Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Universal Congress Of - Ralph'sTape 091589



we got this tape sometime in the 90's in claremont from a girl who worked with my brother at figg who knew the bass player (he said his name was ralph). we went to a party once and they were there and asked him some questions about then other current bass players on the scene. i don't know, but this cat definitely had a negative opinion about bill laswell! this is a dub from a tape he gave her that we got a copy of. it's live from somewhere, and it sounds really cool, but beyond that, i don't know anything else about this tape.


this is thier bio from AMG:

Led by ex-Saccharine Trust axewielder Joe Baiza, Universal Congress Of began as the title for Baiza's 1987 solo record later becoming the name of his fine, funky backing band. Although on his debut solo LP he was still playing semi-improvised, avant-garde jazz-rock similar to what he was exploring in Saccharine Trust, Baiza/UCO's later (and for my money better) work was more structured and song-oriented. Although he continued to show a talent for all-out free playing and gnarled, aural jazz damage, when Baiza added funk to the mix and kept the songs under ten minutes, he became a much more interesting musician and UCO became a much more interesting band.

Although I'm uncomfortable using the term (because I'm not quite sure what it means), UCO, especially their early-'90s records, falls into the category of "fake jazz." But UCO, paced by excellent bass/drum combinations like Bob Fitzer and Paul Lines, and Steve Gaeta and A. P. Gonzalez, played rockish jazz/jazzish rock not unlike that of Blood Ulmer and Ornette Coleman. But whereas those two wandered freely into the world of dissonance and (especially in Ornette's case) harmolodics, UCO deeply anchored their music in heavy funk. This, however, did not mean that Baiza's guitar playing became less intriguing, nor did it mean that UCO's fine sax player, Steve Moss, stopped blowing up a storm; what it meant was that they limited the screwing around and focused on substance rather than style. Not what you'd expect from a bunch of former SoCal punks, UCO was (is still?) a band that realized that less, especially when played with a feisty verve, is always more.

2 comments:

marram62 said...

http://rapidshare.com/files/347571054/Universal_Congress_Of.rar

marram62 said...

i'm upgrading this tape and i'm gonna re-post it on FRGK along with some of my other tapes i got in my dusty old collection (like henry kaiser at mccabes in '84 that we recorded ourselves, and jack bruce and ginger baker at the coach house in '89 that we recorded ourselves,and a few other weird things like that....it's cool stuff and i gotta post it somewhere. it's kinda one of the reasons i started these blogs to begin with...