I.A.O.
 |
Artist:
John Zorn
Label: Tzadik
Category: Music
Average customer rating:
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1
UPC: 702397733829
EAN: 0702397733829
ASIN: B0000658MV
Release Date: 2002-05-21 |
Related Categories:
Avant Garde & Free Jazz
|
Jazz
|
Styles
|
Music
General
|
Jazz
|
Styles
|
Music
General
|
Pop
|
Styles
|
Music
General
|
Jazz
|
Indie Music
|
Stores
|
Music
Avant-Garde
|
Jazz
|
Indie Music
|
Stores
|
Music
Listmania:
-
Curret Discs im enjoying (Like any of you care)
-
My favorite music
-
Uh.....MUSIC!!!
-
Assault on Christianity and Consensus Reality
-
My John Zorn collection...
-
F*** Beginning - Fall Head First Into John Zorn
-
Apocalypse Maybe: A Guide to the End of the World
-
The best of John Zorn
-
Noise and Experimetnal Music for Smart People
-
The Magic of John Zorn's TZADIK in my CD collection (part 2)
Tracks:
- Invocation
- Sex Magick
- Sacred Rites Of The Left Hand Path
- The Clavicle Of Solomon
- Lucifer Rising
- Leviathan
- Mysteries
Similar Items:
-
The Gift
-
The Circle Maker [2-CD Set]
-
Music Romance, Vol. 2: Taboo & Exile
-
Bar Kokhba
-
The Big Gundown: John Zorn Plays the Music of Ennio Morricone
Customer Reviews:
A Brilliant & Hypnotic Occult Masterwork..........2005-12-07
John Zorn is one of contemporary music's most enigmatic and talented figures. The range of musical output by his Tzadik label is mind boggling. In my mind, Tzadik is the quintessential label for avant-garde and experimental music. Tzadik was founded in 1995 by Zorn and is responsible for releasing some of the most unique and uncompromising music ever recorded on this planet. Zorn himself is a masterful musician and composer. Since the 70's, John has explored Jewish music, soundtracks, grindcore, free jazz, chamber music, rock, mysticism, world music, and everything in between. He has worked with Bill Frisell, Wayne Horvitz, Derek Bailey, Fred Frith, Keiji Haino, Bill Laswell, Mike Patton, John Medeski, Marc Ribot, Yamatsuka Eye, and numerous others.
`I.A.O.' is inspired by Magick. Specifically, by the writings of Aliester Crowley and the films of Kenneth Anger- 2 of the 20th century's most notable students of the Occult. This is music with a purpose. It is intended to be used in invocations of the Beast. In fact, the name IAO is Kabbalistically identical to Satan. Just look at the song titles: `Invocation', `Sacred Rites Of The Left Hand Path', `Lucifer Rising', and `Sex Magick'. A dark ambience pervades this music. Much of it is hypnotic and trance inducing; some of it is downright creepy. `I.A.O.' is a very atmospheric work.
The first track, `Invocation' is a 7-plus minute drone-piece, making use of minor key organ, unclassifiable eerie sounds, human voice, and sinister synth tones to create tension and prepare the listener for what awaits. It is the perfect introduction for this album. `Invocation' is followed by `Sex Magick'. Clocking in at over 13 minutes, it's obvious what the intended function of this track is, as it utilizes hypnotic percussion to lure the listener in deeper.
Next up is one of my favorite pieces on the album, `Sacred Rites Of The Left Hand Path'. This track makes great use of a repeated evil sounding organ vamp. Devilish piano and equally unsettling synth combine with other ungodly sounds to produce something that would not be out of place in a truly scary horror film. After another highly effective 9-plus minute drone piece comes `Lucifer Rising', a truly haunting and lovely track. Jennifer Charles beckons, moans, and whispers over a seriously creepy female chorus, inviting us to the dark side. There is something very erotic about this piece. But then again, there has always been something appealing and sexy about `the dark side'.
`I.A.O.' ends with the death metal amalgamation of `Leviathan', featuring the vocals of none other than Mike Patton. Followed by the closer, `Mysteries', a perfect and dark end to a perfectly dark work. `I.A.O.' is one of my favorite of Zorn's releases. According to Tzadik, it is "hypnotic seven-movement suite of Alchemy, Mysticism, Metaphysics and Magic both black and white". I can't argue. This is one of the more interesting albums I have come across in a VERY long time. It is put together perfectly. If you are planning on any rituals, freaking out friends, or engaging in `magickal pursuits'; this album is a must-have. `I.A.O.' comes especially highly recommended if you are a student of the Occult.
Powerful and evocative........2005-08-03
John Zorn is a musician of startling diversity and perhaps an even more startling batting average when it comes to the quality of his music. When one of his real masterpieces comes around though, one is always amazed to find just how good music can be. "I.A.O.: Music in Sacred Light" is one of those pieces.
Drawing inspiration from the writings of turn-of-the-twentieth-century occultist Aleister Crowley and the films of Kenneth Anger (probably best known for "Lucifer Rising"), the album is touted on the Tzadik website as a "hypnotic seven-movement suite of Alchemy, Mysticism, Metaphysics and Magic both black and white". While the descriptions on the Tzadik website are noted for their hyperbole, in this case, this may be entirely accurate.
The music on "I.A.O." is mysterious, enchanting, swirling, and intriguing. The musicians involved (vocalists Mike Patton, Jennifer Charles, Beth Anne Hatton and Rebecca Moore, bassists Greg Cohen and Bill Laswell, pianist/organist Jamie Saft, and percussionists Jim Pugliese and Cyro Baptista) appear in small ensemebles throughout, performing music that is minimalist and yet delicately beautiful-- I'm reminded of Messiaen, Kagel, and Naked City's "Absinthe" at times and Verdi, Morricone and "Torture Garden" at others.
"I.A.O." moves through seven movements during its composition. Opening movement "Invocation" is a wall of metallic percussion with a high organ or synth part and Patton whispering in the background. This moves into the percussion-oriented "Sex Magick"-- drawing its sound largely from Central and South American sources before the piece changes directions in the third movement, "Sacred Rites of the Left Hand Path", featuring a loping yet aggressive organ line, pounding pianos, and more whispering from Patton. There's a sense of unity to these three movements, a building, haunting, delicate sound that permeates all three. The fourth movement ("The Clavicle of Solomon") should be a drastic shift but isn't-- moving the sound into electronic noise, scrapes, and high pitched tones that should be grating but somehow are not. And even though the sound has quieted, it somehow continues that feeling of building intensity that was prevelent in the first three movements.
The next portion of the suite ("Lucifer Rising") is focused largely on vocals, with a female choir (and what sounds like a flute accompaniment) gently pushing forward while Charles whispers darkly, evoking a thick slab of tension that will be released on "Leviathan"-- a slab of death metal featuring throbbing bass from Laswell and positively inspired vocals from Patton. Patton's final scream ends unaccompanied and the closing movement, "Mysteries", is quite the opposite of "Leviathan"-- electric piano gently playing dark lines over delicate percussion.
Nearly as interesting as the music contained within the CD is the artwork-- though contained in a standard jewel case, the liner notes consist of four cards, each detailing some element of the performance. The entire jewel case slides into a white slipcase with raised symbols printed on either side.
All in all, this is quite a package, the music has that odd quality of being familiar even while being totally alien. One of the essential Zorn recordings. Probably not a good place to start for Zorn (that's still "Naked City"), but maybe a good second. Highly recommended.
Music In Sacred Light: under a microscope.......2005-04-20
Full Title: "IAO: Music in sacred light (which explains the title)
Honestly, listening to this album made me feel like i was sort of breaking into someone's house. I mean I've never really been into ambient music, except for maybe the first fantomas album, and the new suspended animation one. And what little reviews for this album said it was neither one of Zorn's essential recordings, nor was it one of his more hard-core works, nor was it a great album to start with, which it was for me. But all that side, the reviews were positive, and the theme and concepts of the tracks and the album as a whole, and being one who is intent on spread my listening ear, I decided to take a chance and get it.
Fortunatly for me, after paying some close listening to this album I was pleasently suprised at what I had just got. This Cd is one of those cds, like pink floyd's "dark side of the moon," Led zeppelin's "houses of the holy," because although it is far less acessable than those albums, it fits almost any occasion, and any emotion. Upon first listen, it was the creepiest sounding music I had ever heard and upon second listening, it was strangely soothing. It's a great album to just but on and drift away too, and although the music is on the subtle side, it doesnt take a huge amount of close listening to be coherent.
Last note: From the perspective of your average 14 year old lets-see-how-long -we-can- pound-on-these- things-before -the-cops-show-up-drummer- living-a-life-of- food-music- school-girls- and being an idiot on purpose, who listens to metallica, fishbone, the offspring, and mr. bungle, I say that this is one hell of a sonic roller caoster good for anyone with an open mind and a willing ear. I'll definately be checking out this guy's other albums. Peace Out
Very different from a lot of his work, but excellent.......2004-04-27
I've got about 30 Zorn albums--this one is of the 'not too melodic' varieties, but definitely not listen-proof. I like this album a lot--it's very meditative and strange, but beautiful and wonderfully recorded.
Thematically it's like many of Zorn's pieces, as described in other reviews here. Sonically it's different--very different soundscapes.
I wouldn't put this at the top of my must-have Zorn list, but it's definitely ON the list. I listen to this one regularly, and it's great on headphones.
I bet I could summon a demon with this cd!.......2004-01-14
Another John Zorn album and, well... it's excellent. As usual, Zorn's collaborators are superlative: Cyro Baptista, Greg Cohen, Bill Laswell, Mike Patton, Jamie Saft, Jim Pugliese, Jennifer Charles, Rebecca Moore, and Beth Hatton. This time the theme is "Alchemy, Mysticism, Metaphysics and Magic both black and white." Like the Music Romance series (_Music for Children_ and _Taboo & Exile_) the music is astoundingly diverse yet presents a unified mood and character, and like the kind-of-but-not-really-Music-Romance disc _The Gift_, it is highly pleasing to listen to -- in a dark, disturbing kind of way.
The pieces are strange because they don't really seem to go anywhere. There are no discernible beginnings or endings to these pieces, they are just...there. That is not to say they are repetitive -- they aren't. This is music that doesn't really flow, it just exists and captures the mood flawlessly. There is lots of development and tense dynamics, but their primary characteristic is their self-contained ritualistic element that pulls you in, hypnotizes you, and leaves you feeling strangely changed afterward. Dark spiritual relevation is possible with this cd.
The songs themselves? "Invocation" has murmuring organ with modulating pitch, watery percussion, electronically manipulated voices, and ominous noisy squalls of feedback. "Sex Magick" is a thirteen-minute percussion ritual with Cyro Baptista and Jim Pugliese, with jagged beats. It paradoxically seems to be both tribal & primitive and advanced and transcendent, with geometrically influenced rhythmic patterns. "Sacred Rites of the Left Hand Path" is an eerie, dissonant, frightening piece with a minimalist slant. Saft's atonal acoustic piano playing is darkly enchanting and the arrhythmic electric piano with the quiet percussion as a backdrop is pretty scary. "The Clavicle of Soloman" is absolutely incredible. It's hard to describe, but it's AMAZING. It's really just slow ebbs of high-pitched static, with the occasional melody carefully hidden, and I have no idea why it is so good. It reminds of Ligeti's Atmosphýres in a way, a piece where it seems that nothing happens while at the same time so much happens. It is a great feat in electronic timbre and unfolding tone clusters. "Lucifer Rising" is an a capella piece for female chorus with a soloist moaning and whispering, breathily pleading for dark rites. It'd probably be sexy if it weren't so disconcerting. "Leviathan" is a thick, complex hulk of death metal noise with Mike Patton's screaming sounding like an evil spirit being exorcised. "Mysteries" is an abstract piece that reminds me of Naked City's _Absinthe_.
This is another truly masterful work by Zorn, and an essential item for anyone interested in him at all.
Music CD:
- Småt Småt ~ Stefano Bollani
- This Kid's the Greatest! ~ Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band
- Fathead: Ray Charles Presents David Newman ~ David %22Fathead%22 Newman
- Undercover ~ Art Porter
- Finger Poppin ~ Horace Silver
- Catching Tales ~ Jamie Cullum
- Love Locked Out ~ Chris Anderson
- Sometimes the Magic ~ Jane Ira Bloom
- Incomplete Directions ~ Steve Dalachinsky
- Michael Brecker ~ Michael Brecker
Music CD
Music CD
Music CD
Flavor Unit ~ The 45 King
Zombie Heaven 4-CD Box Set ~ The Zombies
Sleepyhead ~ The Brothers Creeggan
Riot Radio ~ The Dead 60s
World Is Saved ~ Stina Nordenstam
Valentino's Pirates ~ Dave Rave Conspiracy
Dancing the Blues ~ Taj Mahal
Lo Mejor De
Apocalypse Brown ~ DarkRoom Familia
The Most Beautifullest Thing in This World ~ Keith Murray