Revolutionary Ensemble, the / And Now...
Album: | And Now... | Collection: | Jazz | |
Artist: | Revolutionary Ensemble, the | Added: | Nov 2004 | |
Label: | Pi Recordings |
A-File Activity
Add Date: | 2004-11-22 | Pull Date: | 2005-01-24 | Charts: | Jazz |
---|
Week Ending: | Jan 23 | Jan 16 | Jan 9 | Dec 26 | Dec 12 | Dec 5 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Airplays: | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
Recent Airplay
1. | Jul 20, 2006: | Cognitive Overload
Berlin Erfahrung |
4. | Jan 07, 2005: | Memory Select (Parts 1 & 2)
Berlin Erfahrung |
|
2. | Jan 21, 2005: | Memory Select
Light |
5. | Dec 24, 2004: | Memory Select, late night version
911-544 |
|
3. | Jan 13, 2005: | Umami Jazz Program
Light |
6. | Dec 10, 2004: | Memory Select
Rumi Tales |
Album Review
Craig Matsumoto
Reviewed 2004-11-18
Reviewed 2004-11-18
Reunion of a trio from the glorious "loft jazz" days of late '70s free jazz -- Leroy Jenkins (violin), Sirone (bass), and Jerome Cooper (drums). Spirited group work with lots of free scribbling on violin, as you'd expect. Excellent stuff.
Leroy gets two compositions (2,4) as does Sirone (1,5). Track 3, by Jerome Cooper, is the centerpiece, and it makes this whole session much more than a reunion. "911-544" feels like the kind of piece that burns a hole in the composer's head; something that has to get out at all costs. But Cooper hasn't recorded a lot in recent years (or maybe his music just hasn't gotten out to the west coast?).... so it's gratifying to see him get a venue for presenting this work, and performing it with two long-time friends, no less. It's a performance you really shouldn't miss.
1- Twiny, with artsy European flair. Fairly fast.
2- Slow start; gets furious and blurry
3- The centerpiece: A 20-minute song with obvious 9/11 connotations. Lots of phases here... it starts appropriately disturbing and gloomy, shrill and weird. Most of the piece is energetic, often chaotic -- what sounds like Cooper overdubbed on drums, piano, balaphone -- and punctuated with quiet moments. Ends on a tight free-jazz segment.
4- Angular and mid/slow, chaotic. Slower second half.
5- Slow and drunkenly happy.
Leroy gets two compositions (2,4) as does Sirone (1,5). Track 3, by Jerome Cooper, is the centerpiece, and it makes this whole session much more than a reunion. "911-544" feels like the kind of piece that burns a hole in the composer's head; something that has to get out at all costs. But Cooper hasn't recorded a lot in recent years (or maybe his music just hasn't gotten out to the west coast?).... so it's gratifying to see him get a venue for presenting this work, and performing it with two long-time friends, no less. It's a performance you really shouldn't miss.
1- Twiny, with artsy European flair. Fairly fast.
2- Slow start; gets furious and blurry
3- The centerpiece: A 20-minute song with obvious 9/11 connotations. Lots of phases here... it starts appropriately disturbing and gloomy, shrill and weird. Most of the piece is energetic, often chaotic -- what sounds like Cooper overdubbed on drums, piano, balaphone -- and punctuated with quiet moments. Ends on a tight free-jazz segment.
4- Angular and mid/slow, chaotic. Slower second half.
5- Slow and drunkenly happy.
Track Listing
1. | Berlin Erfahrung | 4. | Light | |||
2. | Rumi Tales | 5. | Ism Schism | |||
3. | 911-544 | . |