Out October 11 on Cryptogramophone Records, and
Featuring Nels Cline, Alex Cline, John Fumo, David Witham, and Joel Hamilton.
Gauthier & Cryptogramophone curate The Stone (NYC) – November 1-13
Open Source is the sixth recording by violinist / composer / producer Jeff Gauthier. His ensemble of almost 20 years, The Jeff Gauthier Goatette,features guitarist Nels Cline, his twin brother Alex Cline on drums and percussion, trumpeter John Fumo, David Witham on piano and keyboards, andJoel Hamilton on bass. Gauthier’s music draws from as many influences as the title Open Sourcesuggests. From jazz to classical, to fusion to “new” and improvised music, Gauthier’s compositions are informed by the many great artists with whom he has worked.
As a violinist Gauthier has performed and recorded with artists like Yusef Lateef, Adam Rudolph, Nels Cline, Alex Cline, Mark Dresser, Vinny Golia, and many others. As a producer or executive producer, he has worked with such luminaries as Alan Broadbent, Alex Cline, Mark Dresser, Peter Erskine, Bennie Maupin, Myra Melford, Jimmy Rowles, Stacy Rowles, Alan Pasqua, Don Preston, Jenny Scheinman, Scott Amendola, Ben Goldberg, and guitarist Nels Cline for whom he has produced 6 recordings. Gauthier is also founder of Cryptogramophone Records, and co-producer of the Angel City Jazz festival in Los Angeles. Gauthier will be curating The Stone in New York City the first two weeks in November, 2011. The Goatette will perform Saturday, November 5th.
Regarding the title Open Source, Gauthier says, “This is not music for others to tinker around with asOpen Source might imply. It’s music drawn from an open source of creativity and style, as interpreted by musicians who have the skills to interact with each other in the moment. Over time, this interaction can develop into a musical language that grows and evolves. In the case of the Goatette, this language has even developed a new dialect drawn from the gradual introduction of electronics into our musical vocabulary. All I have to do is say ‘Spaceprov’ and everyone knows what I want.”
The Goatette will celebrate its 20th anniversary in 2012, but the origins of the group go back even farther, to the band Quartet Music led collectively by Gauthier, the Cline brothers, and bassist Eric von Essen. Formed in 1979, Quartet Music recorded 4 albums (all currently out of print) and toured the west coast over 12 years. Gauthier continues, “I’ve been playing music with Nels and Alex since we were in our early 20s. They have a musical connection that can only come from a lifetime of creating music together, aided perhaps by sharing the same DNA as twins. Joel Hamilton and David Witham have played in my band for 18 and 20 years respectively. John Fumo and I discovered we had a special musical connection while working in Steuart Liebig’s band Quartetto Stig for 5 or 6 years, as well as in Alex Cline’s “Band of the Moment.”
As a composer and improviser Gauthier often uses counterpoint to integrate the newest voice (trumpet) into the Goatette. Regarding his influences as a composer, Gauthier says, “Having grown up as a violinist, the music of J.S. Bach is the bedrock of my being. I also studied counterpoint and composition with teachers like Harold Budd, who has great skills as a composer and teacher. Harmonically, I’ve been influenced by the music of Bill Evans, Igor Stravinsky, Ralph Towner, Olivier Messiaen, and John Coltrane, to mention only a few. And it’s impossible not to mention the influence of Eric von Essen, who was perhaps my greatest musical teacher.”
Open Source is a mature work by an eclectic and experienced musician who values human interaction in music making above all else. Having forged careers as producer and presenter to compliment his performing life, Gauthier has been able to work with some of the most creative musicians on the planet, thus paving the way for his own musical growth and renewal. With the support of these longstanding musical relationships, the open source of creativity continues to flow.








































The differences between the two discs are as stunning as they are revealingly demonstrative of the shared language that Cline, bassist Devin Hoff and drummer Scott Amendola have built over the years. The studio disc, described by producer David Breskin (Ronald Shannon Jackson, Bill Frisell, John Zorn) as “technicolor, non-naturalistic, hyper-sensuous,” explores a variety of musical touchstones that have been an integral part of Cline’s DNA from the very beginning but are, in some ways, making their first overt appearances just now. The live disc, contrarily, is “stark, raw, a black-and-white movie,” — an incendiary ‘what you see is what you get’ document. Here the Singers perform material dating as far back as the episodic avant-bop of “Sunken Song” (from Cline’s 2000 Cryptogramophone debut, The Inkling) to the most recent “Thurston County” (from the guitarist’s 2009 solo album, Coward) which, with Hoff and Amendola in tow this time, turns into a far more jagged and fiery tribute to the guitarist’s occasional co-conspirator, Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore.
