| | Matthew Shipp One CD Matthew Shipp Discography of CDs
Personnel: Matthew Shipp (piano); Matthew Shipp. Audio Mixer: Glenn Robinson . Recording information: Leon Lee Dorsey Studios, New York, NY (08/18/2005). Editor: Glenn Robinson . The 12 tracks that make up One, Matthew Shipp's first solo piano outing since 2002's Songs on the Splasc(h) label, amount to a new kind of recital for the pianist. Two of his major influences on the instrument, Cecil Taylor and Mal Waldron, make their traces heard in terms of Shipp's architecture, but never do they become dominant. There is a kind of economy of scale that goes into these pieces that's refreshing for any solo piano outing. For starters, there are the elegant middle- and lower-middle-register chord voicings that make up the lion's share of "Arc," the opener. Shipp puts down a series of chords following in scale, and then extrapolates on them, shading their colors more sharp or more flat, a little bit at a time, never trying to arrive at a destination until one speaks out loudly enough for more detail. On "Patmos," one can hear the unhurried projection of scale in the single-note flourishes that stack up, allowing one set of tones to bleed into another, asserting not so much projection as a platform from which to hear what comes next and to allow that songlike voice to rise to the surface. "Gamma Ray" invokes both Thelonious Monk and Taylor in its jagged, rhythmic dexterity. The play of melody works against the grain here in the beginning, but it does make itself known before the pianist's own sense of space between chromatic statements becomes dominant. But Shipp is very keen on balance in these pieces, too; there is the constant rise of tension and its gradual release once a path of inquiry is found and decided upon. The drift in "Zero" is charted so that one of Shipp's most beautiful and realized melodies comes to the fore -- along with graceful melodic and harmonic articulations -- and stays there for the entire piece. One is a fully realized and poetic work by a mature pianist who should finally begin getting his due, not only as an improviser and a visionary but as a technician as well. ~ Thom JurekSpin (p.91) - "[A] dozen solo piano pieces as frisky and dramatic as they are assured, generating electricity without plugging anything in." -- Grade: A- Magnet (p.118) - "His touch is lighter, and his melodies now stand in stark relief instead of rising like spray from a rolling surf of dissonance." The Wire (pp.51-53) - "ONE commands attention....This album returns Shipp to jazz roots. There are no wasted notes here -- 12 very distinctive tracks are packed into just 40 minutes." Down Beat (p.68) - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "Music that can conjure thoughts of a visual world has to be doing something right, and Shipp's rococo reveries have enough cinematic clout to make one thing obvious: Brooding becomes him." JazzTimes (p.95) - "He lays little eggs that evolve into wildly unpredictable shapes and then stop, in quick fades....It is all very fresh to the ear..." One Review
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Purchase One CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | William Parker Scrapbook CD (2003)
One
$13.59 Live Recording
William Parker Violin Trio: William Parker (bass); Billy Bang (violin); Hamid Drake (drums). Recorded at Strobe-Light Studios, New York, New York in May 2002. Includes liner notes by William Parker. Personnel: Billy Bang (violin); Hamid Drake (drums). Audio Mixer: Chris Flam. Liner Note Author: William Parker . Recording information: Strobe-Light Studio, New York, NY (05/2002). Editor: Glen Robinson. Photographers: Cynthia Fetty; Lee Christiansen. William Parker's Violin Trio band is one of the more surprising and delightful bands to come out of New York's modern free jazz scene. Parker and his truly singular tone and ingenious modes of attack, violinist Billy Bang, and drummer Hamid Drake conjure the notion of song as it processes itself not only through the simulation and presentation of improvisation but also through the process of memory -- allegorical, perceptual, cultural, and personal -- and they turn it back in itself in creating something brand new from the various shards that lay upon the pavement in the dark, highlighted only by an ...
| | Matthew Shipp Harmony And Abyss CD (2004)
One
$14.29 Personnel: Matthew Shipp (piano, synthesizer); Matthew Shipp; William Parker (double bass, upright bass); Flam (synthesizer, programming, drum programming); Gerald Cleaver (drums). Recording information: Mindswerve Studios, New York, NY (2004); Systems Two Studios, Brooklyn, NY (2004). Editor: Flam. Pianist Matthew Shipp has long been one of the more adventurous and innovative musicians on the turn-of-the-millennium jazz scene, and his work for the Thirsty Ear label, which represents his interest in combining jazz and electronica, shows no signs that Shipp's musical ambition is abating. HARMONY AND ABYSS (2004) is one of the artist's most satisfying efforts in this field. With help from bassist and frequent collaborator William Parker, drummer Gerald Cleaver, and electronica artist FLAM, Shipp pushes jazz into new, uncharted territory. HARMONY AND ABYSS is remarkably organic. Sampling, loops, and repetitive structures that recall club music are integrated seamlessly into the trio setting, with improvisations bubbling up through the rhythms and circular forms. At times, ...
| | David S Ware Live In The World CDs (2005)
One
$20.49 Personnel: David S. Ware (saxophone); Matthew Shipp (piano); Guillermo E. Brown, Hamid Drake, Susie Ibarra (drums). Recording information: Cineama Taetro, Chiasso, Switzerland (12/11/1998-??/??/2003); Milano, Italy (12/11/1998-??/??/2003); Terni, Italy (12/11/1998-??/??/2003). Very few saxophonists have been capable of replicating the intense transcendental energy generated by the tenor saxophone of John Coltrane, whose unique ability to capture the essence of spirituality imbued his music with a mystical stature that charged his later performances with an almost magical tinge. David S. Ware is one of the few post-Coltrane performers to dip successfully into that well as a basis for expressing a singular vision that builds on the innovations and strategies of the great jazz saxophonist. In a sense, this glorious full-length, three-CD live set sums up Ware's career at the time of release, featuring his core trio with pianist Matthew Shipp and bassist William Parker, supplemented on each CD by a different drummer. Taken from different European concerts in 1998 and in 2003, there is a mix of original tunes, a pop tune, and Ware's second incredible ...
| | John Coltrane One Up, One Down: Live At The Half Note CDs (2005) Remastered
One
$18.95 Live Recording
Personnel: John Coltrane (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Alan Grant (spoken vocals); McCoy Tyner (piano); Jimmy Garrison (double bass); Elvin Jones (drums). ONE DOWN, ONE UP: LIVE AT THE HALF NOTE, recorded in the last year of the classic quartet's existence, captures John Coltrane, drummer Elvin Jones, pianist McCoy Tyner, and bassist Jimmy Garrison going full blast. Recorded a year after A LOVE SUPREME, Coltrane was already moving on to extended improvisation, stretching out a single composition for 15 or 20 minutes while deconstructing it from every conceivable angle, turning his saxophone into an instrument of relentless exploration. The dramatic, spiraling inventions of Tyner lend a frenetic element to Coltrane's already intense lines, while Jones and Garrison find and rearrange nearly every rhythm and counter-rhythm imaginable. There are only four tracks here (spread out over two discs), but each--whether it's the fiery title track or the exhilarating take on "My Favorite Things"--is a study in artistry. 2005 was a watershed year for unreleased music by John Coltrane. First there was the unbelievable Thelonious Monk ...
| | Thelonious Monk At Carnegie Hall CD (2005)
One
$12.89 Personnel: Thelonious Monk (piano); John Coltrane (tenor saxophone); Ahmed Abdul-Malik (bass instrument); Shadow Wilson (drums). Liner Note Authors: Larry Appelbaum; Robin D.G. Kelley; Ira Gitler; Lewis Porter; Amiri Baraka; Stanley Crouch; Ashley Kahn. Recording information: Carnegie Hall, New York, NY (11/29/1957). Larry Appelbaum, the recording lab supervisor at the Library of Congress, came across this tape by accident while transferring the library's tape archive to digital. What a find. Forget the Five Spot recording that sounds like it was recorded inside of a tunnel from the far end. The sound here is wonderfully present and contemporary. More importantly, this band -- which also included drummer Shadow Wilson and bassist Ahmed Abdul-Malik -- had it right on November 29, 1957, at Carnegie Hall. The John Coltrane on this date is far more assured than he had been four months earlier on the Five Spot date and on the initial Prestige side Thelonious Monk with John Coltrane. He'd been with Monk for four months and had absorbed his complex, multivalent musical system completely. It's clear from the opening track, "Monk's Mood," where the pair play in duet, ...
| | Andrew Hill Time Lines CD (2006)
One
$13.45 Personnel: Andrew Hill (piano); Andrew Hill; John Hebert (upright bass); Greg Tardy (clarinet, bass clarinet, tenor saxophone); Charles Tolliver (trumpet); Eric McPherson (drums). Audio Mixer: Dae Bennett. Recording information: Bennett Studios, Englewood, NJ (06/23/2005-07/18/2005). Photographer: Jimmy Katz. While recording for Blue Note in the 1960s, composer and pianist Andrew Hill released some of the most forward-thinking and meticulously constructed albums of the post-bop era. The intelligence and daring that characterized those albums still inhabits Hill's recordings, as 2006's TIME LINES attests. Flanked by a fine quartet (a bassist, drummer, trumpeter, and the multi-talented Greg Tardy on tenor sax, clarinet, and bass clarinet), Hill still reels off witty, elliptical piano lines that bring together modal music and free jazz with strains of traditional bop structure. Packed with both fine compositions and playing all around, TIME LINES shows that Hill is still capable of making works of quiet, incisive brilliance. Andrew Hill has been, in the gentlest of cases, ...
| | Erykah Badu Mama's Gun CD (2000)
One
$10.85 Personnel includes: Erykah Badu (vocals, acoustic guitar, whistle, synthesizer); Jef Le Johnson (acoustic & electric guitars); Dready (acoustic guitar, bass); Pino Palladino (electric guitar, bass); Russell Elevado (guitar); Igor Swzec, Emma Kummrow, Charles Parker, Gregory Teperman, Charles Kwas, Olga Konopelsky (violin); Davis Barnett, Peter Nocello (viola); Larry Gold (cello); D'Wayne Kerr (flute); Jacques "Pepe" Swarzbart (saxophone); Roy Hargrove (trumpet); Frank "Roots" Lacy (trombone); James Poyser (piano, Fender Rhodes piano, Clavinet, organ, ARP synthesizer, Mini-Moog synthesizer); Geno "Junebugg" Young (Fender Rhodes piano); Bilal Oliver (Fender Rhodes piano); R.C. Williams, Shaun "Fingers" Matin (keyboards); Roy Ayers (vibraphone). Producers include: Erykah Badu, James Poyser, Jay Dee, Jah Born, Shaun Martin. Engineers include: Chris Bell, Russell Elevado, Tom Soares. "Bag Lady" was nominated for the 2001 Grammy Award for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance and for Best R&B Song. "Didn't Cha Know" was nominated for the 2002 Grammy Award for Best R&B Song. Personnel: Erykah Badu (vocals, background vocals); Emma Kummrow, Gregory Teperman, Charles Parker (violin); Peter Nocella (viola); Larry Gold (cello); Roy Hargrove (trumpet); Shaun Martin (keyboards); Ahmir Khalib Thompson (drums); Leonard "Doc" Gibbs (percussion); Geno "Junebugg" Young, Yah Zarah (background vocals). Audio Mixers: Russell Elevado; Tom Soares; Leslie Brathwaite. Photographer: Don Thompson . Since the arrival of Erykah Badu onto the neo-soul scene back in 1997 with Baduizm, commercial music stood up and took notice with an onslaught of similar artists reaching comparable peaks of mainstream success. After taking some time off for introspection and to raise her son, Badu returned with Mama's Gun, which is a turning point for her in many ways. Gone are the cryptic "Baduizms" that glossed all over her first release, replaced with a more honestly raw Badu singing directly from her heart rather than her head. Sonically, Badu wades out into adventurous territories as well. From the Jimi Hendrix-inspired ...
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