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Nguyen Le: Songs of Freedom
ByWith an unorthodox core quartet, reliant on mallet instruments for much of its chordal support, Lê tackles other '60s chestnuts, like Cream's "Sunshine of Your Love"which, after a seemingly non sequitur introduction, filled with thundering percussion and wailing voices, turns relatively faithful, albeit at a brisker pace and with an uncharacteristic complexity of percussive detail. But once singer Himiko Paganotti gets past the first verse and chorus, the harmonic center shifts, and suddenly, with vibraphonist Illya Amar layering a shifting cushion of chords over bassist Linley Marthe's lithe underpinning, the song turns into an odd-metered solo feature for Lê, his mesh of oriental microtonality and occidental grit and grease moving in parallel with background vocal percussion, leading to a knotty, thundering finale.
As for "In A Gadda Da Vida," sure, its near-Jungian riff remains intact, but delivered on marimba, and driven by drummer Stéphane Galland's lithe 17/8 pulse, there's none of the original's gravitas, as Lê takes its preexisting Indo-centricity further, giving it an idiosyncratic arrangement; its chorus gradually building to staggering contrapuntal confluence and impressive solos from Lê and Amar, before a newly composed section leads to an ostinato-driven drum solo that avoids all the clichés of the original...all in a nice, compact five minutes.
Elsewhere, Lê tackles The Beatles' "Eleanor Rigby," with Youn Sun Nah making one of two guest appearances (the other, a tabla and konnakol-driven version of Led Zeppelin's "Whole Lotta Love" ), the guitarist's swirling, ethereal guitar lines supporting the singer during an extended intro before the band enters, eastern linearity meeting western harmonies in Guo Gan's erhu and Lê's electric guitar, for a more subdued yet undeniably grooving album opener.
When it comes to interpreting music in a jazz context, freedom more often than not means improvisational freedom, and to be sure, Songs of Freedom has plenty of that. But clearly, for Lê, the concept has more to do with an unfettered prerogative to draw on what, in many cases, are the simplest of song forms, as grist for far more elaborate compositional reworks filled with pointillist detail. Songs of Freedom combines heartfelt respect with absolute irreverence, breathing an utterly different kind of life into these songs, four decades after they first hit the airwaves.
Track Listing
Eleanor Rigby; I Wish; Ben Zeppelin; Black Dog; Pastime Paradise; Uncle Ho's Benz; Mercedes Benz; Over the Rainforest; Move Over; Whole Lotta Love; Redemption Song; Sunshine of Your Love; In A Gadda Da Vida; Topkapi; Come Together.
Personnel
Nguyen Le
guitar, electricNguyên Lê: guitars, computer, fretless electric guitar (3), prepared Vietnamese Cai Luong acoustic guitar (8), baby 12-string acoustic guitar (14); Illya Amar: vibraphone (1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10-13, 15), marimba (1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15), electronics (1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10, 13, 15); Linley Marthe: electric bass (1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15), vocals (12); Stéphane Galland: drums (1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10, 13, 15); Youn Sun Nah: lead vocal (1, 10); Ousman Danedjo: vocals (1, 2, 7, 15), lead vocals (5); Gou Gan: erhu (1); Stéphane Edouard: percussion (1, 4, 9, 12, 15); David Linx: lead vocal (2, 9), vocals (7, 15); Himiko Paganotti: vocals (2, 5, 15), lead vocal (7, 12); Prabhu Edouard: vocals (2), percussion (2), tablas (10), Indian vocals (10); Dhafer Youssef: vocals (3, 4); Karim Ziad: percussion (5), karkabus (10, 12), drums (12); Hamid El Kasri: gumbri (5); Keyvan Chemirani: zarb (7); David Binney: alto saxophone (9); Julia Sarr: vocals (7, 15), lead vocals (11).
Album information
Title: Songs of Freedom | Year Released: 2011 | Record Label: ACT Music
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About Nguyen Le
Instrument: Guitar, electric
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