03 May, 2011

Don Cherry - Brown Rice (1976) (eac-log-cover)

Don Cherry - Brown Rice (1976)
jazz | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 255MB
A&M Records
Allmusic:
If Eternal Rhythm was Don Cherry's world fusion masterpiece of the '60s, then Brown Rice is its equivalent for the '70s. But where Eternal Rhythm set global influences in a free jazz framework, Brown Rice's core sound is substantially different, wedding Indian, African, and Arabic music to Miles Davis' electrified jazz-rock innovations. And although purists will likely react here the same way they did to post-Bitches Brew Davis, Brown Rice is a stunning success by any other standard. By turns hypnotic and exhilarating, the record sounds utterly otherworldly: the polyrhythmic grooves are deep and driving, the soloing spiritual and free, and the plentiful recording effects trippy and mysterious. The various ethnic influences lift the album's already mystical atmosphere to a whole new plane, plus Cherry adds mostly non-English vocals on three of the four tracks, whispering cryptic incantations that make the pieces resemble rituals of some alien shaman. The title cut has since become an acid jazz/rare-groove classic, filtering Charlie Haden's acoustic bass through a wah-wah pedal and melding it with psychedelic electric piano riffs, electric bongos, wordless female vocals, short snippets of tenor saxophonist Frank Lowe's free jazz screeching, and, of course, Cherry's whispers and trumpet. Closer "Degi-Degi" works a similarly mind-bending mixture, but the middle two pieces ("Malkauns" and "Chenrezig") are lengthy explorations where Cherry's languid trumpet solos echo off into infinity. Of all his world fusion efforts, Brown Rice is the most accessible entry point into Cherry's borderless ideal, jelling into a personal, unique, and seamless vision that's at once primitive and futuristic in the best possible senses of both words. While Cherry would record a great deal of fine work in the years to come, he would never quite reach this level of wild invention again. [Brown Rice's original title was Don Cherry, which was changed a year after its initial 1975 release.]

Tracks
-1. "Brown Rice" - Cherry - 5:15
-2. "Malkauns" - Berger, Cherry - 14:02
-3. "Chenrezig" - Cherry - 12:51
-4. "Degi-Degi" - Cherry - 7:06

Personnel
* Don Cherry – trumpet, electric piano, vocals
* Frank Lowe – tenor sax
* Ricky Cherry – electric piano
* Charlie Haden – acoustic bass
* Hakim Jamil – acoustic bass
* Moki – tamboura
* Billy Higgins, drums
* Bunchie Fox – electric bongos
* Verna Gillis – vocals

6 comments:

durmoll said...

log & linx:
http://shortText.com/6lh34qu8d7sopnr
mirror:
http://tinypaste.com/b4b2c
p: lworld

Phonemes said...

Thank you, it's a treat!

Chris said...

Thanks for this Free Jazz/World Fusion Masterpiece. It's great to hear Frank Lowe in a different context blowing hard, not to mention Charlie Haden's wonderful bass playing. Keep Free Jazz alive with more posts, kriztof :)

its me said...

Thanks for sharing..

Philo said...

Interesting stuff!

I have the tune "Brown Rice" performed by Shadowfax on their 1983 album Shadowdance. I had no idea it was a Don Cherry composition.

Reiss Latimer said...

Very nice indeed.

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