Categorias:
Carrinho de compras 0

Serviço indisponível no momento.

The Vandermark 5|Burn The Incline

Burn The Incline

The Vandermark 5

Disponível em
Qualidade de CD de 16 bits 44.1 kHz - Stereo

Streaming ilimitado

Escute agora este álbum em alta qualidade nos nossos aplicativos

Começar meu período de teste e começar a escutar este álbum

Curta este álbum nos aplicativos Qobuz com a sua assinatura

Assinar

Curta este álbum nos aplicativos Qobuz com a sua assinatura

Idioma disponível: inglês

The fourth CD by the Vandermark 5 doesn't blast out of the gate with full-bore skronk the way Simpatico did, but rather insinuates itself with the listener in a more gradual fashion. "Distance," the leadoff track, starts with a bass solo from Kent Kessler, somewhat giving the impression that the band's performance has been caught in mid-stride. The tune does, in fact, burn its way up the incline -- the band moves from a somewhat plaintive Ornette-ish theme through a chunky modal vamp into emphatic blues-funk riffing, with scorched-earth sax and guitar solos blasting away as the band gathers steam. "Distance" is almost a summary of everything that Burn the Incline offers aside from outright swing and free jazz. Swing enters the picture with "The Cooler," which like all else on the CD is filled with stellar soloing; there are wonderful turns by Jeb Bishop on trombone, Vandermark on bass clarinet, and Dave Rempis on tenor. The ruminations of "Late Night Wait Around" are followed by "Roulette," a dose of blistering up-tempo funk with a dedication to bassist Nate McBride. The band remains relaxed during the lovely ballad "The Trouble Is"; this tune, with its beautiful alto solo from Rempis, proves that the Vandermark 5 can be compelling even when in a reflective mood. The CD closes with the rhythmically open "Ground," a piece that is multifaceted in the manner of "Distance" but with a pronounced tilt toward free jazz explosiveness. With this track, the apex has indeed been reached and the incline leading to it left smoldering in the Vandermark 5's path. All in all, Burn the Incline is another strong release from the Vandermark 5 -- it may not be a step up from Simpatico, but it holds its own against the standard of that extraordinary release and effectively measures the ensemble's growth into one of the best working bands in creative improvised music circa 1999-2000. [The first 1,000 copies of Burn the Incline included not only the aforementioned Vandermark-penned tracks but also a second CD comprised of credible live V5 covers of "free jazz classics": "Happy House" by Ornette Coleman, "69L" by Anthony Braxton, "Conquistador, Pt. 2" by Cecil Taylor, "Goodbye Tom B." by Joe McPhee, "Saturn" by Sun Ra, "Gazzelloni" by Eric Dolphy, and "New York Is Full of Lonely People" by Lester Bowie. In 2002, this bonus CD was released by Atavistic as half of a two-CD set entitled Free Jazz Classics, Vols. 1 & 2, which also includes a second CD of live tracks originally released as a limited-edition bonus disc with the Vandermark 5's Acoustic Machine from 2001.]
© Dave Lynch /TiVo

Mais informações

Burn The Incline

The Vandermark 5

launch qobuz app Já baixei o Qobuz para Windows / MacOS Abrir

download qobuz app Ainda não baixei o Qobuz para Windows / MacOS Baixar o aplicativo Qobuz

Você está escutando amostras.

Escute mais de 100 milhões de músicas com um plano de streaming ilimitado.

Escute esta playlist e mais de 100 milhões de músicas com os nossos planos de streaming ilimitado.

A partir de 8,99€/mês

1
Distance (for Joe Morris)
00:09:14

The Vandermark 5, Primary

1999 Atavistic Atavistic 1999

2
The Cooler (for Pandelis Karayorgis)
00:06:17

The Vandermark 5, Primary

1999 Atavistic Atavistic 1999

3
Late Night Wait Around (for Ab Baars)
00:09:17

The Vandermark 5, Primary

1999 Atavistic Atavistic 1999

4
Roulette (for Nate McBride)
00:04:28

The Vandermark 5, Primary

1999 Atavistic Atavistic 1999

5
Accident Happening (for William Parker)
00:08:43

The Vandermark 5, Primary

1999 Atavistic Atavistic 1999

6
In Focus (for Per Henrik Wallin)
00:09:32

The Vandermark 5, Primary

1999 Atavistic Atavistic 1999

7
The Trouble Is (for Misha Mengelberg)
00:05:27

The Vandermark 5, Primary

1999 Atavistic Atavistic 1999

8
Ground (for The Ex)
00:06:58

The Vandermark 5, Primary

1999 Atavistic Atavistic 1999

Descrição do álbum

The fourth CD by the Vandermark 5 doesn't blast out of the gate with full-bore skronk the way Simpatico did, but rather insinuates itself with the listener in a more gradual fashion. "Distance," the leadoff track, starts with a bass solo from Kent Kessler, somewhat giving the impression that the band's performance has been caught in mid-stride. The tune does, in fact, burn its way up the incline -- the band moves from a somewhat plaintive Ornette-ish theme through a chunky modal vamp into emphatic blues-funk riffing, with scorched-earth sax and guitar solos blasting away as the band gathers steam. "Distance" is almost a summary of everything that Burn the Incline offers aside from outright swing and free jazz. Swing enters the picture with "The Cooler," which like all else on the CD is filled with stellar soloing; there are wonderful turns by Jeb Bishop on trombone, Vandermark on bass clarinet, and Dave Rempis on tenor. The ruminations of "Late Night Wait Around" are followed by "Roulette," a dose of blistering up-tempo funk with a dedication to bassist Nate McBride. The band remains relaxed during the lovely ballad "The Trouble Is"; this tune, with its beautiful alto solo from Rempis, proves that the Vandermark 5 can be compelling even when in a reflective mood. The CD closes with the rhythmically open "Ground," a piece that is multifaceted in the manner of "Distance" but with a pronounced tilt toward free jazz explosiveness. With this track, the apex has indeed been reached and the incline leading to it left smoldering in the Vandermark 5's path. All in all, Burn the Incline is another strong release from the Vandermark 5 -- it may not be a step up from Simpatico, but it holds its own against the standard of that extraordinary release and effectively measures the ensemble's growth into one of the best working bands in creative improvised music circa 1999-2000. [The first 1,000 copies of Burn the Incline included not only the aforementioned Vandermark-penned tracks but also a second CD comprised of credible live V5 covers of "free jazz classics": "Happy House" by Ornette Coleman, "69L" by Anthony Braxton, "Conquistador, Pt. 2" by Cecil Taylor, "Goodbye Tom B." by Joe McPhee, "Saturn" by Sun Ra, "Gazzelloni" by Eric Dolphy, and "New York Is Full of Lonely People" by Lester Bowie. In 2002, this bonus CD was released by Atavistic as half of a two-CD set entitled Free Jazz Classics, Vols. 1 & 2, which also includes a second CD of live tracks originally released as a limited-edition bonus disc with the Vandermark 5's Acoustic Machine from 2001.]
© Dave Lynch /TiVo

Sobre o álbum

Melhorar as informações do álbum
Mais sobre o Qobuz
Por The Vandermark 5

Beat Reader

The Vandermark 5

Beat Reader The Vandermark 5

A Discontinous Line

The Vandermark 5

A Discontinous Line The Vandermark 5

Free Jazz Classics Vols. 3 & 4

The Vandermark 5

Elements Of Style, Exercises In Surprise

The Vandermark 5

Free Jazz Classics Vols. 1 & 2

The Vandermark 5

Playlists

Você também pode gostar...

Entre eux deux

Melody Gardot

Entre eux deux Melody Gardot

Bewitched

Laufey

Bewitched Laufey

We Get Requests

Oscar Peterson

We Get Requests Oscar Peterson

Here It Is: A Tribute to Leonard Cohen

Various Artists

Kind Of Blue

Miles Davis

Kind Of Blue Miles Davis