
In the 70's, especially in Europe, there was no shortage of groups striving to merge the worlds of jazz and rock. Often the fruit of these labors seem proggishly vulgar, pedantically over-intellectualized (looking right at you, Soft Machine), or were simply train wrecks-- the result of clueless musicians who understood neither jazz nor rock with any insight or subtlety, smashing them together like joyless stoners. So If I were to tell you that Dutchman Hans Dulfer's Candy Clouds is a Jazz-Rock masterpiece and beyond, I'd understand if you required some further persuasion.
Let's get something straight: Dulfer doesn't even belong in the Prog-jazz ghetto with acts like Alcatraz, Xhol Caravan, and all the others. Candy Clouds' mind-blowing brand of fusion has much more in common with the free/spiritual jazz scene in Europe, and can be easily to compared to the experimental fusion efforts of Archie Shepp or Gato Barbieri in the 70's. It isn't even entirely accurate to call this jazz-rock, as though the two modes of music share the spotlight equally; the music here is as Latin as it is heavy, and so this becomes a fascinating record of Spiritual Free Jazz Latin Psych. Stupendous.
I am unable to find much information on this record, or indeed much on Mr. Dulfer himself. I was inspired to do this post after Bacosco at Orgy in Rhythm dropped another sweet Dulfer joint, El Saxofon, an event which was followed by my noticing the inclusion of a 6-minute edited-down version of the title track to Candy Clouds on Jazzman's release of Spiritual Jazz Vol. 2.
That title track, split into two sections on the record and totaling nearly twenty minutes, is the heart of this fine album. Part 1 opens with a giant smash of heavy guitar that sounds like early Sabbath (forgive the obviousness of this comparison-- it just sounds like fucking Sabbath), trading lines with conniptions of free sax. They go back and forth a few times, until the whole things drops and it's a heavy psychedelic Latin jam with red hot sax burning through everything. In case I am failing to make the case, let me be blunt: it is awesome, as in awe-inspiring.
Part 2 takes its time getting started, beginning above the clouds with a long dreamy section, the sax heating up to flaming as the combo descends to earth... after six or seven minutes, your flight has landed, and that huge groove from Part 1 makes a return. Bigger, deeper, groovier even than before, Dulfer's improvisations reach a thrilling space between, say, Gato Barbieri's warm exotica shredding and Archie Shepp's emotional Fire Music-- all while electric guitars blaze in a cloud of reverb, a piano wanders off and gets lost, and a glorious cowbell abides with wisdom.
Just as good as "Candy Clouds 1&2" are the two tracks preceding it, a guitar-based groove with jungle shadows that's honestly just too cool to be believed, and a huge Latin jam with excellent flute acrobatics (the flautist is doing that Black Harold-y thing where he's sort of howling into the flute as he's playing it, whatever that's called). The Fire Music is in full force throughout.
The last two tracks sort of lose me, unfortunately. A seemingly pointless, very free jam with no groove and no flavor, entitled "Froggy", followed by a goofy Afro-Cuban/Kwela/highlife number (which does have some fleeting but awesome guitar blasts). These two tracks are short and inconsequential next to the utter majesty of what has preceded them, a lost masterpiece of many fusions, an album so crazy and cool and fun that I honestly can't believe it exists. This is the type of thing I hear in my dreams, then wake up depressed because it wasn't real and I can't even remember it anymore. So, so good.
CANDY CLOUDS(320)

I am very serious: get over to Orgy in Rhythm and grab Dulfer's follow-up to Candy Clouds, El Saxofon, ASAP. The track "Sad Love Story" is jaw-droppin'. Awesome record.
And now that Bacoso's link is dead, I've gone ahead and upped this one for y'all. You still oughtta take a minute to thank him though.
EL SAXOFON (320)

And you can grab The Morning After the Third, here (**not anymore, you can't-- so I upped it here). It seems to precede Candy Clouds, and while it's not as brilliantly conceived, it does have a very similar sound. Highly recommended-- so, so highly recommended.
The Morning After the Third
9 comments:
You just made my day, Flash! I've totally been grooving to El Saxophon, can't wait to put this on tomorrow. And your comments are (as always) priceless.
Thank you.
BTW, do you know why we can't we subscribe to comments via e-mail anymore? If I put one more thing in my RSS reader it's going to explode! Between that & the new captcha it seems Blogger is actively discouraging post commentary
do you have any machito to post? is it even worth my time checking out? do you know anything about that cat?
Thanks for the clouds and the extras. Knew about Dulfer, but had no idea about his earlier works. Great!
This post also reminds me to buy the second spiritual jazz, which is awesome as well.
I would suppose a lot of people are more familiar with his daughter Candy Dulfer?
Yes, I'm sure. She's quite successful.
also, flash & co., does anyone have any damia they want to share with a brother. i heard that song on the holywarbles comp & i need more.
You should totally check out that Machito cat, Brother BOS. Then report back, if you have the time, because Machito is a huge blind spot of mine that I'm trying to map out as we speak.
Also, I'd love to hear more of that Damia stuff. I don't have or know a thing beyond that single track of Owl's. What a fuckin song it is, though.
hey! posted some machito for you over at my blog buddy http://spookcityusa.blogspot.com/ it's pretty good, & i think you'll dig it. let me know what you think! & i'm just going to have to break down & order some damia because i've hit up a few world blogs now, & none of the stores up here carry any of her music. but yes, i was entranced by the song owl birthed to the world via the mixtape. if yr lurking around, thank you again brother.
Thanks for all the Hans Dulfer info, spot on, candy clouds is AMAZING. Check out my next comp, vol64, he's going on :)
Rich
http://aftersabbath.blogspot.com
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