In Carterian Fashion
ASIN: B0000062RR
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com's Best of 1998
Early in 1998, saxophonist James Carter signed a modeling contract, perhaps explaining the title of this LP. His jazz chops, we are happy to report, have not suffered. On Fashion, Carter and his sax are all business. He is able to cool burn on slower numbers, recalling Ben Webster's smoldering ballads, then turn on a dime to deliver blistering runs of honk and skronk that seem intent on peeling the paint from the walls. Carter's horn playing is all about power and forceful delivery, but he is also capable of amazing control. And on Fashion, he dukes it out with hotshot keyboardist Cyrus Chestnut, here driving a Hammond B3 organ like he was piloting a Zamboni. Great stuff! --S. Duda
Amazon.com
Detroit-born saxophonist James Carter has proven on his three previous CDs that he's a multifaceted, jazz dynamo. His tenor sax playing can ache with the romantic silkiness of Ben Webster and then soar with the multiple ranges of David Murray. In Carterian Fashion ups the ante on listeners, with Carter and celebrated jazzman Cyrus Chesnutt getting downright soulful in the latter's first outing on Hammond B-3 organ. There would be no "Carterian Fashion," however, if there wasn't a wide and telling divergence among Carter's performances. He goes ballistic on a couple of freewheeling tunes, showing again how the avant-garde and mainstream in jazz are, in reality, kissing cousins when skillfully dashed together. And once again, fellow Detroit-native and pianist Craig Taborn hammers the keys with both subtlety and absolute directness. --Andrew Bartlett
In Carterian Fashion
In Carterian Fashion,James Carter,Atlantic / Wea,Contemporary Jazz,Jazz,Jazz Music,Pop,Post-Bop,Soul-Jazz
Average customer rating:
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In Carterian Fashion
James Carter Manufacturer: Atlantic / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000062RR Release Date: 1998-05-19 |
Tracks:
Amazon.com's Best of 1998
Early in 1998, saxophonist James Carter signed a modeling contract, perhaps explaining the title of this LP. His jazz chops, we are happy to report, have not suffered. On Fashion, Carter and his sax are all business. He is able to cool burn on slower numbers, recalling Ben Webster's smoldering ballads, then turn on a dime to deliver blistering runs of honk and skronk that seem intent on peeling the paint from the walls. Carter's horn playing is all about power and forceful delivery, but he is also capable of amazing control. And on Fashion, he dukes it out with hotshot keyboardist Cyrus Chestnut, here driving a Hammond B3 organ like he was piloting a Zamboni. Great stuff! --S. DudaAmazon.com
Detroit-born saxophonist James Carter has proven on his three previous CDs that he's a multifaceted, jazz dynamo. His tenor sax playing can ache with the romantic silkiness of Ben Webster and then soar with the multiple ranges of David Murray. In Carterian Fashion ups the ante on listeners, with Carter and celebrated jazzman Cyrus Chesnutt getting downright soulful in the latter's first outing on Hammond B-3 organ. There would be no "Carterian Fashion," however, if there wasn't a wide and telling divergence among Carter's performances. He goes ballistic on a couple of freewheeling tunes, showing again how the avant-garde and mainstream in jazz are, in reality, kissing cousins when skillfully dashed together. And once again, fellow Detroit-native and pianist Craig Taborn hammers the keys with both subtlety and absolute directness. --Andrew BartlettCustomer Reviews:
almost a tenor thing.......2007-03-17
Where is the line?.......2003-04-21
James Carter is an oddity then in the world of popular jazz. This album, with its soul-jazz organ riffs maybe expected to sound just like a 60s soul-jazz record; very much hard bop with an organ and nothing too avant-garde. In Carterian Fashion shows Carter going all over the place; with drum beats that sound like a 40s swing band, screeching solos that would have made Albert Ayler and John Coltrane proud and great straight-ahead playing. Carter is pretty much unique in the Young Lions era of jazz in that he is able to use all of jazz history to his own ends to create some of the best Jazz of the 1990s. This album is recommended to fans of jazz who aren't close-minded to the avant-garde and enjoy a bit of 40s swing.
How Jazz Is SUPPOSED To Sound...........2001-08-10
Acomplished tenor.......2001-04-03
"Skull Grabbin'" is a (perhaps too) clever uptempo exercise that sounds like it's indebted to "Tune Up" &, especially, Coltrane's rewriting of it on _Giant Steps_--there's a "Countdown"-style tenor-drums battle in the centre of it, & Carter shows no lack of ideas or facility but perhaps could have scaled them back a touch. On the other hand "Lianmo" is quite beautiful, right from its evocative start with a throbbing choir of saxophones & trumpet. There's a couple nicely-turned tributes to Don Byas ("Don's Idea") & Lockjaw Davis ("Lockjaw's Lament"), & an unabashed modern funk number in the title track. Carter's playing has his usual exaggerated swagger, which is mostly winning (though his fondness for distortion & freak high notes sometimes gets the better of him).
Basically a winner: a fun, intelligent album that doesn't have the gravitas of an album like _The Real Quietstorm_ (shamefully already deleted by Atlantic) but nonetheless is an enjoyable listen.
great albums like this one reignite an age-old jazz debate.......2000-01-14
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