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1,090
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在庫状況 について

フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2017年02月16日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルSony Classical Essential Classics
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 SBK46339
SKU 5099704633923

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
Personnel: Stanley Jordan (guitar, piano, programming); Tammi Brown, Julia Jordan, Julianne Jordan, Tommy Brown (vocals); Jay Kishor (sitar); Meta Weiss (cello); Giovanna Imbesi (piano, keyboards); Ryan Turnage (keyboards); Dudu Lima, Charnett Moffett (bass guitar); David Haynes, Ivan Conti, Kenwood Dennard, David Haynes (drums); Vedang Londhe (tabla); Hartt Stearns, Hartt Stearns (percussion). Programmer: Stanley Jordan. Audio Mixers: Rick Vargas; Tim Jessup; Stanley Jordan. Liner Note Author: Johnny Kelman. Photographer: Raj Naik. Arranger: Stanley Jordan. State of Nature is the first studio offering by Stanley Jordan in over ten years; it also his debut for Detroit's fine Mack Avenue imprint. For those who have only heard the early Blue Note records or his live dates, this will be both welcome and a bit of a shock. Jordan has always been an ambitious artist. He took a long break from recording to study music therapy as well. His pioneering tap technique on the guitar changed the way it is used in jazz and popular music for many, and his holistic approach to music has delighted many and infuriated some purists. Oh well. The 14 tracks here are, as one might expect, all over the map, and so are his support musicians. There are some killer pieces from the jazz canon here, most notably in Horace Silver's "Song for my Father" and Miles Davis' "All Blues." These are likely to get notice because Jordan plays both guitar and piano on them simultaneously with no overdubbing. There will no doubt be some gnashing of teeth because Jordan's not as fine a pianist as Bill Evans or Silver. So what? These are fine renditions of these tunes, performed by a crack band featuring bassist Charnett Moffett and drummer David Haynes (who make up the core rhythm section on the majority of the disc). They swing, they groove, and they remain not only faithful but soulful as well. Haynes' cymbal work on the Silver tune is gorgeous, and Moffett's driving pulse of a bassline on the Davis tune is in the cut and very creative. As for the quality of Jordan's pianism? It works beautifully, and his guitar solos on both cuts add breadth and dimension to the originals. It's actually dazzling on "Song for My Father." These are but two of the many surprises to be found here. The reading of Tom Jobim's "Insensatez" with bassist Dudu Lima and drummer Ivan Conti evokes the sparseness of the original -- even with the multiple tonalities at work in Jordan's playing (many of them bluesy and rounded) combined with Lima's wildly creative, fretless bass playing -- and still manages to hold a drop-dead precise groove for the percussive invention that engages Jordan in his interaction with Conti. This is a beautiful if very unusual interpretation of the tune that probably adds more to its timeless appeal than any cover of it in recent memory. Jordan's own compositions have not suffered in his time away from recording; far from it. Check album opener "A Place in Space" with the Moffett and Haynes rhythm section. The colors on display here are rich, even lush, and if the tune didn't pop the way it does rhythmically or have its force of swing -- even in rather staccato interludes -- it might be a tad lush. But it moves and the breaks by Haynes, while never overstated (he's using brushes) are simply intoxicating. There are a number of brief "environmental" recordings here, as well, underscoring the artist's deep concern with the personal transformation of self and nature (yeah; green politics) but it's a spiritual type of politics, not a brow-beating one. "Ocean Breeze" was written with Jay Kishor, who also plays sitar in a large ensemble setting. The Jordan-Moffett-Haynes trio is embellished by keyboards (Giovanna Imbesi), a second bassist in Tommy Brown, and various hand percussion and tablas. While the track has a bit of a new-agey feel in the first couple of seconds, it quickly becomes something akin to what Oregon did in the early '70s but with an electric guitar. T
録音 : ステレオ (Studio)

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Place in Space, A
    2. 2.
      All Blues
    3. 3.
      Forest Garden
    4. 4.
      Insensatez
    5. 5.
      Mozart's Piano Concerto #21 (Andante in F Major)
    6. 6.
      Song for My Father
    7. 7.
      Mind Games #1
    8. 8.
      Ocean Breeze
    9. 9.
      Healing Waves
    10. 10.
      Mind Games #2
    11. 11.
      Shadow Dance
    12. 12.
      Mind Games #3
    13. 13.
      Prayer for the Sea
    14. 14.
      Steppin' Out

作品の情報

商品の紹介

Down Beat (p.64) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "His nicely chorded lines sound remarkably like Les Spann, who played with Dizzy Gillespie in the '60s. There is some fine brush work here on drums, too."
Rovi

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