Bar Kokhba

Bar Kokhba Artist: John Zorn , and Masada Chamber Ensembles
Label: Tzadik
Category: Music



Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 2


UPC: 702397710820
EAN: 0702397710820
ASIN: B000003YTK


Release Date: 1996-08-20

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Listmania:

  1. Experiments in klezmer
  2. Brown Paper Packages Tied up with String
  3. some stuff that lately makes me feel better
  4. avant-garde
  5. John Zorn---he would hate this!
  6. la musique qui me plait ...
  7. Music that inspires me to MAKE music
  8. Essential albums from the Zorn/downtown crew
  9. Perfect weird music for good listeners
  10. My John Zorn collection...

Tracks:

  1. Gevurah
  2. Nezikin
  3. Mahshav
  4. Rokhev
  5. Abidan
  6. Sheloshim
  7. Hath-Arob
  8. Paran
  9. Mahlah
  10. Socoh
  11. Yechida
  12. Bikkurim
  13. Idalah-Abal

Tracks:

  1. Tannaim
  2. Nefesh
  3. Abidan
  4. Mo'ed
  5. Maskil
  6. Mishpatim
  7. Sansanah
  8. Shear-Jashub
  9. Mahshav
  10. Sheloshim
  11. Mochin
  12. Karaim

Similar Items:

  1. The Circle Maker [2-CD Set]
  2. At the Mountains of Madness
  3. Masada Guitars
  4. Naked City
  5. The Big Gundown: John Zorn Plays the Music of Ennio Morricone

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars ONE OF JOHN ZORN'S BEST!.......2006-03-22

This is a beautiful recording. Somewhat more accessible than some John Zorn records. I don't write long reviews. YOU NEED TO OWN THIS!!

5 out of 5 stars As good as its reputation........2005-08-15

"Bar Kokhba" is one of John Zorn's most tirelessly praised and revered albums-- look no further than the reviews here, all of them give the recording five stars. Likewise, every commercial review sings its praises-- "[t]he album consistently impresses" (All Music Guide), "a double album of painfully beautiful music" (omnology.com), "simply excellent music" (Lord Chimp's review here on amazon).... the praise goes on and on. The album is discussed as the kind of Zorn you could play for your friends and family, I even saw one review mention this as dinner music. Zorn? Dinner music? So what's the truth? Is this piece all those things? "Painfully beautiful"? Arresting and engaging? Human and living? A total masterpiece?

You know, it pretty much is. There's few albums that stretch over two hours as this one does that can really hold my interest, but this does so effortlessly. "Bar Kokhba", for those unfamiliar, is effectively billed as chamber ensembles play the Masada songbook. For those unfamiliar, the Masada book is a series of melodies written by Zorn using the "Jewish scales"-- this lends that Middle East meets Eastern European vibe that you get from traditional Jewish musics. Originally performed by a quartet modelled after Ornette Coleman's famed quarter on his Atlantic recordings (alto sax, trumpet, bass and drums), "Bar Kokbha" was the first recording to explore the music in different lights. Featuring violinest Mark Feldman, cellist Erik Friedlander, bassists Greg Cohen and Mark Dresser, guitarist Marc Ribot, pianist/organists Anthony Coleman and John Medeski, clarinetists David Krakauer and Chris Speed, drummer Kenny Wolleson and trumpeter Dave Douglas in various formations, the music is performed with a depth and sensitivity. Alternatingly aggressive (the Masada String Trio on "Sheloshim") and passive (piano and organ duet "Mo'ab"), delicate (downtempo Speed and Medeski duet "Abidan") and explosive (Coleman/Dresser/Wolleson piano trio "Nefesh"), patient (bubbling solo guitar piece "Mochin") and schizophrenic (Cecil Taylorish Medeski solo piano piece "Hath-Arob"), the music never ceases to engage the listener fully.

Still, as wonderful as this recording is, it's not the kind of thing everyone's going to "get" It's still a Zorn piece, and for every easily digestable piece ("Mashav"), there's one that's not so easy to deal with ("Paran"). Both of these are duets between Krakauer and Coleman, but while the former features melancholy clarinet over delicate piano, the latter features swirling, avant-garde organ and dug-in bass clarinet. But it's really this duality that makes the album so successful.

One more note-- the production on this is fairly unique-- it's almost as though Zorn wanted a human feeling to this-- clicking clarinet keys, fingers muting strings, and breathing all are readily apparent, and this serves only to enhance the recording. All in all, an essential entry in Zorn's catalog. Try a straight Masada piece first if you're new to the music (I'd recommend "50th Birthday Celebration Volume 7", a recent live recording for an introduction), but this may be a good second place to look. Highly recommended.

5 out of 5 stars i am a beas.t are yuo.......2004-05-10

This is quite a set. _Bar Kokhba_ is two hours of small chamber-jazz ensembles playing pieces from John Zorn's Masada songbook. The music stems from traditional Jewish melodies, which are addictive and lovely, but Zorn revisions them as very jazzy and deviously contrapuntal. The instruments used are violin, cello, bass, drums, clarinet, trumpet, piano, organ, and guitar. Certain combinations appear more frequently than others, for instance the Feldman-Friedlander-Cohen string trio and piano trios led by Anthony Coleman or John Medeski. There are also a few piano solo pieces, with one in particular, "Hath-Arob", where Medeski attacks with a 'free' atonal clatter, while still sounding kinda Jewish. Marc Ribot is notably impressive on guitar. No matter what he plays, on this disc or anything else, it is always so compelling. His 13-minute solo piece, "Mochin", is probably the high point of disc 2. This is simply excellent music that will impress many. It would be wise to purchase it.

5 out of 5 stars Too expensive, truly extortionate price :).......2003-12-16

It's not Zorn you may know from Naked city or albums with Mike Patton, it's (partly) not even Zorn you know from awe-inspiring 'Masada' LPs. It's much more 'legible' piece. But a masterpiece, for me. Some of these songs were included in various Masada albums, but there are some new, anyway. As for the album, it IS dark, it IS expressive, it IS evocative, it IS highly-priced too (:-) ), but worth buying (though sound production could be better, as it sometimes lets a little distortion pop up in one's speakers). It's sometimes lyrical, but all the sime extremely dark, minor.

5 out of 5 stars Beauty and Variety.......2000-02-01

I never was a "hardcore" Zorn fan. I liked Naked City, I like the Masada albums, I like the Filmworks series, but I was never crazy for everything Zorn put out, nor have I heard everything Zorn's put out. However, the two things that struck me about this album were its beauty (the shimmering, quiet, spacious elegance it displays) and its variety. I know Zorn is in some situations synonymous with variety, but, as opposed to such albums as Locus Solus, the variety here is not so farflung and extreme that it alienates people not into all of the styles represented. The variety here is less stylistic, and more related to the different instrumental combinations. Plus, this was the album that finally convinced me that Marc Ribot is the Man. At any rate, for hardcore Zorn fans there may be better albums, but for me, this was THE best overall Zorn album I've yet heard. The Circle Maker was good too, but since it was pretty much the same group, the textural and instrumental variety was somewhat narrower, and over two disks, I found that a little tiring. But Bar Kokhba made me happy the whole way through, and still does. I would highly recommend this.

Music CD:

  1. Feels So Good ~ Jr. Grover Washington
  2. Plays for Dancers in Love/Plays for Dream Dancing ~ Ray Anthony
  3. Oscar Peterson Plays the Duke Ellington Song Book ~ Oscar Peterson
  4. The Complete Hot Five and Hot Seven Recordings ~ Louis Armstrong
  5. Captain Fingers ~ Lee Ritenour
  6. Which Way Is East ~ Charles Lloyd and Billy Higgins
  7. Bembé en Mi Casa ~ Nachito Herrera
  8. Jazz From the Soul of New Orleans ~ Michael White
  9. The Rodeo Eroded ~ Tin Hat Trio
  10. Freedom in the Groove ~ Joshua Redman

Music CD

Music CD

Music CD

Wild Child ~ Da Youngsta's

Sinner ~ Drowning Pool

Rock 'n' Roll Drum Beat ~ Sandy Nelson

Instrumental Fire ~ Various Artists

Drowning Cupid ~ The Orphins

Life Is Sweet ~ Maria McKee

Prime Cuts, Vol. 2 ~ The Selecter

Golden Touch, Pt. 2 ~ Razorlight

Righteous Takeover ~ Colorunconscious

Dia de los Muertos ~ Lokote