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Jazz Articles about DJ Olive

257
Album Review

Dave Douglas and Keystone: Moonshine

Read "Moonshine" reviewed by Matthew Miller


Dave Douglas is not your typical iconoclast. The progressive trumpeter--a mainstay of John Zorn's Masada and more typically avant-garde groups--favors an understated upheaval in his efforts as a leader, courting, in the words of writer Andy Battaglia “tradition and progression without puzzling over the difference." On Moonshine, his second album with Keystone, a sextet featuring Marcus Strickland (saxophone), Adam Benjamin (Fender Rhodes), Brad Jones (bass), Gene Lake (drums) and DJ Olive (turntables and laptop), Douglas once again focuses his modernist ...

1
Album Review

Dave Douglas & Keystone: Moonshine

Read "Moonshine" reviewed by AAJ Italy Staff


Originariamente concepito come progetto di sonorizzazione dei film dello sfortunato comico degli anni Venti, Roscoe “Fatty" Arbuckle [clicca qui per leggere la recensione del disco di esordio di questa formazione], il sestetto Keystone del trombettista Dave Douglas ha da subito dato l'impressione di non essere una prova isolata, una semplice divagazione, ma di ampliare il percorso intrapreso con il quintetto “elettrico" [ormai strutturatosi in una sua, per quanto stimolante, classicità], dimostrandosi più aperto a influenze della natura più varia. Questa ...

173
Album Review

Dave Douglas & Keystone: Moonshine

Read "Moonshine" reviewed by Mark F. Turner


As one of jazz's most omnivorous thinkers, trumpeter/composer Dave Douglas continues to explore ideas outside of the norm. Moonshine is a continuation with Keystone--an electric sextet that includes Marcus Strickland (saxophones), Adam Benjamin (Fender Rhodes), Brad Jones (bass), Gene Lake (drums), and DJ Olive (turntables)--exploring in music, the life and art of 1920s silent film actor/director Roscoe “Fatty" Arbuckle, whose career was abruptly ended when he was falsely accused of murder. Whether or not Douglas' odd juxtaposition ...

486
Album Review

Dave Douglas & Keystone: Moonshine

Read "Moonshine" reviewed by John Kelman


It's unlikely that Dave Douglas expected the Grammy-nominated Keystone (Greenleaf Music, 2005) to turn into an ongoing project, but as a parallel to his quintet of the past half decade, the trumpeter has forged a distinct entity with the group he now calls Keystone. This sextet shares some commonality with the quintet responsible for Meaning and Mystery (Greenleaf, 2006), but there are just as many differences, if not more. Moonshine affirms that Keystone is a band with a very different ...

489
Album Review

Dave Douglas: Keystone Live in Sweden

Read "Keystone Live in Sweden" reviewed by John Kelman


In the early days of silent film, scores were played live, most often by a single musician--simplifying the response to the on-screen activities. In recent years artists like guitarist Bill Frisell and clarinetist Louis Sclavis have upped the ante by combining composed music with improvisation on silent film scores for small ensembles, making the coordination of sight and sound much more challenging.

Trumpeter Dave Douglas' Keystone (Greenleaf, 2005) is another contemporary entry, a two-disc release including a DVD of the ...

1
Album Review

Dave Douglas: Keystone

Read "Keystone" reviewed by AAJ Italy Staff


Le strategie sonore di Dave Douglas si semplificano in questi anni recenti, nella dialettica tra quintetto acustico e gruppo elettrico, gruppi eccellenti curati con particolare meticolosita'. Escono ora per la Greenleaf, diretta in proprio, due CD in contemporanea: questo Keystone, ed un “live" del vecchio quintetto col repertorio di The Infinite. Keystone e' pensato come sonorizzazione di un'opera del regista Roscoe Arbuckle, grande autore dell'epoca del muto, ingiustamente sottovalutato anche alla luce di una condanna penale che lo escluse da ...

401
Album Review

Dave Douglas: Keystone

Read "Keystone" reviewed by Michael McCaw


Keystone is an incredibly mature-sounding album from Dave Douglas--not because his work up till now has not been complete, but because he has fully integrated the technology and mode of the music first espoused by Miles Davis. Yet he has moved beyond that reference point and created a group sound that is thoroughly modern and doesn't need to push itself to musical extremes to demonstrate mastery.Dedicated to and inspired by early film comic Fatty Arbuckle, Keystone uses the ...


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