Language

Language Artist: Richard Leo Johnson
Label: Blue Note Records
Category: Music



Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


UPC: 724352432929
EAN: 0724352432929
ASIN: B00004YL5I


Release Date: 2000-09-26

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General General
Related | Jazz | Styles | Music
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Meditation Meditation
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Experimental Music Experimental Music
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Tracks:

  1. Hip Hop Zep
  2. Sweet Jane Thyme
  3. Event Horizon
  4. Music Roe
  5. Chuck Soup
  6. Cheek To Cheek/Dance In Heaven
  7. Happy Talk/Dream A Dream
  8. Sketches Of Miles
  9. New West Helena Blues
  10. Daddydaughterduo
  11. 1-5-90
  12. Freestone Peach
  13. Ritual Ground

Similar Items:

  1. Fingertip Ship
  2. Poetry of Appliance
  3. Legend of Vernon McAlister
  4. All the Roadrunning

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Scary and beautiful.......2002-06-21

The first couple of listens I didn't like this as much as I liked Fingertip Ship - I LOVED Fingertip Ship! The thing about this CD is, Richard's playing gets overwhelmed by production sometimes, and for me, the grace and intensity of him just sitting there playing the damn guitar is breathtaking. After a few more listens I started to get more comfortable with it, and now I don't like it less or more, just differently.

Richard is one of the most incredibly, purely creative people on the planet today, and anything he does is going to be earthshakingly good. My opinion? You ain't seen nothin' yet.

5 out of 5 stars Beyond Hedges, a New Musical Language.......2001-02-23

The last guitarist to knock my socks off was Steve Tibbetts with percussionist Marc Anderson, whose otherworldly compositions defy words. A friend of mine heard this CD played over the P.A. prior to a California Guitar Trio show in Japan at the end of 2000, and was blown away. He sent me a copy (via Amazon, of course!). This is the first guitar CD in several years to knock my socks off again.

Richard Leo Johnson's first release on solo acoustic guitar, "Fingertip ships" (which I bought after hearing this CD) is merely "great". You know the kind: a couple of very enjoyable tracks, the rest forgettable, and after a while you stop listening to it. This release moves the instrumental work up several notches, toward the indescribable. Notably, drums, percussion, bass, sax, cello and accordion musicians accompany the pieces. This is the sort of CD you become addicted to listening in its entirety, over and over again. Like Michael Hedges' multi-instrumentation in his later works, the addional instrumets on this CD lend great depth to the guitar work, which continues to take center stage.

Unlike the more recent Hedges works, Richard is not toning down the guitar to make room for vocals; this CD contains high energy guitar. Also, unlike Richard's previous release, the music on this CD is much more focused and lyrical, while remaining as intense as its predecessor.

In summary, this CD would be an extremely welcome addition to your collection, especially for guitar enthusiasts, but also for anyone who appreciates quality in musical performance.

4 out of 5 stars Compelling and diverse.......2001-02-18

Every time someone starts talking about the newest discovery of a guitar wizard, I get nervous. Generally, it means that yet another person has acquired a record deal because he can play as fast as Kottke, or plays a Michael Hedges percussive style, but has nothing creative to add to the genre. What caught my eye about this album, though, and got me into Richard Leo Johnson was the record label-- Blue Note (it helped when I noticed that Warren Haynes of Gov't Mule and formerly of the Allman Brothers makes a few guest appearances, though). Why on earth would a jazz label put out an album from some new age hack? I was curious enough to give the album a try, and it's good. If you like Preston Reed, you'll probably like this. RLJ has a unique compositional sense that comes only from being self-taught, and every piece, even those he didn't write, sound uniquely his own. He combines odd rhythms, odd tunings, odd and occasionally dissonant phrasing, and all-around odd techniques to make everything on this, and Fingertip Ship (well worth owning) sound, that's right, odd. The recording technique is equally odd- none of the many musicians who contribute to this album were ever together. They recorded their parts entirely separately, which at times gives the pieces an awkwardness, but also means that each part is recorded with more individuality than can be achieved in a traditional recording format. At times, this album does sound like that annoying, new age fusion garbage that has flooded the music scene (Paul McCandless' horns helped in many places, but hurt in others, although if you are a fan of his band, Oregon, you probably won't mind as much as I do), but it also has flashes of brilliance that blew me away. If you're looking for pyrotechnics from other modern solo acoustic guitarists with some compositional sense, here are a few to check out-- Preston Reed is the master of two-handed tapping and percussive playing; Adrian Legg is about the best finger-picker I've ever heard; and to broaden your horizons to some experimental brazilian/classical guitar, Badi Assad has filled the gap left by the death of Bola Sete. If you really feel like broadening your horizons, check out Steve Tibbetts (who is not a solo guitarist, but is required listening anyway), particularly his self-titled debut album, if you can find it, which is mostly acoustic guitar and recording tricks. RLJ is carrying on the Tibbetts tradition of true experimentalism.

Music CD:

  1. Only in New York ~ Bob Mintzer Big Band
  2. Detente ~ The Brecker Brothers
  3. Due Time
  4. The Later Recordings: The Crystal Gazer ~ Claude Thornhill & His Orchestra
  5. The Clown ~ Charles Mingus
  6. The Year of the Elephant ~ Wadada Leo Smith
  7. Doin' the Do ~ David Berger & The Sultans of Swing
  8. Driving While Black ~ Bennie Maupin & Dr. Patrick Gleeson
  9. Just Add Water ~ Bobby Previte & Bump
  10. Learning to Wave ~ Andy Sheppard

Music CD

Music CD

Music CD

As the World Burns ~ Arsonists

Just Before the Bullets Fly ~ Gregg Allman Band

Extraordinary Machine ~ Fiona Apple

Bone Box ~ Chris Baily & The General Dog

The Best of Hank Marvin & the Shadows ~ Hank Marvin

Made in Japan ~ Deep Purple

Lover's Gospel: Gospel Hits & Love Melodies ~ Various Artists

Northtown vs. Westside vs. Eastside ~ Doomsday Productions

One Shot One Kill ~ Eight Eleven & Ph.D

Messy Situationz ~ Messy Marv