Catégories :
Panier 0

Votre panier est vide

Sir Richard Bishop|Polytheistic Fragments

Polytheistic Fragments

Sir Richard Bishop

Disponible en
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Musique illimitée

Écoutez cet album en haute-qualité dès maintenant dans nos applications

Démarrer ma période d'essai et lancer l'écoute de cet album

Profitez de cet album sur les apps Qobuz grâce à votre abonnement

Souscrire

Profitez de cet album sur les apps Qobuz grâce à votre abonnement

Téléchargement digital

Téléchargez cet album dans la qualité de votre choix

Langue disponible : anglais

Sir Richard Bishop, formerly guitarist of the (in)famous Sun City Girls ensemble, has been making solo recordings intermittently since 1998, and quite regularly since 2004. In fact, Polytheistic Fragments -- his debut for Drag City -- is his fourth in as many years, and his third since 2006. The Sun City Girls split after the death of percussionist Charles Gocher in February of 2007. This is Bishop's first musical statement since that time. He has a given style as a guitarist. Icons like the late John Fahey and Robbie Basho are usually invoked, but Bishop plays nothing like either one. His musical knowledge and technical range are vast: from ancient and modern Asian scalar modalities (Vietnam to China to Japan to Malaysia) and Indian raga, from South American indigenous rural folk musics to British Isles and Celtic instrumental forms, from American Appalachian folk, blues, and jazz, to Brazilian samba and Spanish flamenco and fado and Argentinean tango. Polytheistic Fragments delves into a number of these, from classical Spanish flamenco to open modal explorative improvisations. He employs mostly a single acoustic guitar, but there are some overdubs and slide tunes where the electric is utilized as well. It hardly matters once one encounters a track like "Rub' Al Khali," where flamenco and Spanish classical styles encounter Pan-Asian modalities. On the very next cut, "Free Masonic Guitar," what appear to the ear to be overdubbed acoustic and 12-strings are tuned in an odd open-toned scale and woven into a tightly knit fabric of single-string wizardry and percussive chord flourishes that touch upon blues, old Andean folk tunes, and a shimmering bluegrass breakdown framed in a flamenco -- not nuevo, either -- rhythmic attack (as if you could dance to Bishop's wildly mysterious music). But there are more surprises here than that, including the shimmering surf-country of "Canned Goods & Firearms," with its electric guitar in plectrum style that doesn't ape Dick Dale so much as go beyond his own wildest dreams. "Saraswati" offers minimal, lightly reverbed piano playing and an odd minor-key melody that is as quizzical as it is beautiful, backed by a droning Indian sarod in the backdrop. "Tennessee Porch Swing" is a Southern hornpipe-styled folk tune, and the set closes with the gloriously languid, elegiac "Ecstasies in the Open Air," an acoustic guitar piece with what sounds like a lone organ line in the background (there are no credits) before an electric guitar offers a contrapuntal lyric line and guitars (including a Resophonic six-string) begin to bleed and blur together in a wall of tastefully layered overdubs to carry this combination lullaby and dirge, sweet as it is, home into silence. Polytheistic Fragments may not appeal to those who enjoy Bishop's longer compositions, but this was meant to be a collection of instrumental songs, and to that end it is successful -- focused, investigative, searching, and full of barely concealed reverie and emotion. It is not less forward-thinking than his other recordings, simply less experimental in nature.

© Thom Jurek /TiVo

Plus d'informations

Polytheistic Fragments

Sir Richard Bishop

launch qobuz app J'ai déjà téléchargé Qobuz pour Mac OS Ouvrir

download qobuz app Je n'ai pas encore téléchargé Qobuz pour Mac OS Télécharger l'app

Vous êtes actuellement en train d’écouter des extraits.

Écoutez plus de 100 millions de titres avec votre abonnement illimité.

Écoutez cette playlist et plus de 100 millions de titres avec votre abonnement illimité.

À partir de 12,49€/mois

1
Cross My Palm With Silver
00:04:02

Sir Richard Bishop, Composer, MainArtist - Drag City Inc., MusicPublisher

2007 Drag City Inc. 2007 Drag City Inc.

2
Hecate's Dream
00:03:21

Sir Richard Bishop, Composer, MainArtist - Drag City Inc., MusicPublisher

2007 Drag City Inc. 2007 Drag City Inc.

3
Elysium Number Five
00:02:02

Sir Richard Bishop, Composer, MainArtist - Drag City Inc., MusicPublisher

2007 Drag City Inc. 2007 Drag City Inc.

4
Rub' al Khali
00:04:05

Sir Richard Bishop, Composer, MainArtist - Drag City Inc., MusicPublisher

2007 Drag City Inc. 2007 Drag City Inc.

5
Free Masonic Guitar
00:04:58

Sir Richard Bishop, Composer, MainArtist - Drag City Inc., MusicPublisher

2007 Drag City Inc. 2007 Drag City Inc.

6
Cemetary Games
00:01:53

Sir Richard Bishop, Composer, MainArtist - Drag City Inc., MusicPublisher

2007 Drag City Inc. 2007 Drag City Inc.

7
Quiescent Return
00:02:48

Sir Richard Bishop, Composer, MainArtist - Drag City Inc., MusicPublisher

2007 Drag City Inc. 2007 Drag City Inc.

8
Saraswati
00:10:48

Sir Richard Bishop, Composer, MainArtist - Drag City Inc., MusicPublisher

2007 Drag City Inc. 2007 Drag City Inc.

9
Tennessee Porch Swing
00:01:57

Sir Richard Bishop, Composer, MainArtist - Drag City Inc., MusicPublisher

2007 Drag City Inc. 2007 Drag City Inc.

10
Canned Goods & Firearms
00:05:15

Sir Richard Bishop, Composer, MainArtist - Drag City Inc., MusicPublisher

2007 Drag City Inc. 2007 Drag City Inc.

11
Ecstasies In The Open Air
00:04:13

Sir Richard Bishop, Composer, MainArtist - Drag City Inc., MusicPublisher

2007 Drag City Inc. 2003 Drag City Inc.

Chronique

Sir Richard Bishop, formerly guitarist of the (in)famous Sun City Girls ensemble, has been making solo recordings intermittently since 1998, and quite regularly since 2004. In fact, Polytheistic Fragments -- his debut for Drag City -- is his fourth in as many years, and his third since 2006. The Sun City Girls split after the death of percussionist Charles Gocher in February of 2007. This is Bishop's first musical statement since that time. He has a given style as a guitarist. Icons like the late John Fahey and Robbie Basho are usually invoked, but Bishop plays nothing like either one. His musical knowledge and technical range are vast: from ancient and modern Asian scalar modalities (Vietnam to China to Japan to Malaysia) and Indian raga, from South American indigenous rural folk musics to British Isles and Celtic instrumental forms, from American Appalachian folk, blues, and jazz, to Brazilian samba and Spanish flamenco and fado and Argentinean tango. Polytheistic Fragments delves into a number of these, from classical Spanish flamenco to open modal explorative improvisations. He employs mostly a single acoustic guitar, but there are some overdubs and slide tunes where the electric is utilized as well. It hardly matters once one encounters a track like "Rub' Al Khali," where flamenco and Spanish classical styles encounter Pan-Asian modalities. On the very next cut, "Free Masonic Guitar," what appear to the ear to be overdubbed acoustic and 12-strings are tuned in an odd open-toned scale and woven into a tightly knit fabric of single-string wizardry and percussive chord flourishes that touch upon blues, old Andean folk tunes, and a shimmering bluegrass breakdown framed in a flamenco -- not nuevo, either -- rhythmic attack (as if you could dance to Bishop's wildly mysterious music). But there are more surprises here than that, including the shimmering surf-country of "Canned Goods & Firearms," with its electric guitar in plectrum style that doesn't ape Dick Dale so much as go beyond his own wildest dreams. "Saraswati" offers minimal, lightly reverbed piano playing and an odd minor-key melody that is as quizzical as it is beautiful, backed by a droning Indian sarod in the backdrop. "Tennessee Porch Swing" is a Southern hornpipe-styled folk tune, and the set closes with the gloriously languid, elegiac "Ecstasies in the Open Air," an acoustic guitar piece with what sounds like a lone organ line in the background (there are no credits) before an electric guitar offers a contrapuntal lyric line and guitars (including a Resophonic six-string) begin to bleed and blur together in a wall of tastefully layered overdubs to carry this combination lullaby and dirge, sweet as it is, home into silence. Polytheistic Fragments may not appeal to those who enjoy Bishop's longer compositions, but this was meant to be a collection of instrumental songs, and to that end it is successful -- focused, investigative, searching, and full of barely concealed reverie and emotion. It is not less forward-thinking than his other recordings, simply less experimental in nature.

© Thom Jurek /TiVo

À propos

Améliorer les informations de l'album

Qobuz logo Pourquoi acheter sur Qobuz ?

Les promotions du moment...

Getz/Gilberto

Stan Getz

Getz/Gilberto Stan Getz

Moanin'

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers

Moanin' Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers

Blue Train

John Coltrane

Blue Train John Coltrane

Live In Europe

Melody Gardot

Live In Europe Melody Gardot
À découvrir également
Par Sir Richard Bishop

Mit's Linctus Codeine Co.

Sir Richard Bishop

Mit's Linctus Codeine Co. Sir Richard Bishop

The Freak Of Araby

Sir Richard Bishop

The Freak Of Araby Sir Richard Bishop

Oneiric Formulary

Sir Richard Bishop

Oneiric Formulary Sir Richard Bishop

Salvador Kali

Sir Richard Bishop

Salvador Kali Sir Richard Bishop

Tangier Sessions

Sir Richard Bishop

Tangier Sessions Sir Richard Bishop
Dans la même thématique...

Calm Down

Réma

Calm Down Réma

Analog Love

Dabeull

Analog Love Dabeull

Monteverdi - A Trace of Grace

Michel Godard

De Todas las Flores

Natalia Lafourcade

De Todas las Flores Natalia Lafourcade

Genshin Impact - The Stellar Moments, Vol. 4

HOYO-MiX