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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best of several worlds,
By
This review is from: Scorched (Audio CD)
The conversation on the Amazon classical music threads somehow turned to Francis Bacon and thence, via Three Screaming Popes, to Mark Anthony Turnage. The only Turnage I had heard before was his opera, Greek, rather a long while ago, and all I remember of it is some dodgy East-End accents. Nonetheless, I checked what Turnage was available through Amazon, and came up with this being offered rather cheaply. A collaboration with jazz guitarist, John Scofield. I am a fan of jazz guitar, but not particularly of John Scofield. I remember admiring what he did when he first showed up with Miles Davis. However, having tried his collaboration with Pat Metheny, I came to the conclusion that, though he was obviously very talented and had a highly original approach, somehow his style of quirkily angular funk was too much to take for a whole album. So, all in all, feeling as I did about both parties, I have no idea what possessed me to actually order this, but I'm glad I did because it's fantastic. It's grown on me over the course of several months, and lately I can't get enough of it.
I could try and give a blow by blow account of how the album unfolds, but there is just so much that I won't. Suffice to say that we get a very detailed spectrum of music here, from rigorous and highly absorbing contemporary orchestral flavours, across the divide to jazz of numerous styles and idioms, smooth, funky, big, band. It's an album of well balanced halves. Scofield features for about half the album. Jazz features for about half the album. Some of the jazz is big band in styles reminiscent of the British avant-garde like Neil Ardley or Mike Westbrook. All the jazz is lifted out of the ordinary by the underlay of highly original orchestral sonorities. The more overtly contemporary orchestral parts hark back to Britten and Tippett in their more accessible guises, being neither particularly challenging nor overtly experimental. There remains throughout a complete absence of cliché and a breezily confident tightrope walk of impeccable good taste. Some of the most interesting and skilful music is to be heard in the handling of the transitions between these various idioms. Scofield's contribution is imbued with a formidable intelligence. Much of what he plays is composed music, while his improvisations are concise and unerringly tasteful, with a highly lyrical approach that seldom lets his fingers get too blurry. One area of his talent I have come to appreciate through the album is his tremendous facility with chord fragments, which shows a deep and innovative harmonic grasp. So, this is a really difficult album to sum up, which is actually a measure of just how successful a collaboration it is. It has jazz elements, and it will certainly appeal to aficionados of modern big band jazz and jazz guitar. But at the end of the day however, it is not a jazz album. It is, all in all, a brave and admirably intelligent classically oriented melting pot that sign-posts the way to a genuinely new and vital musical high ground. Lately I have found myself sufficiently taken with it as to take the plunge and order another disc of Turnage's orchestral music. If I enjoy it even half as much as I'm enjoying this one then my pennies will have been well spent indeed.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
4.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews) 12 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Is anybody ever completely comfortable in these sessions?,
By Jan P. Dennis "Longboard jazzer" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Scorched (Audio CD)
What we have here is an attempt to blend jazz and classical music. And I thought the Third Stream was dead. It seems that contemporary composer Mark-Anthony Turnage has been taken by the music of John Scofield for quite some time and decided to write some material based on it for orchestra and big band, incorporating Sco + bass and drums into the soundscape. Does it work? Not very well, to these ears.There are, it must be admitted, a few moments when things sound pretty natural, both from the orchestra/big band side as well as the small-group setting. But Sco certainly has sounded a lot freer and hipper in more natural small-group contexts. Even the audience's responses seem somewhat tentative (this was recorded live in concert). Falls between two stools. Neither fish nor fowl. A Jackalope (not the great jazz improv group, but an amalgam that simply doesn't work). The problem is that you can't make classical orchestras swing. Just doesn't happen. So what you get is some mildly interesting new music-ish orchestral passages punctuated by fairly standard small-group (Sco, guitar; John Patitucci, e-bass; Peter Erskine, drums) playing (not that this group is in any way deficient; it's just that they seem restrained, unable to completely cut loose). Why not just listen to either, say, Ligeti or Nono or Part, or one of Sco's latest discs? You'd be a lot better off.
4.0 out of 5 stars
This composer (and guitarist) likes it,
By English Setter "Winifred" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Scorched (Audio CD)
I attended NEC, and taught there, and I know Gunther Schuller a little, even played with his one of his sons on some jazz sessions. But my main interest is composition. I say this because I'm still sympathetic to the Third Stream project, and my background is partly why. However, aside from that, this is good music, and I'm breaking my silence to write this here.
I've heard a lot of forced attempts to combine styles -- that fail in one area or another. But this isn't one of them. Nor does it sound anything like Ligeti or Nono or a jazz session by Scofield, nor does it sound like Pops, nor Gunther Schuller's own Third Stream music, nor does it sound like film music. It's too densely composed and concise to be film music. To my ear it sounds quite fresh -- equally successful in the jazz trio parts, the big-band parts, the orchestral parts, and the combinations. Erskine is one of my favorite drummers, and he's in good form. So is Scofield. It's also well-recorded and well-balanced. This doesn't really swing, but it *does* groove, and it has too much integrity to sound like film music. (I would know about film music without much integrity, because I spent over ten years writing the stuff.) I specialize in composing microtonal music, with some jazz influence. I would be proud to have written this myself. I'm only giving it four and a half stars because maybe only Mozart should get 5 stars. A pleasure to listen to, and an inspiration, in every way. 1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Music in search of a story,
By Edward Thomas - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Scorched (Audio CD)
Very suggestive music, in a way conveyingly cinematic. One piece is even called "Kubrik"... other is called "Nocturnal Mission"... you can hear a wide rannge of dramatic arrangements that will undoubtely carry you through the scenes of a very interesting imaginary movie.
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