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| ARCHIVED ENTRIES BELOW |
| 12.02.03 (2:10 am) [edit] |
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I've pulled in entries from the old Blogger hoon's tunes into this new version, courtesy of tBlog.
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| The Truest Rock and Roll Band |
| 12.02.03 (2:08 am) [edit] |
It may appear immodest to claim veracity as a signal quality for electric guitar-driven music, a form entering its fifth decade of vitality. But Los Lobos takes simple materials and just does their thing on Good Morning Aztlan without a hint of archness, posturing, or audience mongering. That theyve survived every trend without ever becoming trendy or ever becoming a museum piece, at this point, is due to their commitment to a truly modest verity: they love to make music. Los Lobos are romantic dramatists; yet the diamond-hard stories here dont concern extravagant and indulgent recollections of the rock and roll journey theyve been on for thirty years. Sans such drama, theyre content to play their road house blues and Chicano rock for their own, and our own, enjoyment. This latest record is not the least bit fussy or experimental, its funky and instantly ingratiating and true.
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| Astonishing Return |
| 12.02.03 (2:07 am) [edit] |
Tenor and soprano saxophonist Wayne Shorter, like his peer Sonny Rollins, wouldnt have to record another note to have his legacy secured by the music he waxed in the sixties. But, also, like Rollins, Shorter has made fitfull attempts to extend his legacy in the decades since, attempts compromised by their sailing the changing winds of post-bop. Yet, again like Rollins, his relentless sensibility has won out, and, on this fully realized acoustic date, Footprints Live!, he makes music at least on a par with his reknowned earlier work. Recent dates hardly hinted at this return to form. Here, at the head of his working quartet [Danilo Perez (piano), John Patitucci (bass), Brian Blade (drums)] he revisits his own classic compositions and etches solos everybit as gripping as his very best work.
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| Desert Dreams |
| 12.02.03 (2:05 am) [edit] |
Multi-instrumentalist Omar Faruk Tekbilek's new disc, "Alif", resonates with longing and sadness. An able and restrained synthesizer of east and west, here the atmospheric touches of programming and keyboards don't interfere at all with Tekbilek's somber spirituality. Filled with prayerful searching, this superb music is centered and heart tugging. Gardener, featuring Mamak Khadem's beautiful voice as a counterpoint to the leader, is a good example of the weaving of feminine and masculine longing in his music. The inescapable beauty of "Alif" tenders the praxis of lover, loved and beloved. Tekbilek's approach is synthetic but the strands of improvisation, ambience, and modernism, in as much as those elements divert the music from the purely classical modes of Anatolia, are rendered with such refinement and focus as to evoke the universal song of the devoted believer.
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Dave Douglas
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| 12.02.03 (2:04 am) [edit] |
"A Thousand Evenings" (from 2000) features a small group with truly orchestral ambitions. Accordion virtuoso Guy Klucevsek and string players Greg Cohen (bass) and Mark feldman (violin) join Douglas on a taut program of originals and a sensational version of Nat Adderley's The Boy With the Sad Eyes.
It's a record full of elegiac graceful melody and sober playing. Douglas doesn't play the form of blues here, yet I find this fascinating for a kind of beautiful blues feel, Euro-centric and fashioned with 'jazz' technique as it is. Sounds universal.
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| 12.02.03 (1:59 am) [edit] |
I've decided "Noites Do Norte", Caetano Veloso's international effort from 2001 is one of his very best records. It's quite a stew too, covering as it does almost the entirety of the vast musical territory the great Brazilian has made his own over three plus decades. So, string laden art songs rub against reggae, rock, and Veloso's signature playful urbane 'nueva folklorico'. He's achieved a stature in Brazil beyond even Dylan's here, yet, his artistry seems most like Mandy Patimkin. Both singers seem to revel in a high wire act defined by extreme audacity effected by both rigorous control and an ability to bring back -alive- adult tales from the caverns of the human heart. Read the lyrics.
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