Open, to Love
Encyclopedia
Open, to Love is a jazz album by Paul Bley
Paul Bley
Paul Bley, CM is a pianist known for his contributions to the free jazz movement of the 1960s as well as his innovations and influence on trio playing.-Biography:...

. It features Bley performing seven solo piano pieces and is regarded to be not only one of his best albums, but a defining album in the history of the ECM record label. Three of the tracks were composed by ex-wife Carla Bley
Carla Bley
Carla Bley, née Borg, is an American jazz composer, pianist, organist and band leader. An important figure in the Free Jazz movement of the 1960s, she is perhaps best known for her jazz opera Escalator Over The Hill , as well as a book of compositions that have been performed by many other...

 and another two by Bley's then-wife Annette Peacock
Annette Peacock
- Biography :Annette Peacock began composing at the age of four. Her mother was a violist in the San Diego and Philadelphia Philharmonic Orchestras....

. The album is one of the first showcases of the pointillism and silence that would inform much of his later work.

Open, to Love was selected to be part of the ECM Touchstones series as one of the most influential recordings on the label.

Reception

The Allmusic review by Thom Jurek awarded the album 4½ stars stating "Despite the fact that pianist and composer Paul Bley had been a renowned and innovative jazzman for nearly 20 years, 1973 saw the release of his most mature and visionary work, and one that to this day remains his opus. This is one of the most influential solo piano recordings in jazz history, and certainly one that defined the sound of the German label ECM... Ultimately, what Bley offers is jazz pianism as a new kind of aural poetics, one that treats the extension of the composer's line much as the poet treats the line as the extension of breath. Sheer brilliance".

Track listing

  1. "Closer" (Carla Bley) - 5:55
  2. "Ida Lupino" (Carla Bley) - 7:35
  3. "Started" (Paul Bley) - 5:21
  4. "Open, to Love" (Annette Peacock) - 7:14
  5. "Harlem" (Paul Bley) - 3:26
  6. "Seven" (Carla Bley) - 7:25
  7. "Nothing Ever Was, Anyway" (Annette Peacock) - 6:02

External links

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