| フォーマット | CDアルバム |
| 発売日 | 1998年03月17日 |
| 国内/輸入 | 輸入 |
| レーベル | DIW |
| 構成数 | 1 |
| パッケージ仕様 | - |
| 規格品番 | 927 |
| SKU | 634164092726 |
構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:53:03
Music Revelation Ensemble: James Blood Ulmer, Calvin Jones, Cornell W. Rochester, Pharoah Sanders, John Zorn.
Personnel: John Zorn (alto); James Blood Ulmer (guitar); Pharoah Sanders (tenor saxophone).
Audio Mixer: Joe Ferla.
Recording information: Avatar Studios, New York, NY (12/17/1996-12/18/1996).
Unknown Contributor Roles: Cornell Rochester; James Blood Ulmer; John Zorn; Pharoah Sanders; Calvin "Fuzz" Jones .
Pretty good idea to rotate guest saxophonists as a means to keep James Blood Ulmer's Music Revelation Ensemble concept fresh. Pharoah Sanders and John Zorn are on board for Cross Fire, and a change to Calvin "Fuzz" Jones' acoustic bass lowers the frenzy level that marked Knights of Power. Sanders, in particular, sounds inspired by the context, playing hard and pushing Ulmer and the music. His tracks all start out peaceful, go totally outside with high harmonic shrieks and thick, woolly tenor tone, and then bring it back to the serenity base. He plays some kind of flute over Jones' arco bass on the atmospheric "Suspect," before Cornell Rochester's drums (a driving, active force throughout) gradually push things out. Some lingering echoes of Sonny Sharrock's Ask the Ages disc mark the Sanders tracks -- it is the exact same lineup after all, led by another guitar improviser with some kind of space-bluesman-kinship-connection to Jimi Hendrix -- that becomes explicit on "Sweet." And damn, "My Prayer" finds Sanders playing over segments with an outright country & western groove (yes, you read that right) before it turns sideways and abstract with a spare Ulmer solo for effective contrast. Zorn is subdued at first -- he's the weak link on the opening "Law," not connecting with the blues dirge-feel created by Jones' bass drag anchor with octave drops and a solid Ulmersolo. But he hits his stride on "Proof," his sonic sax effects playing dodge 'em games with Ulmer's guitar around a very pretty, classic Ulmer theme over a slow, descending bassline -- later he comes vomiting back in to spew forth guttural commentary, whoops, and slides near the end of a great track. His playing even picks up on the peace and serenity vibe for the nice closer "Backbeat." Music Revelation Ensemble seems to be the context that Blood Ulmer reserves his strongest melodies for, and he plays with the kind of fire and invention that made him a major figure. Cross Fire probably isn't the best place to plunge in and explore the music, but it's a very worthy addition to the catalog. ~ Don Snowden
録音 : ステレオ (Studio)

※ショッピングカートおよび注文内容の確認画面にてフラゲのお届けになるかご確認ください。
※各種前払い決済をご利用の場合、フラゲは保証しておりません。
※フラゲは配送日時指定なしでご注文いただいた場合に限ります。
読み込み中にエラーが発生しました。
画面をリロードして、再読み込みしてください。
