Showing posts with label John Zorn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Zorn. Show all posts

Monday, October 2, 2023

John Zorn - 444

Styles: Avant-garde Jazz, Contemporary Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:40
Size: 107,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:25) 1. Splendour Solis
(7:35) 2. Retort
(2:59) 3. In Sulphur And In Flame
(7:31) 4. Astral Projection
(3:29) 5. Civil Disobedience
(5:49) 6. With Blood I Summon Thee
(5:38) 7. Salt And Mercury
(9:11) 8. Tayy Al-Ard

John Zorn’s work is abundant and consistently good, often great. It is reliably intriguing and fascinating. Sometimes I feel as if I’m repeating myself in these reviews (check out this Zorn review, and this one, and this one, and tell me if I’m lying), but the music is never repeating itself, either because there are new structures, new partners, new ingredients into the mixture, or new improvisations by old partners.

Brian Marsella (electric piano), John Medeski (organ), Matt Hollenberg (electric guitar), and Kenny Grohowski (drums and percussion) form a group for the ages. The electric piano always sends me back to Bitches Brew and you might consider that a limitation for me but its ability to float between shimmering elegy and wild abandon is unmatched. You can do things on the electric piano you can’t do anywhere else (as Sun Ra taught us), and Marsella does so many of those things on 444.

I spotlight Marsella because his voice drew my attention first. The four musicians are the quartet Chaos Magic, which started as Marsella+Simulacrum (a “heavy metal organ trio”). They are bound by the expectations of heavy metal or organ trios. “In Sulphur and in Flame” is a thrashy speed fest with the guitar sounding like an ax counting time. “Astral Projection” sounds like it could live behind a montage of Audrey Hepburn and a bombed-out city in France, just as the plants are starting to grow back.

Shifting time signatures and jump scares are par for the course, as are evocations of beauty. The electric piano arpeggios that open “Tayy al-Ard,” with the shimmering cymbals underneath, are poetically powerful, pensive and filled with curiosity. The guitar and organ come in to lay a field, but the tune relies on persistence and repetition to say what it needs to say. By Gary Chapin
https://www.freejazzblog.org/2023/08/john-zorn-fourth-way-and-444.html

444

Sunday, July 10, 2016

John Zorn - The Mockingbird

Styles: Jazz, Avant-Garde
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:13
Size: 99,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:13)  1. Scout
(4:36)  2. Riverrun
(5:07)  3. Child's Play
(4:54)  4. Porch Swing
(7:13)  5. Innoceence
(4:17)  6. Pegasus
(7:03)  7. A Mystery
(5:46)  8. The Mockingbird

Drawing on his experience in a variety of genres including jazz, rock, hardcore punk, classical, klezmer, film, cartoon, popular and improvised music, John Zorn has created an influential body of work that defies academic categories. A native of New York City, he has been a central figure in the downtown scene since 1975, incorporating a wide range of musicians in various compositional formats. He learned alchemical synthesis from Harry Smith, structural ontology with Richard Foreman, how to make art out of garbage with Jack Smith, cathartic expression at Sluggs and hermetic intuition from Joseph Cornell. Early inspirations include American innovators Ives, Varese, Cage, Carter and Partch, the European tradition of Berg, Stravinsky, Boulez and Kagel, soundtrack composers Herrmann, Morricone and Stalling as well as avant-garde theater, film, art and literature. http://www.hipsroadedition.com/bio.html

Personnel:  Carol Emanuel: Harp;  Bill Frisell: Guitar;  Kenny Wollesen: Vibraphone, Chimes

The Mockingbird

Thursday, June 23, 2016

John Zorn - In Lambeth: Visions From The Walled Garden Of William Blake

Styles: Avant-garde, Jazz Contemporary
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:22
Size: 99,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:58)  1. Tiriel
(4:45)  2. A Morning Light
(6:17)  3. America, A Prophecy
(3:55)  4. Through The Looking Glass
(6:55)  5. The Ancient Of Days
(3:35)  6. Puck
(3:25)  7. The Minotaur
(4:55)  8. The Night Of Enitharmon's Joy
(4:32)  9. The Walled Garden

In Lambeth (subtitled Visions from the Walled Garden of William Blake) is an album composed by John Zorn and performed by Bill Frisell, Carol Emanuel and Kenny Wollesen which as recorded in New York City in April 2013 and released on the Tzadik label in December 2013. The album is the third by the trio following The Gnostic Preludes (2012) and The Mysteries (2013). Its title quotes from William Blake's poem Jerusalem (plate 37, line 14 "There is a Grain of Sand in Lambeth that Satan cannot find"). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_Lambeth_(album)

Personnel:  Carol Emanuel – harp;  Bill Frisell – guitar;  Kenny Wollesen - vibraphone, bells;  Ikue Mori - electronics (track 7)

In Lambeth: Visions From The Walled Garden Of William Blake