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Artist:
George Russell
Label: Grp Records Category: Music Average customer rating: Media: Audio CD Number Of Discs: 1 UPC: 011105082624 EAN: 0011105082624 ASIN: B000006R88 Release Date: 1998-05-19 |
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Customer Reviews:
Not Just a Theorist.......2002-08-30
All of this would be well and good, but should be judged by the results, and the results on this CD are spectacular. Russell's music is both gripping and complex. The CD is a suite, not a set of pieces. There are melodic and rhythmic corrospndences in each of the movements. And Russell's writing is so flexible that there are moments where the transitions from improvisation to composition are completely seemless. The playing in the orchestra is crisp and precise, rivaling the work of the Kenton band of the time, but pushing the envelope even more.
Part of the reason to get this CD is to listen to the duo piano work of Bill Evans and Paul Bley. Evans is as adventurous on this album as he ever got...(except on Russell's Living Time album which is an extension of the concepts explored here) and he and Bley listen intently to each other. The results are spectacular! There is also fine soloing by David Young and especially a young David Baker.
Many of the musicians on this album ended up going down different paths. Bley became the lyric voice of the avant-garde, Evans, a neo-traditional romantic, Baker, a jazz educator of the first degree. But what is evident here is that Russell taught them much more than has ever been ackowledged....and is himself a genuine creative artist. Here's hoping that his masterwork (Othello, a ballet for big band that Russell recorded in the late 60s) will someday be available again. Until then, this CD is a treasure. Buy it and be amazed.
A highpoint of postwar jazz.......2000-11-19
The album is divided between a series of three short "Chromatic Universe" tracks and three longer pieces. The "Chromatic Universe" tracks are features for the duelling pianos of Bill Evans & Paul Bley, one of the most memorable encounters in modern jazz. They play together against a tricky 5/2 rhythm-section backdrop, one which maximises the soloists' freedom: these tracks are in fact probably the closest Evans ever got to "free jazz". -- The three longer tracks feature charts that are meticulously detailed, with the characteristic off-centre polyphonic fanfares of Russell's early work. There's fine work from lesser-known players like Al Kiger & David Young, but the centrepiece is again a piano battle between Evans & Bley on "The Lydiot"--this time, not a simultaneous improvisation but trading fours.
This is a recording both enjoyable & historically significant. With _Ezz-Thetic_ & the Jazz Workshop date it's one of the peaks in Russell's oeuvre.
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