Showing posts with label Bill Frisell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Frisell. Show all posts

23 January, 2015

Bill Frisell - Rambler (1984)

Bill Frisell - Rambler (1984)
jazz | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-covers | 265MB
ECM 1987, released: 2008

Allmusic:
This relatively early set from Bill Frisell is a fine showcase for the utterly unique guitarist. Frisell has the ability to play nearly any extroverted style of music and his humor (check out the date's "Music I Heard") is rarely far below the surface. This particular quintet (with trumpeter Kenny Wheeler, tuba player Bob Stewart, electric bassist Jerome Harris and drummer Paul Motian) is not exactly short of original personalities and their outing (featuring seven Frisell compositions) is one of the most lively of all the ones in the ECM catalog.

Tracks
01. Tone (8:01)
02. Music I Heard (4:50)
03. Rambler (8:20)
04. When We Go (5:20)
05. Resistor (5:49)
06. Strange Meeting (7:06)
07. Wizard Of Odds (6:20)

Personnel
- Bill Frisell – guitar, guitar synthesizer
- Kenny Wheeler – trumpet, cornet and fluegelhorn
- Bob Stewart – tuba
- Jerome Harris – electric bass
- Paul Motian – drums

04 April, 2014

Petra Haden And Bill Frisell - Petra Haden And Bill Frisell (2004)

  Petra Haden And Bill Frisell  - Petra Haden And Bill Frisell (2004)
jazz | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-covers | 265MB
Rykodisc/Hannibal HNCD1472
Allmusic:
It's safe to say that most albums don't include renditions of tunes by Foo Fighters, George Gershwin, and Stevie Wonder, along with traditional Tuvan folk songs, together on the same track list. Unless, of course, you're referring to the 2005 disc by the duo of Bill Frisell and Petra Haden. One of the foremost guitarists in contemporary jazz, Frisell is renowned for his signature guitarscapes, heard through a galaxy of effects and loops. Haden is an eclectic vocalist/violinist formerly of the indie-pop group That Dog (and, incidentally, the daughter of jazz bass great Charlie Haden), whose singing is guileless, experimental, and endearing all at once.
Together, Haden and Frisell create an unexpected magic, with Frisell's shimmering chords and electronically embellished atmospheres providing the perfect pillow for Haden's sleepy, breathy voice (which she layers in harmonies to excellent effect). The songs--also including Coldplay's "Yellow," Henry Mancini's "Moon River," Tom Waits's "I Don't Want to Grow Up," and the Disney classic "When You Wish Upon a Star"--are incongruous only in theory. The lush, lullaby-like quality of the duo's sound gives the album a remarkably cohesive feel, highlighting the strength of the material and the chemistry of this unusual pair.

Tracks
01. "Satelliteˇ- Elliott Smith - 2:37
02. "Floatyˇ- Dave Grohl - 6:55
03. "Bai-La Taigamˇ- Traditional - 5:22
04. "Moon Riverˇ- Henry Mancini / Johnny Mercer - 2:22
05. "Yellowˇ- Guy Berryman / Jon Buckland / Will Champion / Chris Martin - 4:39
06. "I Don't Want to Grow Upˇ- Kathleen Brennan / Tom Waits - 3:37
07. "The Quiet Roomˇ- Petra Haden - 4:21
08. "When You Wish Upon a Starˇ- Leigh Harline / Ned Washington - 2:34
09. "I Believeˇ- Stevie Wonder - 6:17
10. "John Hardy Was a Desperate Little Manˇ- Traditional - 2:40
11. "I've Got a Crush on Youˇ- George Gershwin / Ira Gershwin - 3:46
12. "Throughoutˇ- Bill Frisell - 4:02


26 September, 2013

Bill Frisell - Have a Little Faith (1993)

Bill Frisell  - Have a Little Faith (1993)
jazz | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 330MB
Elektra/Nonesuch 7559-79301-2
Allmusic:
Bill Frisell has long been one of the most unique guitarists around. Able to switch on a moment's notice from sounding like a Nashville studio player to heavy metal, several styles of jazz, and just pure noise, Frisell can get a remarkable variety of sounds and tones out of his instrument. This set features Frisell in a quintet with Don Byron (on clarinet and bass clarinet), Guy Klucevsek on accordion, bassist Kermit Driscoll, and drummer Joey Baron. To call the repertoire wide-ranging would be an understatement. In addition to eight melodies from Aaron Copland's Billy the Kid, Frisell and company explore (and often reinvent) pieces written by Charles Ives, Bob Dylan, Muddy Waters, Madonna, Sonny Rollins, Stephen Foster, and John Phillip Sousa. This is one of the most inventive recordings of the 1990s and should delight most listeners from any genre.

Tracks
01. "The Open Prairie": from Billy the Kid (Copland) - 3:11
02. "Street Scene in a Frontier Town": from Billy the Kid (Copland) - 1:45
03. "Mexican Dance and Finale": from Billy the Kid (Copland) - 3:44
04. "Prairie Night (Card Game at Night)/Gun Battle": from Billy the Kid (Copland) - 5:02
05. "Celebration After Billy's Capture": from Billy the Kid (Copland) - 2:17
06. "Billy in Prison": from Billy the Kid (Copland) - 1:33
07. "The Open Prairie Again": from Billy the Kid (Copland) - 2:34
08. "The Saint-Gaudens in Boston Common": Excerpt 1 (Ives) - 0:41
09. "Just Like a Woman" (Dylan) - 4:49
10. "I Can't Be Satisfied" (Morganfield) (3:00)
11. "Live to Tell" (Leonard, Madonna) - 10:10
12. "The Saint-Gaudens in Boston Common": Excerpt 2 (Ives) - 3:05
13. "No Moe" (Rollins) - 2:37
14. "Washington Post March" (Sousa) - 2:05
15. "When I Fall in Love" (Heyman, Young) - 3:26
16. "Little Jenny Dow" (Foster) - 3:30
17. "Have a Little Faith in Me" (Hiatt) - 5:39
18. "Billy Boy" (Traditional) - 1:38
* Recorded at RPM Studios NYC March 1992

Personnel
* Bill Frisell – guitar
* Don Byron – clarinet, bass clarinet
* Guy Klucevsek – accordion
* Kermit Driscoll – bass
* Joey Baron – drums

 




17 February, 2012

Bill Frisell - Sign Of Life: Music For 858 Quartet (2011)

Bill Frisell - Sign Of Life: Music For 858 Quartet (2011)
jazz, avantgarde | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 285MB
Savoy
Allmusic:
After a five-year hiatus, Bill Frisell's 858 Quartet recorded their second offering. Their elliptical debut, Richter 858, was produced by poet David Breskin (who also helmed the sessions for Nels Cline's Dirty Baby), and accompanied an exhibition by German artist Gerhard Richter. The music on Sign of Life: Music for 858 Quartet was loosely composed by Frisell, and took shape in group rehearsals. 858's other members include violinist Jenny Scheinman, violist Eyvind Kang, and cellist Hank Roberts. Recorded at Fantasy Studios in San Francisco and produced by Lee Townsend, the 17 selections on this set feel very organic. The album opens with Americana-tinged themes in the two-part "It's a Long Story" that nod to country, folk, and even Curtis Mayfield's "People Get Ready" in its melody. "Old Times" hints at bluegrass, blues, and ragtime, but because of the complex interplay between the four players, reaches far past them into a music that is 858's own. "Friend of Mine" is another two-part tune; that said, where a pastoral theme is suggested in part one, a more mischievous one responds in the second some eight tracks later. Elsewhere, improvised classical motifs, jazz modes, and folk and other roots musics shimmer through these compositions, sometimes simultaneously and often spontaneously. The haunted yet restrained "Painter," which clocks in at under two minutes, is a modal sketch immediately followed by an equally brief, slightly dissonant pointillistic exercise in counterpoint called "Teacher." "All the People, All the Time" returns to more accessible and resonant territory but, as gentle as it is, it's full of quiet surprises and unexpected twists. For all of its space and economical phrasing, "Village" is downright cartoon spooky, and "Suitcase in My Hand," which jaunts along in a striding, near reel, is transformed by Scheinman playing country-style fiddle, though the rhythmic signature never changes. "Sixty Four," with its pulsing time and repetitive, slightly shifting harmonic line, feels -- but not quite sounds -- like something Philip Glass might have written if he had a sense of humor, and is the only place on the record where Frisell lets somewhat ragged sonic edges into his playing. Sign of Life is a curious, quirky, and deceptively low-key affair that is musically labyrinthine and ambitious; it's full of gorgeous spaces, textures, utterly instinctive interplay, and unexpected delight.

Tracks
-01. "I'ts a Long Story, Pt. 1" - 2:40
-02. "Old Times" - 4:59
-03. "Sign of Life" - 2:49
-04. "Friend of Mine, Pt. 1" - 5:48
-05. "Wonderland" - 3:18
-06. "It's a Long Story, Pt. 2" - 6:32
-07. "Mother Daughter" - 2:20
-08. "Youngster" - 3:01
-09. "Recollection" - 2:54
-10. "Suitcase in My Hand" - 2:22
-11. "Sixty Four" - 3:52
-12. "Friend of Mine, Pt. 2" - 1:49
-13. "Painter" - 1:14
-14. "Teacher" - 1:28
-15. "All the People, All the Time" - 2:05
-16. "Village" - 4:20
-17. "As It Should Be" - 1:52
all compositions by Bill Frisell

Personnel
Bill Frisell: - guitar
Jenny Scheinman - violin
Eyvind Kang -  viola
Hank Roberts - cello

16 September, 2011

Bill Frisell - Live in Montreal (2002) (music video)

Bill Frisell - Live in Montreal (2002)
jazz | DVD9 NTSC | PCM 2.0; DTS 5.1 | iso, cover | 8000MB
EmArcy | rel: 2009
Amazon:
The music on this concert recording is very laid back and groovy. The playing is highly collective - and the different instruments blend perfectly - yet with distinct and impressing solos, especially from Bill Frisell and Ron Miles. I first heard clips from the concert on You Tube and later on a TV-recording from som japanese station. This DVD is much better both with regard to audio and video quality and without mixing music and interviews. Highly recommended!

Tracks
-01. lmprovisation #1
-02. What Do We Do?
-03. Improvisation #2
-04. Dream On
-05. Outlaws
-06. I'm So Lonesome l Could Cry
-07. Improvisation #3
-08. The Tractor
-09. Blues Dream
-10. Ron Carter
-11. BIues For Los AngeIes
-12. Keep Your Eyes Open
-13. That Was Then
-14. Egg Radio
-15. We're Not From Around Here
~93 mins

Personnel
* Bill Frisell - guitar & loops
* Matt Chamberlain - drums
* Billy Drewes - alto sax
* Curtis Fowlkes - trombone
* Greg Leisz - steel guitars & mandolin
* Ron Miles - trumpet
* David Piltch - bass

25 July, 2011

Bill Frisell - Further East / Further West (2005)

Bill Frisell - Further East / Further West (2005)
jazz | 2cd | flac-cover, download only release!! | 470MB
Nonesuch
Nonesuch:
Grammy Award–winning guitarist Bill Frisell’s East/West—a live double-disc recorded during a pair of bi-coastal trio engagements—was released by Nonesuch in August 2005. Frisell is joined by Kenny Wolleson on drums and percussion and Tony Scherr on bass for East, which was recorded at New York’s Village Vanguard, and Viktor Krauss on bass for West, recorded at Yoshi’s in Oakland, California. Further East / Further West, a special digital-only release of other sets from the engagements—was made available for digital release.
The recordings feature a mix of original Frisell compositions and popular, standard, and traditional tunes, written by a wide variety of songwriters, including George and Ira Gershwin, Henry Mancini and Johnny Mercer, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, and Johnny Cash. East/West and Further East / Further West are Frisell’s first full-length live recordings on the Nonesuch label.

Tracks
cd1_ Furher West
-1. Lookout for Hope (9:47)
-2. Monroe (7:02)
-3. Big Shoe (7:50)
-4. Egg Radio (11:10)
cd2_East
-1. Lost Highway (10:48)
-2. Masters of War (9:00)
-3. What The World Needs Now (5:21)
-4. Somewhere Over The Rainbow (4:03)
-5. Prelude/Body and Soul (3:04)
-6. Paradox (6:33)
-7. Cluck Old Hen (2:16)

Personnel
* Bill Frisell – electric & acoustic guitars, loops
* Viktor Krauss - bass
* Tony Scherr – bass, acoustic guitar
* Kenny Wollesen – drums, percussion

Bill Frisell - East / West (2005)

Bill Frisell - East / West (2005)
jazz | 2cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 680MB
Nonesuch
Allmusic:
The allusion of the title East/West is an apt one; this live double-CD set is a study in contrasts. Recorded just six months apart with two different trios, Bill Frisell really shows both sides of his musical personality. The "East" disc was recorded in December of 2003 at the Village Vanguard with Frisell on guitar (acoustic and electric) and loops, Tony Sherr on acoustic bass and a bit of acoustic guitar, and Kenny Wollesen on drums and percussion. The program here consists largely of well-known standards with a couple brief improvisations and a single Frisell composition. The "West" disc was recorded at Yoshi's in May of 2004 and features Frisell (guitars, loops), Viktor Krauss (acoustic bass), and, well, Kenny Wollesen on drums (no other percussion), but this time the program is half Frisell compositions, a couple pop songs, and the traditional "Shenandoah." On the "East" disc, only three of the ten tunes are longer than five minutes, but on the "West" disc only one track is shorter than eight minutes! The preponderance of standards on the "East" disc keeps the players mostly on the inside tip, even eliciting laughter from some audience members when Frisell hits the intro to the old warhorse "People" (to which he replies, "you think I'm joking or what?"). They do loosen up a bit at the end, for a wonderful arrangement of Willie Nelson's "Crazy" with two acoustic guitars and looping aural detritus, and there's a fun gallop through "Tennessee Flat Top Box." The group improvisations also add a bit of spark. Folks who discovered Frisell in the late '90s with albums like Nashville are going to love this set.
Then there are the folks who discovered Frisell in the '80s as a major player in the downtown new music scene along with folks like John Zorn and Wayne Horvitz (fellow bandmates in the groundbreaking and genre-smashing Naked City band). For them, Frisell seemed to be losing his edge a bit as his trademark skronk was traded for acoustic textures. Richter 858 and the Grammy-winning (!) Unspeakable saw him revisiting that earlier sound to some degree, mainly through more extensive use of delays and loops, but the "West" disc here shows he's really back. "Heard It Through the Grapevine" starts out a bit slow, but right from the outset the delay plays a large role, ping-ponging ugly harmonics back and forth as an intro before hitting the first verse. It gradually picks up momentum, until the delays return and Frisell adopts a roaring backward-sounding tone for the end. "Blues for Los Angeles" has even more great looping, some pretty menacing sounds, and some fantastic soloing. "Pipe Down" (originally on Nashville) gets a much slower deconstructed treatment, then kicks into high gear with a serious groove. This set is way more adventurous than the "East" one, and might surprise some old fans who haven't been paying close attention of late. Frisell retreats a bit from the edge for the last track, a nice reading of "A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall" where the delay plays little to no role. With both bands, the rhythm section offers great support, but interestingly, Tony Scherr gets a bit of solo space while Viktor Krauss gets none. Then there's the fact that the album is called East/West, but the "West" disc (the later of the dates) is programmed as the first disc, so you listen to the sets in reverse chronological order as well as the opposite of what the title implies (perhaps "West/East" would have been more appropriate). And while this set is indeed a study in contrast, the common thread is the absolute guitar mastery and singular style and tone of Frisell. His use of double stops, open string voicings, and chordal leads in his playing, not to mention that slippery tone, makes him one of the most recognizable voices in music no matter what the context. And it's clear that Frisell is at home in any context, from playing chestnuts like "The Days of Wine and Roses" to John Zorn speed metal. The fairly naked trio context of East/West really gives the listener a chance to appreciate exactly what he can do, no matter which musical direction they're coming from.

Tracks
cd1_West
-1. "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" (Strong, Whitfield) - 8:00
-2. "Blues for Los Angeles" - 11:09
-3. Shenandoah" (Traditional) - 12:05
-4. "Boubacar" - 6:22
-5. "Pipe Down" - 10:50
-6. "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall" (Dylan) - 11:49
cd2_East
-1. "My Man's Gone Now" (Gershwin, Gershwin, Heyward) - 3:48
-2. "The Days of Wine and Roses" (Mancini, Mercer) - 9:20
-3. "You Can Run" (Frisell, Scherr, Wollesen) - 0:51
-4. "Ron Carter" - 13:59
-5. "Interlude" (Frisell, Scherr, Wollesen) - 1:39
-6. "Goodnight Irene" (Ledbetter, Lomax) - 8:57
-7. "The Vanguard" (Frisell, Scherr, Wollesen) - 4:44
-8. "People" (Merrill, Styne) - 4:29
-9. "Crazy" (Nelson) - 4:31
-10. "Tennessee Flat Top Box" (Cash) - 2:28
All compositions by Bill Frisell except as indicated

Personnel
* Bill Frisell – guitars and electronic effects
* Kenny Wollesen – drums
* Viktor Krauss – bass (Disc 1 - West)
* Tony Scherr – bass, acoustic guitar (Disc 2 - East)

17 June, 2011

Bill Frisell - Unspeakable (2004)

Bill Frisell - Unspeakable (2004)
jazz | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 420MB
Nonesuch
Allmusic:
With the exception of 2003's Intercontinentals, Bill Frisell had been playing it pretty safe for some time, sticking to his own personal vision of variations on the Americana theme (with nearly all of those albums being produced by Lee Townsend, by the way). Well, a change of producers often means a change of pace, and teaming up with eclectic producer Hal Willner for Unspeakable seems to have gotten the creative juices flowing again. Their working relationship goes back a long ways, all the way back to the Amarcord Nino Rota tribute from the early '80s. The use of a string section on more than three-fourths of the tunes already adds a different flavor to this album, but the fact that Frisell and Willner seem to have taken inspiration from the sounds of classic soul music is what really sets this apart from others in the Frisell catalog. Not only that, but Frisell's delays return in a more prominent role and he offers up some of his fiercest playing in years. There are a handful of introspective pieces that feature just the strings and guitar, with some slight sonic embellishments from Willner. The majority of the tunes, however, sound something like Bill Frisell scoring the music to Superfly! The soul grooves are tough to miss, but with this cast of players, it comes off like some cinematic offshoot of soul music. The grooves are fantastic, and Frisell really rises to the occasion, bringing back the delays, nasty distorted tone, and ugly harmonics that have been largely absent from his more recent releases. There are still lots of lovely sounds, but it's great to hear him stretching out a bit more again. Tony Scherr and Kenny Wollesen have not only served as Frisell's rhythm section in the past, but they also play together in Sex Mob. Sometimes aided by Don Alias, they really drive the tunes, with the strings and occasional horns punctuating the melody and Frisell's guitars floating all over the place. Willner's use of turntables and samplers adds some great sounds to the mix, sometimes adding an almost exotica flavor. It's all quite accessible, but fans with delicate ears may be put off by some of the noisier moments on the album, like the keyboard (?) sound on "Stringbean" or the guitar solo on "Old Sugar Bear." Other fans will be delighted to hear such a glorious din on a Bill Frisell record again. After so much of a similar thing, it's just great to hear Frisell being pushed in a new direction (and quite a fun one, at that). Recommended.

Tracks
-01. "1968" - 4:35
-02. "White Fang" (Frisell, Willner) - 5:39
-03. "Sundust" (Willner) - 2:36
-04. "Del Close" (Frisell, Liljestrand, Willner) - 5:03
-05. "Gregory C." (Frisell, Willner) - 5:38
-06. "Stringbean" (Frisell, Liljestrand, Willner) - 5:57
-07. "Hymn for Ginsberg" - 2:24
-08. "Alias" (Frisell, Liljestrand, Willner) - 7:56
-09. "Who Was That Girl?" - 4:50
-10. "D. Sharpe" - 4:10
-11. "Fields of Alfalfa" (Frisell, Bernstein, Liljestrand, Walter, Willner) - 3:38
-12. "Tony" (Frisell, Scherr, Wollesen) - 3:37
-13. "Old Sugar Bear" (Grant, Liljestrand, Willner) - 7:10
-14. "Goodbye Goodbye Goodbye" (Frisell, Lasry, Willner) - 8:58
*All compositions by Bill Frisell except as indicated

Personnel
*Bill Frisell: guitars
*Hal Willner: turntables, samples
*Tony Scherr: bass, guitar
*Kenny Wollesen: drums
*Don Alias: percussion
*Steven Bernstein: trumpet
*Briggan Krauss: baritone sax
*Curtis Fowlkes: trombone
*Adam Dorn: synth
*Jenny Scheinman: violin
*Eyvind Kang: viola
*Hank Roberts: cello

09 May, 2011

Naked City - Grand Guignol (1991) (eac-log-cover)

Naked City - Grand Guignol (1991)
jazz, avantgarde | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 350MB
Avant
Allmusic:
Naked City's follow up to their self-titled album is a departure from the New York noir that they had perfected. Here, after a 17 minute, moody title piece, all low rumbling punctuated by drum thrashes and distorted screams, is a very straight transcription of Debussy's "Cathedrale Engloutie" featuring some very lovely, watery guitar work from Bill Frisell. Other modern pieces follow, with works by Scriabin, Ives, Messian, and Di Lassus. And then for something completely different: 32 thrash'n'burn numbers lasting anywhere from 10 seconds to a whopping 1:14, most with humorous titles (some favorites: "Jazz Snob: Eat Shit," "Perfume of a Critic's Burning Flesh," "Pigfucker"). Forget the subtlety of the first half -- this is thrash jazz! Yamatsuka Eye of the Boredoms provides vocals. As they say, there's screaming, and then there's Yamatsuka Eye. Whether or not such eclecticism makes for awkward listening is apparently the last thing on Zorn's list, and it probably shouldn't be a concern anyway. A rewarding album.

Tracks
-01. "Grand Guignol" – 17:41
-02. "La Cathédrale Engloutie" – 6:24 (Claude Debussy)
-03. "Three Preludes Op. 74: Douloureux, Déchirant" – 1:17 (Alexander Scriabin)
-04. "Three Preludes Op. 74: Très Lent, Contemplatif" – 1:43 (Scriabin)
-05. "Three Preludes Op. 74: Allegro Drammatico" – 0:49 (Scriabin)
-06. "Prophetiae Sybillarum" – 1:46 (Orlande de Lassus)
-07. "The Cage" – 2:01 (Charles Ives) - Featuring Bob Dorough
-08. "Louange à l'éternité de Jésus" – 7:08 (Olivier Messiaen)
-09. "Blood Is Thin" – 1:02
-10. "Thrash Jazz Assassin" – 0:47
-11. "Dead Spot" – 0:33
-12. "Bonehead" – 0:54
-13. "Piledriver" – 0:36
-14. "Shangkuan Ling-Feng" – 1:16
-15. "Numbskull" – 0:31
-16. "Perfume of A Critic's Burning Flesh" – 0:26
-17. "Jazz Snob: Eat Shit" – 0:26
-18. "The Prestidigitator" – 0:46
-19. "No Reason To Believe" – 0:28
-20. "Hellraiser" – 0:41
-21. "Torture Garden" – 0:37
-22. "Slan" – 0:24
-23. "The Ways of Pain" – 0:33
-24. "The Noose" – 0:13
-25. "Sack of Shit" – 0:46
-26. "Blunt Instrument" – 0:56
-27. "Osaka Bondage" – 1:17
-28. "Shallow Grave" – 0:42
-29. "Kaoru" – 0:53
-30. "Dead Dread" – 0:48
-31. "Billy Liar" – 0:13
-32. "Victims of Torture" – 0:24
-33. "Speedfreaks" – 0:50
-34. "New Jersey Scum Swamp" – 0:44
-35. "S/M Sniper" – 0:17
-36. "Pigfucker" – 0:24
-37. "Cairo Chop Shop" – 0:25
-38. "Facelifter" – 0:57
-39. "Whiplash" – 0:22
-40. "The Blade" – 0:30
-41. "Gob of Spit" – 0:21
*All compositions and arrangements by John Zorn, except where noted.

Personnel
* John Zorn – alto sax, vocals
* Bill Frisell – guitar
* Wayne Horvitz – keyboards
* Fred Frith – bass
* Joey Baron – drums
* Yamatsuka Eye – vocals
* Bob Dorough – special guest vocalist

12 March, 2011

Bill Frisell with Dave Holland and Elvin Jones (2001) (eac-log-cover)

Bill Frisell with Dave Holland and Elvin Jones (2001)
jazz | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 480MB
Nonesuch
Allmusic:
What can you expect but good things from a date featuring three players of such high pedigree. With Dave Holland and Elvin Jones representing the steadfast rhythm sections of old, and with Frisell's post-modern tones being among the finest voices moving jazz forward, a date like this should easily yield some classic moments. But Frisell comes up with only partial melodies and bare bones sketches for the band to play. Jones sounds at times utterly bored with his rhythm duties, desperate for a chance to stretch out. Frisell himself is often hesitant. Henry Mancini's "Moon River" and Stephen Foster's century-and-a-half old "Hard Times" together offer brief glimpses of levity, but cannot save the set entirely.

Tracks
-01. "Outlaws" - 7:55
-02. "Twenty Years" - 3:15
-03. "Coffaro's Theme" - 4:50
-04. "Blue's Dream" - 4:49
-05. "Moon River" (Mancini, Mercer) - 6:25
-06. "Tell Your Ma, Tell Your Pa" - 9:06
-07. "Strange Meeting" - 5:22
-08. "Convict 13" - 3:54
-09. "Again" - 7:32
-10. "Hard Times" - 3:39
-11. "Justice and Honor" - 4:48
-12. "Smilin' Jones" - 5:03
All compositions by Bill Frisell except as indicated

Personnel
* Bill Frisell: guitars
* Dave Holland: bass
* Elvin Jones: drums

25 July, 2010

Bill Frisell - The Intercontinentals (2003) (eac-log-cover)

Bill Frisell - The Intercontinentals (2003)
jazz | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 450MB
Nonesuch | rar +5% recovery
AMG:
Bill Frisell has been actively -- some would say obsessively -- exploring the depths and dimensions of American roots music since the release of Nashville in 1997. His subsequent recordings -- Ghost Town, Gone Just Like a Train, Blues Dream, Good Dog, Happy Man, and The Willies -- were all approaches to the various folk styles that originated on American soil: country, blues, bluegrass, field hollers, jazz, and others. He has successfully been able to blend, extract, adapt, and otherwise morph one set of music onto another through his own approach to guitar playing -- the song. More than any other contemporary guitarist, Frisell is driven by the notion of song -- what it entails, both in terms of musical and cultural expression, and what it implies. On The Intercontinentals, Frisell continues his investigation of American music, but as a way of understanding how it entwines with the folk musics of other nations. Onboard for this outing are Frisell's longtime collaborators Jenny Scheinman; pedal, dobro, and lap steel guitarist Greg Leisz; as well as Brazilian mega-guitarist and songwriter Vinicius Cantuaria; Macedonian vocalist and oud player Christos Govetas and Malian percussionist and vocalist Sidikki Camara. Frisell had played with Camara and Malian uber-guitarist Boubacar Traore a couple of years before and was intrigued enough to explore the connection further. The result of this unlikely union is one of the most seamlessly beautiful works Frisell has ever produced. On it, he and Cantuaria delve into the modern Malian guitar and percussion sound pioneered by Ali Farka Toure; blend it with the timeless emotional resonance of Greek folk songs via Govetas' oud and infectious Brazilian lyricism; and filter it through shimmering country landscapes and otherworldly string textures that reinvent harmonic properties to suit the lyric of the blues, song, indigenous folk musics, and the contemporary improvisational ideal. Frisell composed the lion's share of the tunes here, but there are also contributions by Gilberto Gil, Traore, Govetas, and Cantuaria. Scheinman's violin acts as a gorgeous signpost for virtually all of these musicians to return to; her melodic sensibility and crisp tone are beacons in the often swirling, escalating, and/or cascading whorls of plucked strings, playing as many as four melodies simultaneously with winding, almost knotty scalar interchanges. What is most fascinating is that even in the vocal tunes, or those where the Malian blues effect is the prominent force, everything else in the mix fans out and creates often contrapuntal backdrops for elegant and lush, if dense, textures. Simply put, this is the busiest record Frisell has made in years, but it doesn't feel like it. His sense of "song" is so pervasive, everything here is arranged to fit its "singing." His own tone is unmistakable, as is Leisz's and Cantuaria's. The guitars are as distinct as the oud and the violin, all of them carried into the next space by hand drums. While each song does stand on its own as a harmonic and lyrical entity, with adventurous improvisation added in the spirit of true exploration, as an album they are linked by the weave of aural tapestry, dynamics, and spaciousness that is so central to Frisell's sound. And while this is more collaborative than perhaps anything he's done in a decade, it nonetheless bears his sonic and esthetic imprint. This is a remarkable album; its sets a new watermark for Frisell's sense of adventure and taste, and displays his perception of beauty in a pronounced, uncompromising, yet wholly accessible way.

Tracks:
01. "Boubacar" - 6:13
02. "Good Old People" - 5:25
03. "For Christos" - 6:13
04. "Baba Drame" (Traoré) - 5:18
05. "Listen" - 6:47
06. "Anywhere Road" - 1:52
07. "Procissão" (Gil) - 6:43
08. "The Young Monk" (Traditional) - 2:23
09. "We Are Everywhere" - 7:06
10. "Yála" (Govetas) - 5:47
11. "Perritos" (Cantuaria) - 4:33
12. "Magic" - 5:54
13. "Eli" - 4:15
14. "Remember" - 1:36

Personnel:
* Bill Frisell: electric and acoustic guitars, loops, bass
* Sidiki Camara: calabash, djembe, congas, percussion, vocals
* Vinicius Cantuaria: electric and acoustic guitars,vocals, drums, percussion
* Christos Govetas: oud, vocals, bouzouki
* Greg Leisz: slide guitars, pedal steel guitar
* Jenny Scheinman: violin
r c

16 June, 2010

Jack DeJohnette - The Elephant Sleeps But Still Remembers (2001) (eac-flac-cover)

Jack DeJohnette - The Elephant Sleeps But Still Remembers (2001)
jazz | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 355MB
Golden Beams |  rel.: 2006 | RAR +5% recovery
AMG:
This collaboration between drummer, pianist, and composer Jack DeJohnette and guitarist Bill Frisell, was recorded live at the Earshot Festival in 2001. But it doesn't end there. The pair, who had only played together once before on Don Byron's Romance with the Unseen, had a chance to listen to the tapes together and decided to add some additional production to the tracks. DeJohnette called in sound engineer Ben Surman, who added "additional production": basslines, ambient sounds, and other electronics and percussion. If you are raising your eyebrows in doubt, think again. One listen to the title track that opens the album should convince you otherwise. Here, a simple blues-like figure becomes a riff that the pair build upon, turn inside out, and make into a labyrinthine journey. Surman's added basslines root the proceedings deeper into the groove. His ambient and electronic sounds are far from distracting. They are more painterly, unobtrusive and yet colorful. Frisell and DeJohnette are such fine listeners and intuitive players that they anticipate one another without ever going over the line that makes free improvisation wankery. The art of the duo comes down to one concept ultimately, and that is true collaboration; musically the pair travel someplace different from where they began. Surman's added touch is a grounding exercise for the listener. And it's true it might have been a different recording if it had only been heard as an un-retouched performance. But in a sense, it is. It's here, mistakes and all, and it's far from covered. It's merely colored a bit. The electronic percussion that leads off "Entranced Androids" is actually coming from Frisell's guitar. Its seven-and-a-half minutes are a strange and terrible wonder of musical language pushed to the edge. DeJohnette's rim-shot percussion keeps it somehow grounded, but he's traveling, too -- Surman's post-production work brings out the true weirdness of Frisell's riffing. There are some truly, outrageously out moments here, too, in the brief "Cat and Mouse," "Otherworldly Dervishes," where Frisell plays a free-music banjo, and the sheer soundscape weirdness that is "Through the Warphole" are examples. They seem to be every other track. The edgy funk on "Storm Clouds and Mist," touches on blues, jazz, rock and deep funk. Frisell's response other rhythms being offered him are tough, lean, and fluid. The dub effects by Surman are tasty. DeJohnette plays piano on "Cartune Riots," and Frisell stays all but hidden until halfway through the cut. DeJohnette's pianism is lyrical, quirky, and deeply rooted in the lower-middle register. The duo really cut loose on "Ode to South Africa," which has Frisell quoting Dudu Pukwana, Johnny Dyani, and Abdullah Ibrahim, as DeJohnette's drumming rolls around in stretched time. Surman's added touch of vocals and regional percussion instruments makes the cut sing. The set ends with a reading of John Coltrane's "After the Rain," with DeJohnette once again on piano. Its balladic structure is preserved, and the space and silence that enter between the lyric phrases allow for Frisell and his digital delay to shape, color, and texturize its gorgeous melody. This is one of those records for the fan who has to have everything, but that said; it is thoroughly enjoyable on its own merit. Highly recommended.

Tracks:
The Elephant Sleeps But Still Remembers...; Cat and Mouse; Entranced Androids; The Garden of Chew-Man-Chew; Otherworldly Dervishes; Through the Warphole; Storm Clouds and Mist; Cartune Riots; Ode to South Africa; One Tooth Shuffle; After the Rain.

Personnel:
Jack DeJohnette: drums, percussion, vocals, piano; Bill Frisell: guitar, banjo; Ben Surman: additional percussion.
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