| | Keith Jarrett Radiance CD Keith Jarrett Discography of CDs
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Personnel: Keith Jarrett (piano). Keith Jarrett returned to performing and recording solo concerts in 1995 with La Scala (released in 1997) after recovering from an illness. That fine recording followed his manner of working that he had begun on Köln Concert in 1975: That is, completely improvised concerts from beginning to end that had melodic and "motivic" centers. The double-disc set that is Radiance, recorded in Japan in 2002, is a new fork in the road. The work has no conceptual center. Jarrett says he wanted to let some of the music "happen" to him while he sat at the piano, deep in thought. He states: "I wanted my hands (particularly the left hand) to tell me things." And happen it does. Each piece, after the first one, comes out of the work that immediately precedes it. There are 13 linked pieces that mark the Osaka concert spread over the first disc, and one-third of disc two. The effect is startling at first because Jarrett is constantly working with what comes, whether dissonant or assonant; he uses the small essences, quick phrases, and themes that come out of each piece to dig further, to extend wider his discovery. Whispers of many musics enter, from classical and jazz to pop to Latin to folk. Nothing feels like a direct quote, but all of it gels together as elemental. Each piece is an aspect of a transformational construction. Most of the music very is exciting; it walks, then runs on edges before turning and stopping, then dances, crawls and rolls, ever-somewhere just past the reach of what preceded it. Some of Radiance is quiet and lyrical (part three, for instance), because it has been suggested by the intensity of the chaotic and forceful harmonic and rhythmic notions preceding it. Jarrett admits in his liner notes "The listener has to bear with me here. The whole thing is risky, but I've taken you places before and I'm not aiming to disappoint." This is born out in the way the audience responds. Some sections get no applause because of the quick, shape-shifting manner in which Jarrett seemingly careens from one place to the next. But intent listening reveals the sometimes very subtle links between themes, spaces, and harmonic and rhythmic invention. Two-thirds of disc two come from a concert in Tokyo conducted in much the same way, though he includes the first two pieces -- a cut from the second-half of the concert and the final track -- as the performance's closer. These do not distract from the Osaka gig. In fact they contain a beautiful, if momentarily disjointed flow. This is Jarrett the artist taking chances, lots of them. His process is immediate, poignant, and utterly engaging throughout and marks a new phase in his solo recordings that will spur great interest in any open-minded listener interested in improvisational music. There is a DVD of the Tokyo performance being prepared by ECM for release. ~Thom Jurek Though pianist Keith Jarrett has dabbled in many styles and genres over the years, he is most renowned, and deservedly so, for his solo piano performances. Live albums like THE KOLN CONCERT and LA SCALA feature Jarrett engaged in extended improvisations, exploring motifs and phrases, and turning them inside-out with a dazzling ear for detail and permutation. The two-disc set RADIANCE belongs with Jarrett's finest improv concerts. Recorded while the artist was on a 2002 tour of Japan, RADIANCE represents Jarrett's unique, genre-bending playing at its best. Jarrett's wide range of influences is threaded throughout--strains of classical, jazz, pop, and world music are identifiable here and there. As with all his improvised work, there is a great feeling of exhilaration for the listener in discovering--along with his concert audience--where Jarrett will go next. In fact, RADIANCE feels even more open-ended than previous efforts in that it relies less on recurring themes and more on small bits of musical connective tissue, which lead the playing in ever-shifting directions. Yet Jarrett's skDown Beat (p.63) - "PART 5 is particularly exciting, featuring Jarrett's dazzling two-hand tandem whorls and eddies..." JazzTimes (p.94) - "Jarrett launches onto three-note cells or rhythmic snaps during the longer pieces to propel him on journeys from one section into an unknown that coalesces into something new, measured and gripping at once." Mojo (Publisher) (p.96) - 3 stars out of 5 - "[O]ne emerges once again from the Jarrett experience quietly changed." Keith Jarrett Radiance Songs Radiance Music Review Average Rating: (5 out of 5 stars)   Bliss for Jarrett fans Keith Jarrett respects his fan base enough to challenge them, and he never does it in a half-hearted or messy way. It's hard to imagine any Jarrett fan not being won over by Radiance's dynamic, atonal experimentation leading to pockets of familiar warmth, which are all the more sweet because they're surrounded by a fresh spirit. Similar to Jarrett's strangely neglected record, Dark Intervals, the short improvised pieces on Radiance veer from headlong rushes into barely thought-out ideas (not so much beautiful as thrilling) to lucid melodies that tap into Jarrett's deep knowledge of standard ballads and elegaic classical motifs. For serious music lovers, this record is over two hours of unfiltered, unpackaged bliss, another in a series of Jarrett albums that seem to mine the very source of music, but unique enough to make us feel that a new path to the source has been cleared. Submitted by nordforsdouglas (Charlottesville, Virginia, USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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