Categorías:
Carrito 0

Servicio no disponible por el momento

Aaron Parks|Little Big II: Dreams of a Mechanical Man

Little Big II: Dreams of a Mechanical Man

Aaron Parks

Disponible en
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Estéreo

Streaming ilimitado

Escuche este álbum ahora en alta calidad en nuestras apps

Comenzar mi periodo de prueba gratis y escuchar este álbum

Disfrute de este álbum en las apps Qobuz con sususcripción

Suscribir

Disfrute de este álbum en las apps Qobuz con sususcripción

Aaron Parks' Little Big quartet played a slew of gigs before recording their masterful self-titled 2018 debut for Ropeadope. In the aftermath, they stayed on the road for over two years, touring the U.S. and Europe and becoming a "single organism," in Parks' words. Their debut had been a long-delayed sequel of sorts to the pianist's Blue Note debut, 2008's Invisible Cinema, as it seemingly focused on creating a smooth aesthetic for Parks' compositions. By contrast, Little Big II: Dreams of a Mechanical Man, though also a sequel to its immediate predecessor, opens up the group's intimate, synergistic communication to reflect the multi-lingual persona of a band making music in the moment. The quartet -- Parks on piano and keys, Greg Tuohey on guitar, David Ginyard on bass, and Tommy Crane on drums -- explore and cultivate a musical aesthetic. Little Big marry creative and improvised music to the groove-centered elements of electronica, indie pop, neo-psychedelia, and prog, but avoid the "fusion" trap entirely by weaving the various textures, influences, and colors into an original, holistic musical language. Excellent examples lie in the two improvisations, "Is Anything Okay?" and "Where Now?" The spectral eeriness during the first half of the former exists in a space of hypnotically played single guitar notes, reverb, ghostly synth, and Crane's percussion with its skittering backbeat. They find a fractured groove and move outside, but not into abstraction. Tuohey's guitar is both guide and anchor, accenting the rhythm with sharp fills and single notes as Crane shifts the dynamic of his attack -- he even drops out -- but never loses the beat. The latter emerges from a funky backbeat to dubwise bassline, and Tuohey's psychedelic surf blues tease Latin-tinged melodic lines as Parks becomes his foil on an analog synth challenging him to go deeper and wider. "The Shadow & the Self" emerges with a noir-ish, brooding, minor-key guitar figure with brooding intensity. The interplay between Parks, Crane, and Ginyard keeps the tension. There is a shift at the halfway mark that tempers the darkness; Parks floats in his own wordless vocals before taking a lilting synth solo a la Pat Metheny with Lyle Mays. "Friendo" establishes a breezy, funky groove in its intro with overdubbed pianos and guitars twinning one another. When Parks finds his solo, he also carves out space for Ginyard's bumping bassline. As Crane holds steady, Tuohey interjects with a biting solo then adds a new riff to the tune's vamp-centric core. "The Ongoing Pulse of Isness" constructs its own soundworld from bright percussion (bells, chimes, etc.) before discovering a folk song hidden in its melody. A slippery 9/4 meter creates fluid movement before the tune shifts again toward post-bop with glorious interplay between Parks and Tuohey, then circles back. Dreams of a Mechanical Man is easily as strong as its predecessor. These tunes showcase Little Big in possession of a unique and vastly exploratory identity. Their music comfortably transcends genre boundaries, and the quartet's sovereignty has been developed to the point where they can break the confines of primacy in any composition to discover its identity. When all is said and done, the album is simply an accurate reflection of the band's own persona.
© Thom Jurek /TiVo

Más información

Little Big II: Dreams of a Mechanical Man

Aaron Parks

launch qobuz app Ya he descargado Qobuz para Windows / MacOS Abrir

download qobuz app Todavía no he descargado Qobuz para Windows / MacOS Descargar la app Qobuz

Está escuchando muestras.

Escuche más de 100 millones de pistas con un plan de streaming ilimitado.

Escuche esta playlist y más de 100 millones de pistas con nuestros planes de streaming ilimitado.

Desde $ 16.190,00/mes

1
Attention, Earthlings
00:05:59

Aaron Parks, MainArtist

2020 Ropeadope 2020 Ropeadope LLC

2
Here
00:05:44

Aaron Parks, MainArtist

2020 Ropeadope 2020 Ropeadope LLC

3
Solace
00:07:13

Aaron Parks, MainArtist

2020 Ropeadope 2020 Ropeadope LLC

4
Friendo
00:06:34

Aaron Parks, MainArtist

2020 Ropeadope 2020 Ropeadope LLC

5
Is Anything Okay?
00:03:24

Aaron Parks, MainArtist

2020 Ropeadope 2020 Ropeadope LLC

6
The Shadow & The Self
00:07:20

Aaron Parks, MainArtist

2020 Ropeadope 2020 Ropeadope LLC

7
The Storyteller
00:06:29

Aaron Parks, MainArtist

2020 Ropeadope 2020 Ropeadope LLC

8
Dreams of a Mechanical Man
00:05:32

Aaron Parks, MainArtist

2020 Ropeadope 2020 Ropeadope LLC

9
My Mistake
00:04:54

Aaron Parks, MainArtist

2020 Ropeadope 2020 Ropeadope LLC

10
The Ongoing Pulse of Isness
00:07:16

Aaron Parks, MainArtist

2020 Ropeadope 2020 Ropeadope LLC

11
Where Now?
00:03:22

Aaron Parks, MainArtist

2020 Ropeadope 2020 Ropeadope LLC

12
Unknown
00:06:57

Aaron Parks, MainArtist

2020 Ropeadope 2020 Ropeadope LLC

Presentación del Álbum

Aaron Parks' Little Big quartet played a slew of gigs before recording their masterful self-titled 2018 debut for Ropeadope. In the aftermath, they stayed on the road for over two years, touring the U.S. and Europe and becoming a "single organism," in Parks' words. Their debut had been a long-delayed sequel of sorts to the pianist's Blue Note debut, 2008's Invisible Cinema, as it seemingly focused on creating a smooth aesthetic for Parks' compositions. By contrast, Little Big II: Dreams of a Mechanical Man, though also a sequel to its immediate predecessor, opens up the group's intimate, synergistic communication to reflect the multi-lingual persona of a band making music in the moment. The quartet -- Parks on piano and keys, Greg Tuohey on guitar, David Ginyard on bass, and Tommy Crane on drums -- explore and cultivate a musical aesthetic. Little Big marry creative and improvised music to the groove-centered elements of electronica, indie pop, neo-psychedelia, and prog, but avoid the "fusion" trap entirely by weaving the various textures, influences, and colors into an original, holistic musical language. Excellent examples lie in the two improvisations, "Is Anything Okay?" and "Where Now?" The spectral eeriness during the first half of the former exists in a space of hypnotically played single guitar notes, reverb, ghostly synth, and Crane's percussion with its skittering backbeat. They find a fractured groove and move outside, but not into abstraction. Tuohey's guitar is both guide and anchor, accenting the rhythm with sharp fills and single notes as Crane shifts the dynamic of his attack -- he even drops out -- but never loses the beat. The latter emerges from a funky backbeat to dubwise bassline, and Tuohey's psychedelic surf blues tease Latin-tinged melodic lines as Parks becomes his foil on an analog synth challenging him to go deeper and wider. "The Shadow & the Self" emerges with a noir-ish, brooding, minor-key guitar figure with brooding intensity. The interplay between Parks, Crane, and Ginyard keeps the tension. There is a shift at the halfway mark that tempers the darkness; Parks floats in his own wordless vocals before taking a lilting synth solo a la Pat Metheny with Lyle Mays. "Friendo" establishes a breezy, funky groove in its intro with overdubbed pianos and guitars twinning one another. When Parks finds his solo, he also carves out space for Ginyard's bumping bassline. As Crane holds steady, Tuohey interjects with a biting solo then adds a new riff to the tune's vamp-centric core. "The Ongoing Pulse of Isness" constructs its own soundworld from bright percussion (bells, chimes, etc.) before discovering a folk song hidden in its melody. A slippery 9/4 meter creates fluid movement before the tune shifts again toward post-bop with glorious interplay between Parks and Tuohey, then circles back. Dreams of a Mechanical Man is easily as strong as its predecessor. These tunes showcase Little Big in possession of a unique and vastly exploratory identity. Their music comfortably transcends genre boundaries, and the quartet's sovereignty has been developed to the point where they can break the confines of primacy in any composition to discover its identity. When all is said and done, the album is simply an accurate reflection of the band's own persona.
© Thom Jurek /TiVo

Acerca del álbum

Mejorar la información del álbum
Más en Qobuz
Por Aaron Parks

Invisible Cinema

Aaron Parks

Invisible Cinema Aaron Parks

Arborescence

Aaron Parks

Arborescence Aaron Parks

Volume One

Aaron Parks

Volume One Aaron Parks

Find The Way

Aaron Parks

Find The Way Aaron Parks

Volume Two

Aaron Parks

Volume Two Aaron Parks

Playlists

Quizás también le guste...

The Köln Concert (Live at the Opera, Köln, 1975)

Keith Jarrett

Getz/Gilberto

Stan Getz

Getz/Gilberto Stan Getz

We Get Requests

Oscar Peterson

We Get Requests Oscar Peterson

Kind Of Blue

Miles Davis

Kind Of Blue Miles Davis

The Carnegie Hall Concert

Alice Coltrane

The Carnegie Hall Concert Alice Coltrane