Quantcast
NEWS: Musicians: Build Your Network at AAJ SHOP:   CDs/DVDs/Vinyl/Sleeves | Downloads | Poster Art
jazz
HOME NEWS REVIEWS ARTICLES MUSICIANS PHOTOS FORUMS
  Login   |   MY AAJ Signup  
Intro Site Map Shows Free Daily MP3s Videos Upcoming Releases Guides Editorial Calendar Contests Help Wanted  
Advanced
Contact Us   |   Advertise   |   For Contributors   |   For Musicians





Storyteller
Rob Mullins
Dreams Are Meant For Two
PJ Parker
Fire Down Below
The Steve Elmer Trio
Jazz In Bel Air
Alphonse Mouzon
Innocence: Green Spring Suite
Jack Reilly Trio
New Christmas
Pamela Hines Trio
Advertise Here




Jazz Excursion Radio



"Illinization"
Medeski, Martin & Wood
The Dropper

Listen Now






Push AAJ Content
AAJ Live | RSS | Widsets

A Man About A Horse
Steve Tibbetts | ECM Records (2002)


By Paul West Discuss        

The work of guitarist and percussionist Steve Tibbetts breaks free from most forms of jazz tradition out there; the music is out there, too, with little that's traditional - or even jazzy - about it. But it offers hypnotic pleasures wherein instruments are totally in sync and create rhythm in favor of melody. His latest, A Man About A Horse fits comfortably into its worldly roots, and might be a fitting soundtrack for the latest Luc Besson science fiction epic. It sustains a style wherein music is almost totally presented as background essence; even Tibbetts guitar work seems hidden precariously in the background.

With Horse, that hidden quality is both the work's best and worst quality. The tonal compositions are striking, and the moodiness is sustained throughout the album, especially on the ten-minute-plus track, "Black Temple," a middle section of an enclosed trilogy within the album (starting with "Red Temple" and concluding with "Burning Temple"), which has a lively yet smooth undercurrent. Yet, for all these amenities, they have a tendency to grow tiresome - unpredictability can become predictable if not employed sparingly. It's the album's use of liveliness, in takes like "Glass Everywhere," fairly edgy work, that resurrects it from its comfort zone of mood and tone while failing to get fully under your skin. More to my liking was the terrific, "Koshala," which has a sturdier, swifter tempo that counterbalances the leisurely mood of percussion and Tibbetts' guitar strings.

While music like this might best be enjoyed on a calm, rainy day, the album's repetitive nature (inherent in this kind of music form, for better or worse) ultimately results in a lack of strong musical differentiation, making it easier to appreciate the subtle craft that goes into the work rather than fully praise on the whole.


Track listing: Lupra (4:47) Red Temple (6:39) Black Temple (10:06) Burning Temple (3:59) Glass Everywhere (3:58) Lochana (3:40) Chandoha (5:58) Koshala (5:54)

Personnel: Steve Tibbetts: guitars, percussion Marc Anderson: percussion Marcus Wise: percussion Jim Anton: bass

Style: Fusion/Progressive Rock
Published: August 08, 2002


Read more reviews of A Man About A Horse.


Discuss         Add to Google  




Articles by Paul West
A Man About A Horse
The Sound of Harry Whitaker
Innocence of Youth
Verse
Upper Road
Coldwater
Red Top



Recent CD Reviews | More CD Reviews
Satoko Fujii Orchestra Nagoya - Sanrei Satoko Fujii Orchestra Nagoya
Sanrei
Massimo - The Visionary Massimo
The Visionary
Jeff Barone - Open Up Jeff Barone
Open Up
Vandermark / Kessler / McBride / Joode / Flaten - Collected Fiction Vandermark / Kessler / McBride / Joode / Flaten
Collected Fiction
Louis Moholo-Moholo Duets With Marilyn Crispell - Sibanya (We Are One) Louis Moholo-Moholo Duets With Marilyn Crispell
Sibanya (We Are One)
Reptet - Chicken or Beef? Reptet
Chicken or Beef?



CD Review Search
Artist Name  
Album Title  
Record Label  
Author  
 

Most Read Reviews
Last 30 Days | All Time
Most Read Articles
Last 30 Days | All Time
Recommended Reviews
Last 30 Days | All Time
Recommended Articles
Last 30 Days | All Time


 
(1)



Mark Egan
Illumination
From Elements
12:24

More | Recent | Top




Steve Elmer
New CD: Fire Down Below











Make a donation and support All About Jazz
Contribute to the continued operation of
jazz's most important online resource.
  Privacy Policy | Dedicated Servers All material copyright © 2008 All About Jazz and/or contributing writers/visual artists. All rights reserved.