GOODSOUND!GoodSound! "Music" Archives

Published August 1, 2001

 

Charles Lloyd: The Water Is Wide
ECM 1734

Musical Performance ****
Recording Quality *****
Overall Enjoyment ****1/2

Tenor saxophonist Charles Lloyd seems to just get better with time -- having produced great music for nearly 35 years, this legendary jazz artist still hasn't exhausted his creative drive. His latest ECM release features a first rate lineup, including guitarist John Abercrombie, the late Billy Higgins on drums, Larry Grenadier on bass and pianist Brad Mehldau, the latter two ranking high among today's "young lions." On The Water Is Wide, Lloyd’s hauntingly deep, ethereal tone inhabits every track. However, the compositions here tend more toward the ballad than has been the case on his previous recordings, such as 1999's Voice In The Night and 1997's Canto; perhaps this is a result of Mehldau’s playing, which has often been likened to that of Bill Evans. Essentially, what you get with The Water Is Wide is very accessible jazz with exceptional recording quality, featuring a great band leader with sidemen who are all bandleaders in their own right.


Tim Story: Shadowplay
Hearts of Space 11403-2

Musical Performance ****1/2
Recording Quality ****1/2
Overall Enjoyment ****1/2

A quote from Balthus aptly describes Tim Story's ambient chamber music: "Beauty is something you discover slowly." Shadowplay asks to be entered into without haste or effort, and reveals itself in a process of relaxation, leaving the listener drifting aimlessly in the kind of semi-hypnotic daydream that listening to rain or watching the waves can induce. Its diaphanous tone poems are narrated by grand piano, oboe d'amore and cello which hover over synth pedals and other sound treatments. As soon as any marginal rhythmic fixations arise, they are swiftly undone. Suggestive time patterns dissolve quickly, undermining regularity. But Shadowplay isn't purely atmospheric space music. Tim Story's compositions contain sufficient melodic elements to feel classical, albeit in a modern, hybrid way. While most so-called New Age music often seems trite or vaporous, Shadowplay is finely crafted and solid. It has excellent sonics, too. Think of Shadowplay as music for a rainy day, when you want to gently veg out and be transported to someplace gorgeous in the process.


Pink Floyd: Is There Anybody Out There? The Wall: Live 1980-1981
Columbia C2K 62058

Musical Performance ****1/2
Recording Quality ****1/2
Overall Enjoyment ****1/2

In late 1980 and early 1981, Pink Floyd embarked on a series of performances in London and Long Island. These shows represented the entirety of the very brief tour for The Wall studio album. For the last twenty years there has been a huge demand for an official release of these performances. Is There Anybody Ouy There? The Wall: Live 1980-1981 finally satisfies that request beautifully. This elaborately packaged two-CD set is an essential recording for Pink Floyd fans, bringing an excellent studio recording to the next plateau. Along with insightful print interviews with all of the band members and key crew personnel, there are excellent photographs and first-rate liner notes. Then there's the sound, which exhibits a dramatically realistic sense of acoustic space, which is further accentuated by loads of detail, typical for a Pink Floyd performance. If you missed this show two decades ago (and you probably did), this release is truly the next best thing.


Cheb Mami: Dellali
Mondo Melodia 186 850 025-2

Musical Performance ****
Recording Quality ****1/2
Overall Enjoyment *****

Algerian raï superstar Cheb Mami penetrated mainstream consciousness with his cameo appearance on Sting's tune "Desert Rose." On Dellali, Nile Rodgers, producer of David Bowie and Chic, helps to fashion an album of truly global and cosmopolitan appeal. Mami sings in French and his native tongue. He also plays the accordion, which adds occasional zydeco elements to a group that includes Chet Atkins on guitars, Omar Hakim on drums and Philippe Saisse on keyboards and synths. Dellali's vibe is alive with a Euro hipness that pervades the entire album, from the reggae-fied "Madanite" to the love ballad "Tzazae." Mami isn't above revisiting a classical Byzantine melody in "Yahamami," accompanied by members of the English Chamber Orchestra -- or following it up by underscoring voices of the London Community Gospel Choir with slamming club beats over which his melismatic voice rises like a call to prayer. In short, Dellali is chock-full of surprises, and none are of the disappointing kind.


Cesaria Evora: São Vicente
Windham Hill 01934-11590-2

Musical Performance ****
Recording Quality ****1/2
Overall Enjoyment *****

Evora is the bare-footed diva from the Cape Verde islands who set world music radio stations ablaze with her Portuguese fado-inspired mornas, songs laden with the bittersweet melancholy of the untranslatable emotion of saudade. Her ensemble sound -- de-tuned piano, guitars, cavaquinho, strings, sax, light brass -- is reminiscent of Brazilian chamber music. So are certain samba-influenced rhythms. Above all, there's the unmistakably happy aroma of island airs. And Evora's vibrato-less but heavily emotive mature alto voice is the undisputed headline act. On São Vicente, she performs duets with Pedro Guerra, Caetano Veloso, Chucho Valdes and Bonnie Raitt, while the Orquesta Aragon stands in on one track for her regulars. The overall flavor is more celebratory than on earlier releases but still unapologetically romantic, with again mostly modest to slow tempi. Stylistically, the album explores some new ground. "Crepuscular Solidão" introduces a surprisingly apt slide guitar and Raitt's question-and-answer support, which will have country fans wonder who is singing. "Linda Mimosa" injects Cuban strings and hand percussion. São Vicente is sophisticated feel-good music tinged with sadness and gratitude, world-weariness and hope. If you haven't yet met Cesaria Evora, you don't know what you're missing -- she's one of the greats on the world music stage!


Strunz & Farah: StringWeave
Selva 1008

Musical Performance ****
Recording Quality ****1/2
Overall Enjoyment ****1/2

With their 11th album, America's premiere guitar duo of guitarra Latina style proves again why these genre originators still lead the pack. To add timbres into the titular warp and woof of stringed instruments, Jorge Strunz picks up cittern and ronroco on two tracks, while Farhad Besharati makes an appearance on the Turkish qanun zither. Special guest collaborators include Indian violin maestro L. Subramaniam, Liona Boyd on classical guitar, Edwin Colón Zayas on cuatro and Bijan Mortazavi on Middle-Eastern violin. Many different rhythmic and melodic flavors intermingle here -- Near-Eastern, South American, Moorish -- all occasionally brushing against minor jazz inflections. "Rimas de Cuerdas" is a slow-motion ballad that sashays gently alongside Cuban congas, while "Gypsy in the Wood" cunningly combines a Peruvian rhythm with a melody that might have escaped from a Sultan's palace across the seas. "Laleh" shifts liltingly between fast waltz- and four-based rhythms, while "Shamsa" introduces Subramaniam's raga-flavored modal scales and quartertone quivers. Recorded in HDCD, StringWeave doesn't break much new ground for those already acquainted with the ensemble. Still, it's another very scintillating, immaculately groomed feather in their colorful cap.


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