As with all improvisation, including our ...