Home » Search Center » Results: Darius Jones / Matthew Shipp
Results for "Darius Jones / Matthew Shipp"
About Darius Jones / Matthew Shipp
Instrument: Band / ensemble / orchestra
Related Articles | Concerts | Albums | Photos | Similar ToResults for pages tagged "Darius Jones / Matthew Shipp"...
The Darkseid Recital
By Darius Jones / Matthew Shipp
Label: AUM Fidelity
Released: 2014
Track listing: Celestial Fountain; 2,327,694,748; Granny Goodness; Gardens of Yivaroth; Lord of Woe; Life Equation; Sepulchre of Mandrakk; Divine Engine; Novu’s Final Gift.
Darius Jones, Matthew Shipp: The Darkseid Recital
by Libero Farnè
Delicati e sospesi impressionismi, movimentate evoluzioni in cui le asciutte sezioni del sax si sovrappongono al continuo e turbolento sottofondo tramato dal piano, rarefazioni caratterizzate da sonorità puntigliose del piano ed eccentriche del sax, scorribande free con i due strumenti legati inscindibilmente in un flusso turbinoso, frasi melodiche innestate su insistenze percussive... Queste ed altre situazioni ...
Darius Jones / Matthew Shipp: Cosmic Lieder
by John Sharpe
Duets with saxophonists loom large in pianist Matthew Shipp's discography. His first release featured one such with a young Rob Brown--Sonic Explorations (Cadence Jazz, 1988)--and there have been further outings over the years with other reed men, including Roscoe Mitchell, Ivo Perelman, Evan Parker and Sabir Mateen. To add to that impressive roster comes a worthy ...
Darius Jones / Matthew Shipp: Cosmic Lieder
by Troy Collins
Cosmic Lieder documents the first recorded collaboration between rising alto saxophone star Darius Jones and venerable pianist Matthew Shipp. Veering between dark lyricism and roiling catharsis, the date offers an illuminating window into the creative discourse between two different generations of the avant-garde. Released concurrently with the expansive live double album, The Art of ...
Darius Jones / Matthew Shipp: Cosmic Lieder
by Nic Jones
Cosmic Lieder contains the sound of a duo engaged in an exercise in totality, which takes in no small amount of the music's past even while there's never any doubt that both players are concerned with music of the future--though, happily, not over-earnestly so. But to call this program a coming-of-age" would be misleading. Of the ...