Guitar, Drums 'n' Bass
1996 studio album by Derek Bailey / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Guitar, Drums 'n' Bass is an album by free improvisation guitarist Derek Bailey, released by Avant Records in 1996. After spending several years improvising his guitar to the sound of jungle and drum and bass music on pirate radio, Bailey proposed to collaborator John Zorn that he make an album of his musical fusion. Zorn then contacted Birmingham-based drum and bass producer D.J. Ninj to provide the musical backing, who recorded his contributions in spring 1995. After a failed session with engineer Mick Harris, Bailey recorded his overlaid guitar improvisations in Bill Laswell's New York City studio in October 1995, slightly altering Ninj's contributions to remove electric piano passages.
Guitar, Drums 'n' Bass | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 21 August 1996 | |||
Recorded | Spring–September 1995, Birmingham, England and Bill Laswell's studio, New York City | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 39:09 | |||
Label | Avant | |||
Producer |
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Derek Bailey chronology | ||||
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The resulting album has been considered the first duet's fusion of free improvisation guitar and breakbeat music ever released. Ninj's drum and bass backing is thudding and minimal, while Bailey's guitar playing is inventive, loud and fast, incorporating truncated licks, heavy distortion and chiming sounds. The album was released to critical acclaim, with some critics finding the album's pairing inspiring. The album is regarded as Bailey's first genre experiment of the mid-late 1990s, a period in which Bailey recorded with unlikely non-improvising collaborators.