Last Home Explained

Last Home
Type:Album
Artist:Caspar Brötzmann/Peter Brötzmann
Cover:Caspar Brotzmann and Peter Brotzmann - Last Home.jpeg
Released:1990
Recorded:– at Greenpoint, Brooklyn, New York
Genre:Free jazz
Length:59:52
Label:Pathological
Producer:Kevin Martin, Robert Musso
Chronology:Caspar Brötzmann
Prev Title:Black Axis
Prev Year:1989
Next Title:Der Abend der schwarzen Folklore
Next Year:1992

Last Home is an album by guitarist Caspar Brötzmann and his father, saxophonist Peter Brötzmann.[1] It was released in 1990 through Pathological Records.[2]

Reception

In a review for AllMusic, Scott Yanow wrote that the album "could serve as the soundtrack of a war," and commented: "The violent interplay between Caspar Brotzmann's acid rock guitar feedback... and Peter Brotzmann's bass sax, tenor, clarinet and tarogato... at first is quite jarring. However frequent playing of the CD (it if does not drive one nuts) reveals a logic to the free improvisations. It may not thrill one's neighbors at 3 am. but the performances are certainly quite stimulating and creative. Intense sound explorations."

The authors of the Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings called the album "a remorseless meeting" and "a collision between two elemental forces," and noted: "even with amplification at his disposal, the younger man can't overpower his partner... Whether one hears it as energizing or tedious, it's quite devastating."

Deborah Sprague, writing for Trouser Press, stated: "On Last Home, the guitarist's collaboration with his father ranges from strangely poignant to outright hostile — the overall tone is not unlike one of those coming-of-age films wherein dad blusters about his accomplishments loud and long enough to prompt a raging retort from the young whippersnapper being challenged. In 1990, at least, the iron-lunged saxophonist got the better of his offspring: time will tell if Caspar can turn the tables."

Saxophonist Mats Gustafsson wrote: "Brutal album – not the mainstream bebop father & son meet really... this is something very very different... Scary intensity. SCARY. No one can be disappointed after hearing this incredible album."[3]

Author Todd S. Jenkins described Last Home as "a frighteningly intense pairing of father and son," and remarked: "This set makes it glaringly obvious where Caspar got his unorthodox musical pedigree, as the two act out the ultimate in domestic violence."[4]

Personnel

Musicians
Production and additional personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Complex Sounds of Caspar Brötzmann. March 4, 2019. downbeat.com.
  2. Deborah . Sprague . Caspar Brötzmann Massaker . . 2007 . March 28, 2013.
  3. Web site: Trades October 2017 . Mats . Gustafsson . October 4, 2017 . MatsGus.com . June 20, 2022.
  4. Encyclopedia: Jenkins . Todd S. . Brötzmann, Peter . Free Jazz and Free Improvisation: An Encyclopedia . 2004 . Greenwood . 1 . 65 . Google Books.