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Matthew Shipp: Songs
ByDespite the innocuous-sounding title and the remarkably mainstream tracklisting, don't go into this record looking for the familiar. Shipp pays due attention to the formal structure of these tunes, doting dutifully on refrains and harmony. But inevitably he allows his inner voice to lead the way "out." On Dizzy Gillespie's "Con Alma" he adopts a soulful air for a while, then jumps into hesitant, skipping counterpoint that contrasts flashy treble runs with dark, deliberate harmonic statements. He turns "Angel Eyes" into a restless cat-and-mouse game, full of sudden stops and starts. Shipp offers just enough of a hint at the original that his improvisations fall into context, and then somehow they frame it in a new light.
It's clear from Songs that Shipp is a coiled spring waiting to expand, keenly aware of the drama in his music. He pointedly avoids repetition unless it serves as a launching pad for fresh momentum. His wisps in the air, his giant gothic thrusts in the bass, and his meandering counterpoint all hint at ideas without explicitly stating them. So he involves the listener, which makes the experience that much more exciting. Shipp's music also leaves plenty of unanswered questions floating away, which lends his music the sort of mystery that can never be answered. Songs is deep, full of irony, and sublimely elevating. And not surprisingly, the record bears repeated listening. That's the way Matthew Shipp is most of the time.
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Track Listing
We Free Kings; There Will Never Be Another You; Almighty Fortress Is Our God; Con Alma; Angel Eyes; On Green Dolphin Street; Bags' Groove; Yesterdays; East Broadway Run Down.
Personnel
Matthew Shipp
pianoMatthew Shipp: piano.
Album information
Title: Songs | Year Released: 2002 | Record Label: Splasc(H) Records