Streaming ilimitado
Escuche este álbum ahora en alta calidad en nuestras apps
Comenzar mi periodo de prueba gratis y escuchar este álbumDisfrute de este álbum en las apps Qobuz con sususcripción
SuscribirDisfrute de este álbum en las apps Qobuz con sususcripción
Usually, when jazz and electronica get together, it's the former that ends up taking a back seat to the latter -- a string bass sample lopes along underneath laid-back synth chords, or a saxophone tries to honk its way through a thicket of over-produced keyboards. Either way, the strategy is to take easy listening pap and give it a superficial gloss of hipness. The sixth album by saxophonist and composer Patrick Zimmerli takes just the opposite tack, and succeeds brilliantly. Instead of using disconnected jazz elements to spice up electronic Muzak, Zimmerli writes complex and beautiful jazz charts and spices them up with tasteful incursions of jittery, jungly breakbeats (courtesy of percussionist and programmer Satoshi Takeishi). His approach might sound gimmicky if it weren't for the strength of his compositions, which manage to balance challenging formal complexity with intuitive, completely approachable beauty. He incorporates a string quartet into his arrangements in a way that brings to mind the more successful moments of Gunther Schuller's third stream experimentation of the 1960s; his setting of the Jobim standard "How Insensitive" is one of the most intriguing and lovely ever recorded, and his own "Gnosis Crisis" combines cool strings with hot beats in a way that is both surprising and immediately attractive. Only the slightly bloated tone poem "Wunderlichen Stadt" (clocking in at over ten and a half minutes) fails to consistently hold one's attention; everything else is a revelation. Very highly recommended.
© Rick Anderson /TiVo
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
Patrick Zimmerli, MainArtist
Songlines Songlines
Patrick Zimmerli, MainArtist
Songlines Songlines
Patrick Zimmerli, MainArtist
Songlines Songlines
Patrick Zimmerli, MainArtist
Songlines Songlines
Patrick Zimmerli, MainArtist
Songlines Songlines
Patrick Zimmerli, MainArtist
Songlines Songlines
Patrick Zimmerli, MainArtist
Songlines Songlines
Patrick Zimmerli, MainArtist
Songlines Songlines
Patrick Zimmerli, MainArtist
Songlines Songlines
Patrick Zimmerli, MainArtist
Songlines Songlines
Patrick Zimmerli, MainArtist
Songlines Songlines
Patrick Zimmerli, MainArtist
Songlines Songlines
Patrick Zimmerli, MainArtist
Songlines Songlines
Patrick Zimmerli, MainArtist
Songlines Songlines
Presentación del Álbum
Usually, when jazz and electronica get together, it's the former that ends up taking a back seat to the latter -- a string bass sample lopes along underneath laid-back synth chords, or a saxophone tries to honk its way through a thicket of over-produced keyboards. Either way, the strategy is to take easy listening pap and give it a superficial gloss of hipness. The sixth album by saxophonist and composer Patrick Zimmerli takes just the opposite tack, and succeeds brilliantly. Instead of using disconnected jazz elements to spice up electronic Muzak, Zimmerli writes complex and beautiful jazz charts and spices them up with tasteful incursions of jittery, jungly breakbeats (courtesy of percussionist and programmer Satoshi Takeishi). His approach might sound gimmicky if it weren't for the strength of his compositions, which manage to balance challenging formal complexity with intuitive, completely approachable beauty. He incorporates a string quartet into his arrangements in a way that brings to mind the more successful moments of Gunther Schuller's third stream experimentation of the 1960s; his setting of the Jobim standard "How Insensitive" is one of the most intriguing and lovely ever recorded, and his own "Gnosis Crisis" combines cool strings with hot beats in a way that is both surprising and immediately attractive. Only the slightly bloated tone poem "Wunderlichen Stadt" (clocking in at over ten and a half minutes) fails to consistently hold one's attention; everything else is a revelation. Very highly recommended.
© Rick Anderson /TiVo
Acerca del álbum
- 1 disco(s) - 14 pista(s)
- Duración total: 01:05:04
- 1 Libreto digital
- Artistas principales: Patrick Zimmerli
- Sello: Songlines
- Género Jazz
Songlines Songlines
Mejorar la información del álbum