Exploring microtones in his subsequent compositions and improvisations alike, Joe Maneri's first officially released recording, 1991's Kalavinka, found him joined by his violinist son Mat and percussionist Masashi Harada, and marked the end of a three-decade absence from performing and recording. Two more efforts -- the Leo session Get Ready to Receive Yourself and Three Men Walking, an ECM date featuring guitarist Joe Morris -- followed in 1995. The former release, recorded in 1993, introduced many avant jazz and creative improvisation listeners to the Joe Maneri Quartet, featuring Joe and Mat joined by bassist John Lockwood and drummer Randy Peterson. Later in the '90s, the Swiss Hatology label dipped further into 1993 Joe Maneri Quartet recordings for 1997's Coming Down the Mountain and 1999's Tenderly (both featuring Ed Schuller on bass rather than Lockwood). Issued in 1997 by ECM, the Maneri Quartet's In Full Cry captured the group (with bassist Lockwood this time) recording in a German studio during June of the preceding year.
Bassist Barre Phillips joined Joe and Mat for 2000's Tales of Rohnlief and 2004's Angles of Repose, both also released by ECM. Meanwhile, in 2002 the AUM Fidelity label released Going to Church, a set of microtonal collective improvisations by the Maneri Ensemble, featuring not only the father and son Maneris, bassist Phillips, and drummer Peterson but also pianist Matthew Shipp and trumpeter Roy Campbell. On August 24, 2009, after an extraordinary life in music marked by decades under the radar and a somewhat improbable late-career performing and recording resurgence, Joe Maneri died in Boston at age 82 following complications from heart surgery. ~ Jason Ankeny & Dave Lynch, Rovi