Showing posts with label Abdullah Ibrahim. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abdullah Ibrahim. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Abdullah Ibrahim - Solotude

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:41
Size: 99,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:10) 1. Mindiff
(1:56) 2. Trieste My Love
(2:24) 3. Nisa
(2:08) 4. Blue Bolero
(5:04) 5. In-Tempo
(2:30) 6. Dreamtime
(0:38) 7. Blue Bolero (First Reprise)
(1:49) 8. Peace
(1:05) 9. Blues For A Hip King
(1:02) 10. District 6
(0:39) 11. Tokai
(0:14) 12. District 6 (Reprise)
(0:42) 13. Pula
(3:20) 14. Sotho Blue
(0:23) 15. Blue Bolero (Second Reprise)
(1:29) 16. Did You Hear That Sound?
(1:33) 17. In The Evening
(6:27) 18. Once Upon A Midnight
(4:52) 19. The Wedding
(1:06) 20. Signal On The Hill

Abdullah Ibrahim once told a seminar at his M7 Academy in Cape Town, "The devil lives on the stage. This is where the ego comes out." On the strength of Solotude, recorded live on his eighty-sixth birthday, Ibrahim has crushed such personal demons and now lets angels guide his performing. One takes his point though, given that even the most spiritual music needs some sense of conceit to create and promote it. But this is an artist with nothing left to prove or justify, having laid down musical markers since emerging on record as Dollar Brand in 1968.

Solotude is neatly titled, with its aching sense of seclusion and repose. The record was made at Hirzinger Hall in east Germany, during the 2020 lockdown, with no audience beyond a technical crew. If anything, this format works better as each piece is left framed by brief silence rather than applause. The only background noise is actually supplied by Ibrahim with his occasional grunts and gasps of concentrated pleasure. Just possibly they could be groans of annoyance at a fluffed note, inaudible to any but himself. But more probably Ibrahim was captivated in the moment at his piano, just as the listeners are left enrapt.

The opening cut, "Mindif," is one of several which he revisits from a stellar career. Shorn of its previous orchestration, the track's blend of mystic light and golden silence sets a tone; also the album's most spectral cut, it echoes some of Espen Eriksen's noirish turns. "Trieste My Love," reworked from Dream Time (Enja Records, 2019) conveys a sweet sense of longing, while the playful rolls and jabs of "Nisa" are distinct from the brassy rendering on The Balance (Gearbox Records, 2019).

More geeky fun can be had with hearing "District 6" retain its funky swagger from the vibrant African Magic album (Enja Records, 2002). Elsewhere, a stark version of "Sotho Blue" supremely mimics the original's haunting sax and flute parts. Trying to unravel Ibrahim's sonic secrets is probably futile, though his fingertip sensitivity and use of sustain are evident on the romantic contemplations of "Blue Bolero" and "Once Upon A Midnight." Further, several short fragments, such as "Peace," "Blues For A Hip King" and "Tokai," echo a philosophical quality found in Franz Liszt's more intimate works.

Ibrahim presents one of his most enduring songs, "The Wedding," near the end like an encore. New numbers include the rhapsodic "In-Tempo" with its ripples of trilling birdsong, plus the closing cut, "Signal On The Hill," which brings a final note of serenity.

The meditative strength of this outing is born of one who recognises martial arts, medicine and movement as key elements. Ibrahim offers his symphonic poems to us here with quiet reverence. Who could refuse such a gift?~Gareth Thompsonhttps://www.allaboutjazz.com/solotude-abdullah-ibrahim-gearbox-records

Personnel: Abdullah Ibrahim: piano.

Solotude

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Abdullah Ibrahim - Dream Time

Styles: Contemporary Jazz, Cape Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:09
Size: 160,0 MB

(1:12)  1. Trieste My Love
(1:00)  2. Genesis
(4:13)  3. For Coltrane
(2:41)  4. Blue Bolero - Blue Bolero I
(9:39)  5. Nisa
(0:36)  6. Blue Bolero - Blue Bolero II
(3:39)  7. Capetown District Six
(3:36)  8. Sotho Blue
(0:08)  9. Machopi
(2:25) 10. Whoza Mtwana
(8:04) 11. Blues for a Hip King
(2:58) 12. Dream Time
(3:05) 13. In the Evening
(2:06) 14. Song for Lawrence Brown
(1:19) 15. Blue Bolero - Blue Bolero III
(7:48) 16. Dedication to Duke Ellington
(3:02) 17. The Ballance
(1:30) 18. Aspen
(2:53) 19. Did You Hear That Sound
(7:07) 20. Blue Bolero - Blue Bolero IV

Abdullah Ibrahim: Dream TimeStream-of-consciousness solo-piano recitals come in as many shades as jazz itself. At one extreme are Keith Jarrett's messianic epics. At another are Abdullah Ibrahim's less flashy but deeper outings. Ibrahim's style is about substance, space and subtlety. He says more by doing less. Duke Ellington and Thelonious Monk, after all, were his formative influences.

Dream Time was recorded in March 2019 at the Hirzinger Concert Hall in Sölinhuben, in the foothills of the German Alps where Ibrahim lives. Over the course of sixty-seven minutes, he ranges over seventeen tunes from his massive songbook of original compositions, returning three times to one of them, "Blue Bolero" (from the 2003 Enja album African Magic). Audio quality is superb and the performance is seamless, each tune seguing into the next. Only at the very end does applause inform us that an audience was present.

It would be interesting to know if Ibrahim's choice of material was planned or off the cuff, but it is of no consequence. Dream Time was conceived not as a greatest-hits package, but in the spirit of the Native Australian timelines from which it takes its name. It is contemplative and intimate and unhurried. Ellington and his longtime trombonist Lawrence Brown are both acknowledged as inspirations and other pieces evoke Ibrahim's early years in South Africa (he exiled himself from the country in 1963). Three of the tunes ("Dream Time," "Nisa," "The Balance") were included on his excellent 2019 album The Balance (Gearbox), recorded in London with his eight-piece band, Ekaya.

Talking soft and saying something, as is Ibrahim's wont, this is a work of exquisite beauty.

Personnel: Abdullah Ibrahim: piano.

Dream Time


Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Abdullah Ibrahim - The Enja Heritage Collection: Banyana

Styles: Piano, Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:15
Size: 92,8 MB
Art: Front

( 2:04)  1. Banyana - The Children Of Africa
( 6:17)  2. Ishmael
( 8:17)  3. Asr
( 6:25)  4. The Honey Bird
( 6:45)  5. The Dream
(10:24)  6. Yukio-Khalifa

Abdullah Ibrahim sings and plays soprano on "Ishmael" but otherwise sticks to piano on this trio set with bassist Cecil McBee and drummer Roy Brooks. As usual Ibrahim's folkish melodies (this CD has six of his originals plus a previously alternate take of "Ishmael") pay tribute to his South African heritage and Islam religion without becoming esoteric or inaccessible. Some of the unpredictable music gets a bit intense (Ibrahim is in consistently adventurous form) but his flights always return back to earth and have an air of optimism. An above average effort from a true individualist. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-banyana-children-of-africa-mw0000204709

Personnel: Piano, Soprano Saxophone, Composed By – Abdullah Ibrahim;  Bass – Cecil McBee; Drums – Roy Brooks.

The Enja Heritage Collection: Banyana

Friday, February 3, 2017

Buddy Tate, Abdullah Ibrahim - Buddy Tate Meets Abdullah Ibrahim: The Lengendary 1977 Encounter

Styles: Piano And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1977
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:18
Size: 139,0 MB
Art: Front

( 7:14)  1. Goduka Mfundi
( 6:52)  2. Heyt Mazurki
( 8:30)  3. Poor Butterfly
( 7:32)  4. In A Sentimental Mood
( 4:43)  5. Doggin' Around
( 7:25)  6. Just You, Just Me
( 7:24)  7. Shrimp Boats
(10:35)  8. Django

Initially a meeting between swing tenor saxophonist Buddy Tate and post-bop pianist Abdullah Ibrahim (still widely known as Dollar Brand in 1977 when this CD was recorded), this seems like a possible misfire. Instead, it proves to be an inspiration, as each player taught the other new music and they successfully blended their disparate jazz backgrounds into one outstanding album. The first track, "Goduka Mfundi," is particularly interesting; it's an original by Ibrahim that Tate and the rhythm section (drummer Roy Brooks and bassist Cecil McBee) had just learned prior to recording it, and the composer sits out this hypnotic African groove tune. The pianist's other original is the tasty blues "Heyt Mazurki." Tate's quick tutoring of Ibrahim also pays off huge dividends, as "Doggin' Around" is the most smoking performance of the date, while "Just You, Just Me" proves to be a unique mix of swing and African jazz. The remaining two quartet tracks are familiar turf to all parties. Tate's soulful tone recalls Ben Webster in "Poor Butterfly," though Ibrahim clearly steals the show with his well-disguised, dreamy introduction to Duke Ellington's "In a Sentimental Mood." At this point Tate had to leave for a gig, and the date was completed as a trio. "Shrimp Boats," a piece that Ibrahim recorded on several different occasions, is slow to develop but a very infectious chant-like work. The pianist actual chants along with the almost Middle Eastern-sounding introduction that eventually unfolds into John Lewis' well-known "Django"; in fact, this ten-plus minute piece is nearly over by the time they segue into its theme, following McBee's terrific arco bass solo and Brooks' superb drum solo. It's a shame there wasn't an encore meeting between Ibrahim and Tate following the making of this memorable disc. ~ Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/buddy-tate-meets-abdullah-ibrahim-the-legendary-encounter-mw0000188790

Personnel: Abdullah Ibrahim (piano); Buddy Tate (saxophone); Roy Brooks (drums).

Buddy Tate Meets Abdullah Ibrahim: The Lengendary 1977 Encounter

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Abdullah Ibrahim - Cape Town Flowers

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:57
Size: 118,9 MB
Art: Front

(2:52)  1. Excursions
(4:22)  2. Eleventh Hour
(2:38)  3. Kofifi Blue
(3:59)  4. Chisa
(3:28)  5. Song For Aggerey
(3:20)  6. The Stride
(4:45)  7. The Call
(5:25)  8. African Marketplace
(9:30)  9. Joan - Cape Town Flower
(4:35) 10. Maraba Blue
(6:02) 11. Monk In Harlem

Cape Town Flowers is an enchanting effort from Abdullah Ibrahim, finding the pianist in a trio setting performing 11 original compositions. With the exception of the nine-minute title track and "Monk In Harlem," most of the album's songs clock in at under five minutes, many under four. Each of the pieces is understated, lovely, and nearly dreamlike. The length of the tracks may make Cape Town Flowers seem like a slight record, but the truth is, that very brevity and the way the songs form a sonic tapestry is exactly what makes the record a modest gem.
~Stephen Thomas Erlewine http://www.allmusic.com/album/cape-town-flowers-mw0000025041

Personnel: Abdullah Ibrahim (piano); Marcus McLaurine (bass); George Gray (drums).

Cape Town Flowers

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Abdullah Ibrahim - The Song Is My Story

Size: 104,5 MB
Time: 39:18
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz: Piano Jazz
Art: Front

01. Celestial Bird Dance (1:15)
02. Threshold (3:21)
03. Open Door Within (3:45)
04. Unfettered Muken (1:50)
05. Spiral Mist (2:13)
06. Just Arrived (3:26)
07. Kalahari Pleiades (6:08)
08. For Coltrane, Pt. 1 (0:54)
09. Twelve By Twelve (1:38)
10. Shadows Lean Against My Song (1:49)
11. The Song Is My Story (1:29)
12. Marinska (2:13)
13. African Dawn (0:36)
14. Eclipse At Dawn (1:58)
15. Phambili - Looking Ahead (1:38)
16. For Coltrane, Pt. 2 (4:25)
17. Children Dance (0:32)

The charismatic Abdullah Ibrahim is South Africa's most distinguished pianist and a world-respected master musician. He releases the solo piano album 'The Song Is My Story' to celebrate his 80th birthday, 2014 also marks 20 years since the end of apartheid.

Abdullah Ibrahim visited Sacile, Italy in the summer of 2014, played on the legendary "Fazioli" grand piano and visited the workshop where these pianos are crafted. There is a concert hall in Sacile with fantastic instruments, which sound as if they were created especially for Ibrahim. He recorded this CD there, a mixture of free improvisations and performances of his classic compositions such as a "For Coltrane" and "African Dawn". Fortunately, professional films were shot during those days, so 'The Song Is My Story' also includes a DVD with concert excerpts, as well as conversations with Abdullah Ibrahim.

Ibrahim explains his approach to creating music in the liner notes: "There are people who can only play if they have sheet music. But we others improvise without knowing where we are headed. This makes us free. We don't fear situations that we don't know. We have a song, rhythm, harmony and pitch, and then we start to play with that, turn everything upside down...We jazz musicians are not afraid of letting things take their course. "

Personnel: Abdullah Ibrahim (piano)

"The humble high priest of international jazz." - The Guardian

The Song Is My Story

Friday, September 5, 2014

Abdullah Ibrahim - Dukes Memories

Styles: African Jazz, World Fusion
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:27
Size: 97,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:40)  1. The Wedding
(3:56)  2. Black And Brown Cherries
(3:27)  3. For Coltrane
(3:10)  4. In A Sentimental Mood
(7:18)  5. Angelica-Purple Gazelle
(6:13)  6. Star Crossed Lovers
(4:21)  7. Way Way Back
(4:08)  8. Virgin Jungle
(6:10)  9. Water Edge

South African pianist Abdullah Ibrahim recorded several tributes to his mentor Duke Ellington, and Duke's Memories is certainly one of the finest. Adroitly choosing some under-recognized beauties of Ellingtonia, adding a standard, and mixing in a few originals, Ibrahim delivers a well-balanced and frequently gorgeous program. The opening "Star Crossed Lovers" includes a heart-rending alto solo by one of the best saxophonists few people know (Carlos Ward), and the obscure, jaunty "Way Way Back" is given a delightful, in-the-pocket reading. Tracks five through nine are from a live date, beginning with Ibrahim's moving, stately "The Wedding," which he seems to have recorded on virtually every album he issued during the '80s; it receives one of its better renditions here. The leader, as is his wont, tends to stay in the background, eschewing the star soloist role and preferring to direct the quartet from the keyboard, though he steps out front with some rich playing on "In a Sentimental Mood." A rippling medley of Ellington's "Angelica" and "Purple Gazelle" closes out the album in delightful fashion, rounding out a deeply felt performance. Recommended. ~ Brian Olewnick  http://www.allmusic.com/album/dukes-memories-accord-mw0000187902

Personnel:  Alto Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Flute – Carlos Ward; Bass – Rachim Ausar Sahu; Drums – Andrei Strobert; Piano – Abdullah Ibrahim

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Sathima Bea Benjamin - A Morning In Paris

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 42:21
Size: 97.0 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1963/2008
Art: Front

[3:46] 1. Darn That Dream
[4:32] 2. I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)
[3:19] 3. I Could Write A Book
[3:11] 4. I Should Care
[2:00] 5. Spring Will Be A Little Late This Year
[3:29] 6. Solitude
[4:15] 7. The Man I Love
[2:37] 8. Your Love Has Faded
[3:17] 9. I'm Glad There Is You
[3:08] 10. Soon
[3:29] 11. Lover Man
[5:13] 12. A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square

In 1963, singer Sathima Bea Benjamin persuaded Duke Ellington to see her future husband, Abdullah Ibrahim (then known as Dollar Brand), play in a club in Europe. Ellington was impressed by both of the recent South African émigrés and arranged with Reprise to record them. While Brand's record came out within a year, Benjamin's debut was lost and not heard for decades, even by the singer. As it turned out, engineer Gerhard Lehner had made a second copy and kept it for all of these years, so the initial 1997 release of this important session was possible. Backed by pianist Ibrahim, bassist Johnny Gertze, drummer Makaya Ntshoko, and (on two songs apiece) Duke Ellington or Billy Strayhorn, and occasionally joined by violinist Svend Asmussen (who here plays exclusively pizzicato, as if he were using a high-pitched guitar), Benjamin's voice sounds quite beautiful. She performs two Ellington tunes, Strayhorn's "Your Love Has Faded," and nine standards, with the emphasis on slow ballads. The moody music is often haunting and quite memorable. ~ Scott Yanow

Recorded at Barclay Studios, Paris, France on February 23, 1963.

Sathima Bea Benjamin (vocals); Svend Asmussen (violin); Duke Ellington, Billy Strayhorn, Abdullah Ibrahim (piano); Johnny Gertze (bass); Makaya Ntshoko (drums).

A Morning In Paris