Feel the Blues with all that Jazz
English (United Kingdom)Polish (Poland)
Home Jazz Michael Bates Michael Bates - Acrobat: Music For and By Dmitri Shostakovich (2011)

Michael Bates - Acrobat: Music For and By Dmitri Shostakovich (2011)

User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 

Michael Bates - Acrobat (2011)

Image could not be displayed. Check browser for compatibility.


1.    Dance of Death
2.    Talking Bird
3.    Strong Arm
4.    Some Wounds
5.    Fugitive Pieces
6.    Silent Witness
7.    The Given Day
8.    Yurodivy
9.    Arcangela

Personnel:
    Michael Bates – Bass, compositions
    Russ Johnson – Trumpet
    Chris Speed – Clarinet and tenor saxophone
    Russ Lossing – Piano
    Tom Rainey – Drums

 

Avant-garde bassist Michael Bates identifies the connection between the Stravinsky-influenced modern classical music of Shostakovich and his own free jazz tendencies on Acrobat: Music for, and by, Dmitri Shostakovich. Actually, only one track, the leadoff one, "Dance of Death," is a Shostakovich composition, and that piece, as played by a group in which Bates is joined by Russ Johnson (trumpet), Chris Speed (clarinet, saxophone), Russ Lossing (acoustic and Fender Rhodes electric pianos), and Tom Rainey (drums), comes off in the style of Kurt Weill's German period, as if it were a bit of incidental music from the score of The Threepenny Opera. On Bates' compositions written for Shostakovich, the group can be playful, as is Speed's clarinet on "Talking Bird," and it can turn in a straight bebop performance, as it does on "Strong Arm," which pairs Johnson's trumpet with Bates' bass in ascending and descending patterns, then follows with Lossing's electric piano against Rainey's busy drumming. "Some Wounds" is a slow blues with a mournful saxophone solo, while the equally melancholy "Fugitive Pieces" is more melodic and, as its title implies, more of a suite with sections strung together, including an unaccompanied clarinet solo. Later tracks, starting with "Silent Witness," are more typical free works, with every man for himself, the only apparent agreement about how to play concerning tempo. Yet these are experienced musicians capable of giving such music the risky, exciting feeling of free jazz, in which things always seem about to fall apart entirely, but never do. What it all has to do with Shostakovich may be more inspirational than literal, but the composer's reputation is only enhanced by an association with such inspired playing. ---William Ruhlmann, allmusic.com

download (mp3 @320 kbs):

uploaded yandex 4shared mega solidfiles zalivalka cloudmailru mediafire filecloudio oboom

 

back

Last Updated (Friday, 06 February 2015 12:11)

 

Before downloading any file you are required to read and accept the
Terms and Conditions.

If you are an artist or agent, and would like your music removed from this site,
please e-mail us on
abuse@theblues-thatjazz.com
and we will remove them as soon as possible.


Polls
What music genre would you like to find here the most?
 
Now onsite:
  • 594 guests
Content View Hits : 247743458