| | Marilyn Crispell Storyteller CD Marilyn Crispell Discography of CDs
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Personnel: Marilyn Crispell (piano); Mark Helias (bass); Paul Motian (drums). Recorded at Avatar Studios, New York, New York in February 2003. Personnel: Marilyn Crispell (piano); Mark Helias (double bass); Paul Motian (drums). Recording information: Avatar Studios, New York, NY (02/2003). Photographer: Cheryl Koralik. Seven years after the unprecedented ECM debut, Nothing Ever Was, Anyway, and three years after the stellar Amaryllis, pianist Marilyn Crispell gives listeners another trip down her ever deepening cavern of mystery and imagination. Teamed once again with drummer and composer Paul Motian and new bassist Mark Helias, Crispell builds an even sturdier tension bridge between her increasing focus on harmonic and melodic interplay and dynamic intensity. The polarities are the immediate way into this set, which is so full of ambiguities and spectral presences one could say it is haunted. Crispell's physicality is held in check for most of the proceedings here, but it is ever present. There is a tautness to these performances that is held firmly by the steady, sinewy rhythmic direction of Helias (who contributed two fine tunes to this set). Crispell wrote three pieces for this recording, all of them signifying a direction the ensemble travels in a labyrinthine fashion for a time. These are underscored and elaborated upon in her choice of six of Motian's tunes covering some 30 years. In fact, the title track, which feels like a Crispell signature, was composed by Motian. What sets Storyteller apart from most recordings out there is its depth of feeling and the unveiled manner in which it is displayed. In the tempered pieces such as "Wild Rose," "Alone," "Flght of the Bluejay," and "The Sunflower," one can hear how Crispell's reliance on depth and instinct has carried her music to an entirely different level. There is no interest in anything but getting the tunes across, digging into them and exposing the secret heart in each to the open air. Certainly the force that has been displayed on her earlier recordings and those she has made with Anthony Braxton contains an emotional aspect in the angular sound worlds she articulates, but here music and emotion are inseparable and become their own poetic syntax and utterance. Crispell is spinning narratives in her forays into complex harmonic investigation. Her woven interplay with Motian, where each musician accompanies as well as anticipates and challenges the other, is remarkable on tunes such as the strident "Cosmology 1" and "Play." The album's final cut, Crispell's "So Far, So Near," is far from a summation. In its wrenching emotion, restraint, and elegance it not only challenges critical notions of who she has been and what she has accomplished, but leaves such questions superfluous and shallow. Beginning with a bass solo by Helias, it skeletally unfolds in a purposeful yet open way, leaving lines to trail off and into one another rather than end or point to specific next steps. Space and nuance are given careful consideration by Motian as he opens up more terrain for Crispell's investigation of a muted yet multidimensional color pattern that is as seductive as it is hypnotic, as tender as it is adventurous within its determined, deliberate parameters. It is the utterance of shadow, of sense impression, of the complex and whispering heart of the music itself. Storyteller is another triumph for Marilyn Crispell. ~ Thom JurekJazzTimes (p.116) - "[T]he great success of STORYTELLER is in the telling. Crispell remains a strikingly lyrical pianist, and Motian is clearly inspired." Marilyn Crispell Storyteller Songs Storyteller Music Review Average Rating: (3.5 out of 5 stars)   A Grower " Always my favorite CD's" Dream like, reflective and subtle, this album seems to grow on me with every listen. Best enjoyed at the rising of the morning sun, this is sophisticated jazz at its best. On the other hand this might appeal more to fans of classical music......the bass work,in particular, is majestic......I also love PJ Harvey! Submitted by RALPH (Madison, Wi) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
A Disappointment... It seems to plod along, and the music doesn't seem to go anywhere. Her previous effort, Amaryllis in contrast, has more to offer in terms of spirit and aliveness. Where as Storyteller seems to languish by comparison. Three minus stars. Submitted by KGS (West Bloomfield, MI, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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$22.79 Please Feed the PagansRoman Rhodes is the stage name of the persistently prolific Singer Songwriter of the Born Again Pagans. With over 200 songs to his name and the ability to write in almost any style, he is a veritable goldmine for any publisher, agent, or company with the intelligence to cultivate but not strip mine… were these The Good Old Days! Humorous and intelligent, he is one of the few on the planet fully understanding and able to expound on the Pagan worldview, in other words he’s Nobody. But then so was Odysseus. Here are some excerpts from an interview with Rhodes by the B.B.C. (Please note: that is the entirely unknown Barely Broadcasting Couch BBC and not the world famous British Broadcasting Corporation, BBC.)BBC: Why do you use the name Roman Rhodes?RR: Well my mother was a piano teacher, and her father a pianist, so as the music seemed to come from that side of the family, I thought I’d honor it by using her maiden name.BBC: And you were a teacher of Roman History at University in Montreal, so the Roman comes from that, I suppose?RR: That’s right. The play on words: Roman/Roaming, seemed appropriate in theme to my troubadour, country-Celtic-folk-roots style of music, and the highly straight (read mainly acoustic in this case) high quality roads of the Romans, added to the name choice.BBC: So you feel your music will last as long as the Roman roads?RR: I like the way your eyebrows arch as you say that, you could work for the real BBC. BBC: (Laughs.)RR: It was not my intention to arrogantly suggest my work will last long, hell its not even lasting short yet! But it is my aim to make well-crafted music. I didn’t say I achieved it, but I do aim for it. BBC: Well I think you have achieved it with this album. There is no song that is a let down from first to last; lyrical, rich and lovely.RR: Thanks. And that was a much nicer eyebrow arching this time.BBC: Thanks. What do you think of the couch?RR: Its ...
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