Qobuz Store wallpaper
Kategorie:
Warenkorb 0

Ihr Warenkorb ist leer

Toxic|This Is Beautiful Because We Are Beautiful People

This Is Beautiful Because We Are Beautiful People

TOXIC: Matthew Shipp, Mat Walerian, William Parker

Verfügbar in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Musik-Streaming

Hören Sie dieses Album mit unseren Apps in hoher Audio-Qualität

Testen Sie Qobuz kostenlos und hören Sie sich das Album an

Hören Sie dieses Album im Rahmen Ihres Streaming-Abonnements mit den Qobuz-Apps

Abonnement abschließen

Hören Sie dieses Album im Rahmen Ihres Streaming-Abonnements mit den Qobuz-Apps

Download

Kaufen Sie dieses Album und laden Sie es in verschiedenen Formaten herunter, je nach Ihren Bedürfnissen.

Text in englischer Sprache verfügbar

On his third recording for ESP-Disk in as many years, Polish multi-instrumentalist Mat Walerian showcases a new band and makes his studio debut. His first ESP-Disk release, Uppercut: Live at Okuden, was a duo with pianist Matthew Shipp. Walerian followed it with the trio date Jungle: Live at Okuden, which added drummer Hamid Drake to the mix. On This Is Beautiful Because We Are Beautiful People, the lineup shifts: bassist/shakuhachi flutist William Parker takes the place of Drake (and marks Parker's own return to the label after a 44-year absence -- he last appeared on Frank Lowe's Black Beings in 1973). This Is Beautiful was cut in a Brooklyn studio during a single day. Almost 80 minutes in length, it consists of five long tracks.
Opener "Lesson" commences as a duet for flute and shakuhachi before Parker abruptly picks up his bass. Shipp's interrogatory chord voicings are followed by an increasingly dynamic exchange with Walerian. But rather than project fire, the trio move toward an investigation of Asian music -- a primary influence on the bandleader. "The Breakfast Club Day 1" erupts with Parker's frenetic free bowing before Walerian's alto saxophone enters on the blues tip, shifting its focus. Shipp straddles the line between them, walking out mysterious, repetitive patterns before finding his own labyrinthian way into another hidden lyricism. Parker's freedom and Walerian's blues eventually entwine with the pianist and the piece gels, unfolding over nearly 20 minutes. Parker again gets the nod to open the title track with a meditative bass solo that takes up a third of the jam's 11-minute length. When Walerian enters on soprano clarinet, highlighted by Shipp's mysterious blocky chords and subtle, left-hand expressionistic caresses, we are again immersed in blues, only this shade bridges the past and the future. Shipp's solo on "The Breakfast Club Day 2" is the highlight of this 20-minute jam as he explores intricately wrought ghost voicings amid Parker's punchy bowed pulses and Walerian's almost swinging alto horn. In the final third they become a single force of swirling color that, even amid the dissonance, creates a groove. Shipp uncharacteristically plays organ on closer "Peace and Respect," which comes off as a seeming glance at the music hidden inside the music of film noir. Walerian's bass clarinet is rooted deeply in the tradition, but his use of Eric Dolphy's spiritually infused lyricism gets the most out of his bandmates before he even switches to alto. Parker's restraint builds a necessary atmospheric tension as he walks out his own hearing of the blues; Shipp's tonal expressions are eerie and beautiful as Walerian opens himself to imbue it all with an ethereal, poetic, yet authoritative utterance. While Walerian's three albums all showcase a truly massive talent -- one as adept at nuanced listening as canny improvisation and creative composition -- Toxic's This Is Beautiful Because We Are Beautiful People is the deepest and widest. Taken as a whole, this record actually sings with inspiration.

© Thom Jurek /TiVo

Weitere Informationen

This Is Beautiful Because We Are Beautiful People

Toxic

launch qobuz app Ich habe die Qobuz Desktop-Anwendung für Windows / MacOS bereits heruntergeladen Öffnen

download qobuz app Ich habe die Qobuz Desktop-Anwendung für Windows / MacOS noch nicht heruntergeladen Downloaden Sie die Qobuz App

Sie hören derzeit Ausschnitte der Musik.

Hören Sie mehr als 100 Millionen Titel mit unseren Streaming-Abonnements

Hören Sie diese Playlist und mehr als 100 Millionen Tracks mit unseren Streaming-Abonnements

Ab 12,49€/Monat

1
Lesson
Toxic
00:13:22

TOXIC: Matthew Shipp, Mat Walerian, William Parker, Main Artist - M. Walerian, W. Parker, Composer, Lyricist - ESP-Disk' Ltd.

2017 ESP Disk 2017 ESP-Disk' Ltd.

2
Medley: Light Blue/Coming on the Hudson/Bye-Ya/Ruby My Dear
Don Cherry Quintet
00:19:56

TOXIC: Matthew Shipp, Mat Walerian, William Parker, Main Artist - M. Walerian, M. Shipp, W. Parker, Composer, Lyricist - ESP-Disk' Ltd.

2017 ESP Disk 2012 ESP-Disk' Ltd.

3
This Is Beautiful Because We Are Beautiful People
Toxic
00:11:11

TOXIC: Matthew Shipp, Mat Walerian, William Parker, Main Artist - M. Walerian, Composer, Lyricist - ESP-Disk' Ltd.

2017 ESP Disk 2017 ESP-Disk' Ltd.

4
The Breakfast Club Day 2
Toxic
00:20:29

TOXIC: Matthew Shipp, Mat Walerian, William Parker, Main Artist - M. Walerian, W. Parker, Composer, Lyricist - ESP-Disk' Ltd.

2017 ESP Disk 2017 ESP-Disk' Ltd.

5
Peace and Respect
Toxic
00:14:10

TOXIC: Matthew Shipp, Mat Walerian, William Parker, Main Artist - M. Walerian, Composer, Lyricist - ESP-Disk' Ltd.

2017 ESP Disk 2017 ESP-Disk' Ltd.

Albumbeschreibung

On his third recording for ESP-Disk in as many years, Polish multi-instrumentalist Mat Walerian showcases a new band and makes his studio debut. His first ESP-Disk release, Uppercut: Live at Okuden, was a duo with pianist Matthew Shipp. Walerian followed it with the trio date Jungle: Live at Okuden, which added drummer Hamid Drake to the mix. On This Is Beautiful Because We Are Beautiful People, the lineup shifts: bassist/shakuhachi flutist William Parker takes the place of Drake (and marks Parker's own return to the label after a 44-year absence -- he last appeared on Frank Lowe's Black Beings in 1973). This Is Beautiful was cut in a Brooklyn studio during a single day. Almost 80 minutes in length, it consists of five long tracks.
Opener "Lesson" commences as a duet for flute and shakuhachi before Parker abruptly picks up his bass. Shipp's interrogatory chord voicings are followed by an increasingly dynamic exchange with Walerian. But rather than project fire, the trio move toward an investigation of Asian music -- a primary influence on the bandleader. "The Breakfast Club Day 1" erupts with Parker's frenetic free bowing before Walerian's alto saxophone enters on the blues tip, shifting its focus. Shipp straddles the line between them, walking out mysterious, repetitive patterns before finding his own labyrinthian way into another hidden lyricism. Parker's freedom and Walerian's blues eventually entwine with the pianist and the piece gels, unfolding over nearly 20 minutes. Parker again gets the nod to open the title track with a meditative bass solo that takes up a third of the jam's 11-minute length. When Walerian enters on soprano clarinet, highlighted by Shipp's mysterious blocky chords and subtle, left-hand expressionistic caresses, we are again immersed in blues, only this shade bridges the past and the future. Shipp's solo on "The Breakfast Club Day 2" is the highlight of this 20-minute jam as he explores intricately wrought ghost voicings amid Parker's punchy bowed pulses and Walerian's almost swinging alto horn. In the final third they become a single force of swirling color that, even amid the dissonance, creates a groove. Shipp uncharacteristically plays organ on closer "Peace and Respect," which comes off as a seeming glance at the music hidden inside the music of film noir. Walerian's bass clarinet is rooted deeply in the tradition, but his use of Eric Dolphy's spiritually infused lyricism gets the most out of his bandmates before he even switches to alto. Parker's restraint builds a necessary atmospheric tension as he walks out his own hearing of the blues; Shipp's tonal expressions are eerie and beautiful as Walerian opens himself to imbue it all with an ethereal, poetic, yet authoritative utterance. While Walerian's three albums all showcase a truly massive talent -- one as adept at nuanced listening as canny improvisation and creative composition -- Toxic's This Is Beautiful Because We Are Beautiful People is the deepest and widest. Taken as a whole, this record actually sings with inspiration.

© Thom Jurek /TiVo

Informationen zu dem Album

Verbesserung der Albuminformationen

Qobuz logo Warum Musik bei Qobuz kaufen?

Aktuelle Sonderangebote...

Money For Nothing

Dire Straits

Money For Nothing Dire Straits

The Studio Albums 2009 – 2018

Mark Knopfler

Brothers In Arms

Dire Straits

Brothers In Arms Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992

Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992 Dire Straits
Mehr auf Qobuz
Von Toxic

Purple Sun

Toxic

Purple Sun Toxic

V.I.P

Toxic

V.I.P Toxic

Yeah Yeah

Toxic

Yeah Yeah Toxic

TROUBLED TIMES

Toxic

AD Genius Lee TaeBaek (Original Television Soundtrack) Pt. 1 - Just A Man In Love

Toxic

Playlists

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen...

Oh Mercy

Bob Dylan

Oh Mercy Bob Dylan

Mirror To The Sky

Yes

The Steven Wilson Remixes

Yes

Greatest Hits

Journey

Toto IV

Toto

Toto IV Toto