Cartwright/Oppenheim / La Faute De La Musique
Album: | La Faute De La Musique | Collection: | Jazz | |
Artist: | Cartwright/Oppenheim | Added: | Apr 2004 | |
Label: | Harriton Carved Wax |
A-File Activity
Add Date: | 2004-07-05 | Pull Date: | 2004-09-06 | Charts: | Jazz |
---|
Week Ending: | Sep 5 | Aug 15 | Aug 1 | Jul 18 | Jul 11 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Airplays: | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
Recent Airplay
1. | Sep 03, 2004: | Jamorama Select
Apartment House |
4. | Jul 16, 2004: | Memory Select
Apartment House |
|
2. | Aug 13, 2004: | Memory Select
Solo for Voice 12 |
5. | Jul 12, 2004: | Mixed-Up Class
Solo for Voice 43 |
|
3. | Jul 30, 2004: | Memory Select
Solo for Voice 72 |
6. | Jul 09, 2004: | Memory Select
Solo for Voice 43 |
Album Review
Craig Matsumoto
Reviewed 2004-07-24
Reviewed 2004-07-24
Jazzy interpretations of some John Cage vocal works. Note that the "solo" tracks aren't performed solo; most are given a bass and sax add-on to create a jazz feel.
The singing is all "vocalese" -- weird noises and cartoony swoops, wordless crooning, and nonsensical spoken snippets. Remember, this is John Cage we're talking about, and the pieces are written in experimental, free-form styles. The jazzy sound lightens it up a bit, but this is still fairly serious stuff, and you do need a tolerance for the avant-garde vocal stylings.
Also check out this duo's CD in World -- it's completely different with, obviously, a "world" tone instead of jazz.
1- Bouncy mid/fast bass; nonsense half-spoken vocals with weird
cartoony/alien sound. Rambles on quite a bit.
2- Mid/slow and dynamic, lots of swooping soprano crooning.
Sounds French.
3*- Loungy and light: dinner jazz! Easy on the ears, with cohesive lyrics
4- Slow, studious. With aerial swirling sax in spots.
5- Scattery shards of sax & voice. Disjoint.
6- Slow. Some loungy piano/bass splashes and avant-garde sax
7- Voice and sax: Mid/fast but sparse, lots of pauses
The singing is all "vocalese" -- weird noises and cartoony swoops, wordless crooning, and nonsensical spoken snippets. Remember, this is John Cage we're talking about, and the pieces are written in experimental, free-form styles. The jazzy sound lightens it up a bit, but this is still fairly serious stuff, and you do need a tolerance for the avant-garde vocal stylings.
Also check out this duo's CD in World -- it's completely different with, obviously, a "world" tone instead of jazz.
1- Bouncy mid/fast bass; nonsense half-spoken vocals with weird
cartoony/alien sound. Rambles on quite a bit.
2- Mid/slow and dynamic, lots of swooping soprano crooning.
Sounds French.
3*- Loungy and light: dinner jazz! Easy on the ears, with cohesive lyrics
4- Slow, studious. With aerial swirling sax in spots.
5- Scattery shards of sax & voice. Disjoint.
6- Slow. Some loungy piano/bass splashes and avant-garde sax
7- Voice and sax: Mid/fast but sparse, lots of pauses
Track Listing
1. | Aria | 4. | Solo for Voice 17 | |||
2. | Solo for Voice 43 | 5. | Solo for Voice 72 | |||
3. | Apartment House | 6. | Solo for Voice 12 | |||
7. | Solo for Voice 27 |