Frank Rosaly - Cicada Music (2013)seeders: 3
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Frank Rosaly - Cicada Music (2013) (Size: 297.18 MB)
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Delmark Records: DE 5006 http://delmark.com/delmark.5006.htm * James Falzone: clarinet * Jason Stein: bass clarinet * Keefe Jackson: bass clarinet, contrabass clarinet, tenor saxophone * Jason Adasiewicz: vibraphone * Jason Roebke: bass, cracklebox * Frank Rosaly: drums, percussion, piano, electronics http://www.allosmusica.org/ http://www.jasonsteinmusic.com/ http://www.keefejackson.com/ http://www.jasonadasiewicz.com/ http://www.jasonroebke.info/ http://www.frankrosaly.com/ Recorded at Strobe Studios (http://www.stroberecording.com/), Chicago, by James Wagner on Summer 2008 (tracks: 1, 3, 5, 8, 10) & by Nick Broste (http://www.nickbroste.com/) on December 2011 (tracks: 2, 4, 6, 7, 9). Reviews By Aaron Cohen http://www.downbeat.com/defa...sp?sect=editorspicks201306#3 Drummer Frank Rosaly has been a key player in Chicagoâ™s thriving jazz scene for the past dozen years—alongside flutist Nicole Mitchell, saxophonist Dave Rempis, vibraphonist Jason Adasiewicz and others—but this stellar disc marks his debut as a bandleader. The album illustrates that he is a continually inventive writer and arranger who is, really, just getting started. Cicada Music began six years ago as a score to filmmaker Brian Ashbyâ™s documentary about scrap-metal collectors, Scrappers. For this disc, Rosaly reworked the themes, and the compositionsâ™ varying playing times create a fascinating sense of movement: While “Typophile/Apples” exceeds 12 minutes, four other tracks are only about two minutes long. The ensemble has a striking tone with a frontline of three clarinetists (James Falzone, Jason Stein and Keefe Jackson) alongside Adasiewiczâ™s vibes. The combination gives a beautiful lift to “Babies” (which bassist Jason Roebke helps keep grounded) and creates intriguing timbre shifts on “Wet Feet Splashing.” Rosalyâ™s electronics and Roebkeâ™s cracklebox add tasteful and evocative atmospherics, including a bell-and-drum choir sound on the 75-second “Adrian.” Rosaly shapes his compositions through his drumming, and his quiet power is more effective here than if he had played with overt aggression. -- By Tom Burris http://www.freejazzblog.org/2013/12/round-up-chicago.html By Mark Corroto http://www.allaboutjazz.com/...s-review-by-mark-corroto.php By Mike Shanley http://www.jazztimes.com/art...64-cicada-music-frank-rosaly Par Alain Tomas (fr) http://www.jazzhot.net/PBEve...67240448&PBMItemID=26197 Por Ángel Gómez Aparicio (es) http://www.cuadernosdejazz.c...tid=10:general&Itemid=11 Sharing Widget |