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Emerging
from the L.A. "free" jazz scene of the early 70's, Mark
Dresser performed with the "Black Music
Infinity", led by Stanley Crouch, and included Bobby
Bradford, Arthur Blythe, David Murray, and James Newton. Concurrently he was
performing with the San Diego Symphony. After
completing B.A.and M.A. degrees at UCSD where he studied
with contrabass virtuoso Bertram Turetzky and a 1983 Fulbright
Fellowship in Italy with maestro Franco Petracchi, Dresser
relocated to New York in 1986 after being invited to join the
quartet of composer/saxophonist, Anthony Braxton. Dresser played
with Braxton's longest performing quartet for nine years.
Once in NY, Dresser began working with a wide variety of
musicians in the greater New York community including Ray Anderson, Tim Berne, Anthony Davis, John Zorn, Dave Douglas and others. He focused on composing for a pair of
cooperative groups, Tambastics with flutist Robert Dick,
percussionist Gerry Hemingway, and pianist Denman Maroney and the string trio, ARCADO, with violinist Mark
Feldman and cellist Hank Roberts.
Numerous European tours, awards, six CD's, and several
commissions resulted, including "For Not the Law", a
composition for ARCADO and orchestra from WDR Radio of Cologne
Germany, "Armadillo" for ARCADO and the WDR Big Band,
and "Bosnia," a work written for the Trio du
Clarinettes of France and ARCADO. His collaborative projects
include a trio, C/D/E, with multi-reed player virtuoso, Marty Ehrlich and master drummer Andrew Cyrille, a duo with
pianist Denman Maroney, the Marks Brothers Duo with fellow
bassist Mark Helias, and the duo with the cello virtuoso,
Frances-Marie Uitti...
In addition to his trio, his current project is the Mark
Dresser's Modular Ensemble which performs his chamber works. He
has composed and recorded original music for silent film
including the German expressionist silent film classic, The
Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (Knitting Factory) and the
French Surrealist collaboration of Luis Bunuel and Salvador Dali,
Un Chien Andalou (Knitting Factory). Solo
performance is one of Dresser's specialties. He has designed
custom made electronics for purposes of amplifying normally
inaudible sounds. "Invocation" (Knitting
Factory), was his first solo CD documenting compositions
from 1983-94 (Knitting Factory). His recent solo compositions are
included on "Marinade" (Tzadik-2000).
Commissions include, "Banquet", a double concerto for
various flutes, contrabass and string quartet written for Swiss
flute virtuoso Matthias Ziegler (Tzadik CD-1997), "Air to Mir,"
commissioned by the McKim Fund in the Library of Congress (Marinade
-Tzadik CD-2000). "Althaus" is for tuba virtuoso,
David LeClair with bass, cello, alto sax, and clarinet (Marinade).
His most recent commission, "Remudadero" is written for
the saxophone quartet, "ROVA".
A chapter on his extended techniques for contrabass, "A
Personal Pedogogy", appears in the book, ARCANA
(Granary Books). Other articles on this research appear in
DOWNBEAT, MUSICIAN MAGAZINE, & JAZZIZ.
He has performed and recorded over eighty CDs with some of the
strongest personalities in contemporary music and jazz including
Ray Anderson, Tim Berne, Jane Ira Bloom, Bobby Bradford, Tom
Cora, Marilyn Crispell, Anthony Davis, Dave Douglas, Fred Frith, Diamanda Galas, Vinny Golia, Joe Lovano, George Lewis, Misha Mengelberg, Ikue Mori, James Newton, Evan Parker, Sonny
Simmons, Louis Sclavis, Vladimir Tarasov, Henry Threadgill, and John Zorn. He has given lecture
demonstrations at the Julliard School, Princeton, New England
Conservatory, National Superior Conservatory of Paris, UCSD,
and others.
QUOTES:
"He
has proven to be one of the master bassists of modern jazz,
perhaps even the most exciting....his improvisational fecundity
was remarkable for its veritable ensemble-in-miniature, in which
every orchestral maneuver can be deployed to advantage...
Dresser's rhythmic mooring, melodic liquidity, and timbral hues
showed how sanguinely he absorbs and adapts available contexts,
emotionally and generically. The almost palpable
physicality of his pizzicato slaps and pedal plunging, the
luxuriant tremolos of his arco passages and refrains, were as
identifiable as the calling cues we associate with elder bass
paragons." - San Diego Reader
"Mark
Dresser is a bassist and composer of the highest order. On
this recording of his "notated" chamber music, he
presents two challenging works that are artistically interpreted.
His creativity and sonic sensibilities need to be heard.
This project, the assemblage of musicians, and this label
make an important statement about the creative process... The
performance is intriguing, engaging and profound."
- Bass World, The Journal of the
International Society of Bassists, 1998, review of Banquet
CD-Tzadik
"To
an experienced reviewer, it doesn't happen too often that the
music makes you speechless. It might be due to the genre of
the silent movie that its music is hard to verbalize, maybe the
film itself can possibly describe this wonderful music.
Mark Dresser not only pays homage to a great German movie
and its expressionist director, Robert Wiene, but also makes a
statement about Neo-Nationalism and the current ethnic cleansing
all over the world...This is the masterpiece of a masterful
musician..." - JazzThetik on Mark
Dresser's "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari"
"You've
got to pity Dresser's poor bass-you wouldn't treat a dog the way
he manhandles his instrument. But the gnarled tones and
vicious swing he tortures out of it are worth the abuse. In
Dresser's slanted compositions, the jazz tradition is only so
much grist for the mill." - The New Yorker,
August 18, 1997
"Mark
Dresser awed the assembly with his compositions for solo bass-no
one expected to be nailed to the floor by one guy with a
four-string." - Los Angeles Times
"Mr.
Dresser, who constantly drove the group forward with his full,
wide-bodied sound, would solo, hammering strings with both hands,
creating the sound of several basses playing at once."
- N.Y. Times
"In
terms of the soloist/accompaniment dichotomy, Dresser explodes
the notion of the bass as both single instrument and back-up
instrument. His arco work takes on a progressively seamless
singing quality while occasional overdubs allow pizzicato dancing
around the bowed slipstream. Thus glissandi and pitch
shifts are pocked and plunked and shoved in a sometimes delirious
display of talent. But even when it's Dresser alone, sans
overdubs, he's a feverish, fast-moving string group unto
himself...I count this among the best anti-virtuosic solo
recordings to date. Anti-virtuosic playing is, of course,
historically a function of interrogating the inherited history of
technique and beauty, and here Dresser presents an alarmingly
tense and exciting technique and a sense of beauty as something
not simply or clearly or calmly related but rather something for
which all involved must work." - Andrew
Bartlett - 5/4 Magazine (Review of INVOCATION on
Knitting Factory Works)
"Dresser
has a heroic sound and his double-, triple-, and
quadruple-stopped glisses are stunning. ...he should
sustain his position as one of the few virtuosos of so-called
avant-garde jazz." - Village Voice about
the premier of "The Banquet" September '95
"Mark
Dresser who is able to jump over the highest stylistic walls in a
single bound wrote a concerto that shows where this journey
between contemporary classical music and jazz can go. Dresser
wrote a piece of music that fits like a glove to the astonishing
soloist, Matthias Ziegler. This piece has many element
which you can't find anymore in "serious" music like
drama, entertainment, rhythmic playfulness, variety of sound, and
room for individual improvisational development." - Neue
Zurcher Zeitung
"Mark
Dresser's Promethean bass-playing powers one of the heaviest
bands on the scene...Dresser consistently astonishes with his
range of ideas and effects, not to mention his towering
beat." - Wire Magazine
"Mr.
Dresser, a basssist of dexterity and power, isn't content with
dryly cerebral experimentation or some anachronistic idea of
euphoria through tumult. He wants it all: timbral
experimentation, pulsating rhythm, strong melodies, imaginative
strategies for composing. ...his well-rehearsedgroup,
swinging four-way cohesion was always the issue." - New
York Times, May 30, 1997
"Mark
Dresser first came to national attention in 1985 as the bass
player for Anthony Braxton's now legendary quartet. The band
broke up in 1994 but Dresser continues to further the vocabulary
of the acoustic bass through his eccentric and radical
advancements in technique." - Jazziz -
The 150 Most Influential Artists who Moved Jazz's Changes Since
1983. September, 1988
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