Quantcast
Channel: música en espiral
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2642

HENRY THREADGILL & MAKE MOVE - Where's Your Cup? (1997)

$
0
0





Even though Henry Threadgill is often considered "difficult to listen to," most blindfolded listeners would probably find themselves identifying any randomly selected 20-second segment of Where's Your Cup as something a little more mainstream. It wouldn't be unreasonable, for example, to hear Brandon Ross on "The Flew" and ask "Might this be a snot-raunchy John McLaughlin electric guitar solo?" with a good bit of confidence. Someone else may smile smugly and say, "I don't suppose this is from the soundtrack of an especially eerie David Lynch film, perhaps Blue Velvet, or an old episode of Twin Peaks maybe?" when Threadgill's alto sax groove kicks off "100 Year Old Game." Such is the elusiveness of Threadgill's a-bit-of-everything approach to modern jazz, a style-collage sound he achieves here with a lot of help from his band, Make a Move. A majority of the tracks here are over eight minutes long, with a lot of room for soloists to stretch out. Ross can sound like two slabs of grinding sheet metal on one song, and softly strum a flamenco-tinged acoustic guitar behind Threadgill's flute on the next. Alternating between accordion and harmonium, Tony Cedras recalls everything from a Sunday hymn to your local seventh-inning stretch organ grinder. But give the credit of assembling these varied and sundry elements into a consistent product to Threadgill. Where's My Cup has its highly organized moments as well, which possess the same spaced-out mysteriousness as all the clamoring jam-out uproar. - John Uhl


Este es el tercero y último de los disco que Threadgill grabó para Columbia, gracias a los buenos auspicios de Branford Marsalis.
Y, si los dos anteriores son buenas obras aunque un tanto irregulares, Where’s Your Cup? vuela muy alto del principio al final. A ello contribuye un grupo perfectamente conjuntado, con la guitarra estratosférica de Brandon Ross, el bajo gomoso de Stomu Takeishi y un fantástico J.T. Lewis a los tambores. Pero el elemento más personal lo aporta Tony Cedras al acordeón y al harmonium, con una paleta sonora que va del orientalismo a la música del Caribe, pasando por la América rural y el góspel. Y por encima de todos la flauta y el saxo ácido y vibrante de Threadgill, con su querencia por el himno y la ironía. Un gran disco de uno de los músicos más personales de las últimas décadas.  -  Tomajazz

Tracks
1. 100 Year Old Game
2. Laughing Club
3. Where's Your Cup?
4. And This
5. Feels Like It
6. The Flew
7. Go To Far

HENRY THREADGILL alto saxophone and flute
BRANDON ROSS electric and classic guitar
TONY CEDRAS accordion and harmonium
S TOMU TAKEISHI 5-string fretless bass
J.T. LEWIS drums

All compositions by Henry Threadgill
Recorded and mixed at East Side Sound, New York, August 1996

Columbia CK 67617

Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2642

Trending Articles