Categorías:
Carrito 0

Servicio no disponible por el momento

Graham Collier|Portraits

Portraits

Graham Collier Music

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

Idioma disponible: inglés

Issued in 1973 after a pair of recording dates in late 1972, Portraits sees Collier revisiting his notion explored on Mosaics -- the working out of longer forms. Three selections make up the album, the two-part "And Now For Something Completely Different," and the nearly 11-minute title track. The ensemble on Collier's Portraits contains only drummer John Webb, and pianist Geoff Castle from Collier's previous few outings, and includes only one saxophonist, Pete Hurt. Dick Pearce is in the brass chair, and Ed Speight is added on guitar. Musically, the exotica present on Mosaics has gone by the wayside in place of a more solidly modal attack that gives play to rock thematics in terms not only of texture, but of architecture. Collier paid close attention to Miles Davis' In A Silent Way, and took from it its sense of propulsive dynamics, and its repetition, while opening up the modes to a more swinging jazz vocabulary. On the suite, riffs take the place of front line melodies, and the modes that come from them are spun out of a clipped series of notes that wind around the rhythm section in a nearly hypnotic way. "Portraits I" is also Milesian, but more in the sense of the quintet's longer reaching palette of modal interstition and elocution. A restrained palette is employed as a way of exploiting all of its chromatic elements, and then inverting them in on themselves. Language between the soloists is overlapping and entwined, rather than oppositional. Time signatures do not vary, but the series of tension placed on one note over another seems to vary, according to arbitrary tonal considerations. This is a more laid-back, yet more challenging listen than any previous Collier outing, but it also dates as one of the best.

© Thom Jurek /TiVo

Más información

Portraits

Graham Collier

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
And Now For Something Completely Different Part 1
Graham Collier Music
00:16:55

Dick Pearce, FeaturedArtist - Geoff Castle, FeaturedArtist - Graham Collier, Composer - Graham Collier Music, MainArtist

(C) 2005 Graham Collier (P) 2005 Graham Collier

2
And Now For Something Completely Different Part 2
Graham Collier Music
00:10:02

Graham Collier, Composer - Ed Speight, FeaturedArtist - Graham Collier Music, MainArtist

(C) 2005 Graham Collier (P) 2005 Graham Collier

3
Portraits 1
Graham Collier Music
00:10:57

Graham Collier, Composer - Graham Collier Music, MainArtist - Dick Pearce (trumpet), Peter Hurt Alto sax.), Ed Speight (guitar), Geoff Castle (piano), John Webb (drums), Graham Collier (bass)., FeaturedArtist

(C) 2005 Graham Collier (P) 2005 Graham Collier

Presentación del Álbum

Issued in 1973 after a pair of recording dates in late 1972, Portraits sees Collier revisiting his notion explored on Mosaics -- the working out of longer forms. Three selections make up the album, the two-part "And Now For Something Completely Different," and the nearly 11-minute title track. The ensemble on Collier's Portraits contains only drummer John Webb, and pianist Geoff Castle from Collier's previous few outings, and includes only one saxophonist, Pete Hurt. Dick Pearce is in the brass chair, and Ed Speight is added on guitar. Musically, the exotica present on Mosaics has gone by the wayside in place of a more solidly modal attack that gives play to rock thematics in terms not only of texture, but of architecture. Collier paid close attention to Miles Davis' In A Silent Way, and took from it its sense of propulsive dynamics, and its repetition, while opening up the modes to a more swinging jazz vocabulary. On the suite, riffs take the place of front line melodies, and the modes that come from them are spun out of a clipped series of notes that wind around the rhythm section in a nearly hypnotic way. "Portraits I" is also Milesian, but more in the sense of the quintet's longer reaching palette of modal interstition and elocution. A restrained palette is employed as a way of exploiting all of its chromatic elements, and then inverting them in on themselves. Language between the soloists is overlapping and entwined, rather than oppositional. Time signatures do not vary, but the series of tension placed on one note over another seems to vary, according to arbitrary tonal considerations. This is a more laid-back, yet more challenging listen than any previous Collier outing, but it also dates as one of the best.

© Thom Jurek /TiVo

Acerca del álbum

Mejorar la información del álbum
Más en Qobuz
Por Graham Collier

British Conversations

Graham Collier

British Conversations Graham Collier

The Barley Mow

Graham Collier

The Barley Mow Graham Collier

Down Another Road/ Songs for My Father/ Mosaics

Graham Collier

Down Another Road

Graham Collier

Down Another Road Graham Collier

Down Another Road @ Stockholm Jazz Days '69

Graham Collier

Playlists

Quizás también le guste...

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

Keith Jarrett

Getz/Gilberto

Stan Getz

Getz/Gilberto Stan Getz

Orchestras

Bill Frisell

Orchestras Bill Frisell

Kind Of Blue

Miles Davis

Kind Of Blue Miles Davis

We Get Requests

Oscar Peterson

We Get Requests Oscar Peterson