Nation Time

Nation Time-副业赚钱-互联网创业-资源整合HIRES SHOP
Nation Time
此内容为付费资源,请付费后查看
¥9.9
限时特惠
¥19.9
立即购买
您当前未登录!建议登陆后购买,可保存购买订单
规格3 首
默认解压密码CNHIFICOM
付费资源

Tenor saxophonist Joe Mcphee has been a cult figure in the jazz world despite a string of releases on the visible Hat Art label and vocal support from the likes of Ken Vandermark. Nation Time is good evidence why. Its three tracks were recorded live in December 1970 and released the following year on the tiny independent CjR Records. “Nation Time” and “Scorpio’s Dance” feature McPhee with a quintet that mixes electric and acoustic instruments with dual percussionists. In a way, this is familiar territory, working Coltrane-inspired repetitions and a nearly reckless group interplay against a variety of musical textures. Here some electric piano or full-speed drumming, there roughly wailed sax or a trumpet pushing notes to a near drone. But no matter how familiar the approach, the end result is inventive and captivating as these two pieces shift from nearly conventional extended improvisations to less structured sound without ever sounding forced. However, it’s the 13-minute “Shakey Jake” that seems like the birth of a wonderful new style that unfortunately never went any further. With the quintet expanded by an alto sax, organist, and electric guitarist, McPhee gets busy marrying free jazz to James Brown funk or maybe creating a vision of what would have happened if early-’60s Coltrane had revisited his R&B youth. The band sets up a complex but danceable groove while the soloists surf along, twisting melodies and pushing the beat but never relying on repeated riffs. Despite their various ideas and overlapped solos, the effect is collaborative not competitive as if they realized what a rare experience this would be.

A Nation Time 18:30
B1 Shakey Jake 13:32
B2 Scorpio’s Dance 8:40

本站内容均转载于互联网,并不代表本站立场!如若本站内容侵犯了原著者的合法权益,可联系我们进行处理! 拒绝任何人以任何形式在本站发表与中华人民共和国法律相抵触的言论!
THE END
喜欢就支持一下吧
点赞18 分享
评论 抢沙发
头像
欢迎您留下宝贵的见解!
提交
头像

昵称

取消
昵称表情代码图片

    暂无评论内容