- 420Recommend It!
- 5,893views
CD/LP/Track Review
John Zorn: The Crucible (2009)
John Zorn is not one to rest on his laurels. It is probably not possible for Zorn to rest, period. With The Crucible, the fourth installment of his Moonchild band, the saxophonist/composer delivers a recording that will be attractive to both hardcore metal and jazz fans.
Twenty years ago Zorn unleashed his band Naked City, its brand of noise/jazz/metal and predilection for musical violence a revelation. He had already shown, in his index card cues, a mix/match, start/stop method of composing; and a love for cartoon, film, and hardcore sounds that took shape in The Big Gundown (Tzadik, re-released 2000) and Spillane (Tzadik, re-released 1999). But it wasn't until Torture Garden (Shimmy Disc, 1989) and the self-titled Naked City (Nonesuch, 1989) that his vision was completely realized.
Naked City hit the senses and caused a protest like Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie's bebop music of the 1940s. Its freakish hard-hitting amalgam of musics were short (songs tended to be less than a minute) sharp shocks.
Zorn moved on to other things. Many other things, including chamber and classical music, film composing, Masada jazz, larger ensemble improvisation, radical Jewish music, and more.
His work with the Moonchild trioMike Patton (former lead singer of the band Faith No More), drummer Joey Baron and bassist Trevor Dunnhas kept the hardcore flames burning. The group's output includes Moonchild (Tzadik, 2006), Astronome (Tzadik, 2006), and Six Litanies for Heliogabalus (Tzadik, 2007).
The Crucible adds Zorn himself on his siren alto, and a guest appearance by Marc Ribot on "9 x 9," a Led Zeppelin tribute that rocks out between the now-patented screams of Patton via Yamatsuka Eye.
Certainly the window dressing is the ferocity; between Baron's pulse and Dunn's thunder the direction of this music is quite turbulent. Add to that the Zorn trademark upper register screams and the severity is complete. But that is not the whole story here. The exchanges are crisp and the musicianship (no surprise here) is top rate. The band displays a gentle beauty in the excess that is this music. "Hobgoblin" almost swings as a call-and-response set and the creepy "Maleficia" is a recitation of evil acts that is as scary as a midnight blackout.
Track Listing: Almadel; Shapeshifting; Maleficia; 9x9; Hobgoblin; Incubi; Witchfinder; Initiate.
Personnel: Mike Patton: voice; John Zorn: alto saxophone; Marc Ribot: guitar; Trevor Dunn: bass; Joey Baron: drums.
Record Label: Tzadik
Style: Beyond Jazz





Keith Jarrett / Gary Peacock...
Lisa Young Quartet
Larry Corban
Christian McBride & Inside...
Sudo Quartet
Laszlo Gardony
Joe Locke
Alexi Tuomarila Trio
Bobby McFerrin
Jonathan Kreisberg
Miguel Zenon & The Rhythm...
Youn Sun Nah





