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Spring is Here (Shall We Dance?)
 
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Spring is Here (Shall We Dance?)

Django Bates Audio CD
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
Price: £11.57 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Product details

  • Audio CD (18 Dec 2008)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Lost Marble
  • ASIN: B00197X1Q8
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 142,484 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

1. Spring
2. Turning 20
3. May Day
4. The Right to Smile
5. Early Bloomer
6. Fire Brigade
7. Subjective Hooks
8. Something Less Soothing
9. Evening Primrose
10. Sheep

Product Description

BBC Review

If the title invitation proffered by Mister Bates is taken up, it can only be tackled by dancers with either a.) an extreme degree of pedal dexterity, or b.) an extreme degree of inhibition-eroding imbibing. Yes, Django returns, with his usual level of dilute-to-taste density. He's finally completing his long-running seasonal sequence of albums with this slightly delayed Spring.

Jazz On 3 presenter Jez Nelson forewarned his listeners that this album (as expected) will not be to all tastes. The Bates contents can often be divisive, his style so individualist and extreme that he often plants folks firmly in love or hate camps. Overloaded with activity, these pieces are simultaneously hook-filled and defiantly uncompromising, with regular singing collaborator Josefine Lindstrand doing much to welcome uncertain ears. Bates digs compression of everything, rarely allowing a soloist to simply solo, but always stringing such self-expression through a maze of hyperactive themes, constantly in motion.

Lately residing in Copenhagen, Bates has formed Stormchaser, a large young band that rehearses weekly, and has a residency in the city's Jazz House. Hence their intimate grasp of these inner Django workings. They maintain slickness at the same time as keeping hold of a slippery sense of anarchy. The legacy of Brazilian tinkerer/composer Hermeto Pascoal looms large, but whose are these many souls, flying past at a kaleidoscopic rate? There whooshes Frank Zappa, and here land a sweetly scatting Lambert, Hendricks & Ross, with slap-happy bongos spilling out of old Edmundo Ros sleeves. Was that Keith Tippett's Centipede, in all its massed choral majesty? Could that be the kitchen/garage clatter of Spike Jones & His City Slickers? And meet The Residents, standing right next to The Smurfs. Bates is funky and tuneful, with piled-up vocal choruses repeating compulsive (or annoying) lines, and most certainly, the essence of the spring season has been bottled in all of its barely containable vigour. --Martin Longley

Find more music at the BBC This link will take you off Amazon in a new window

The Guardian, (John L Walters), June 20, 2008

(4 stars) With such inventiveness, mastery of orchestration and flair he runs rings around his contemporaries in every genre.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Django Bates and Stormchaser - Spring is Here (Shall We Dance?) (Lost Marble, 2008)

With a characteristic tinge of self-importance, Keith Jarrett once declared that his music was `the end result of a process that has nothing to do with music'. Whilst he hasn't abandoned composition completely like Jarrett, one senses that Britain's great Pianist and Composer Django Bates shares a similar outlook. Most of the pieces on this outstanding album are inspired by concepts and ideas - from the `pointlessness' of borders and boundaries, to the `incendiary nature of love'.

From these springboards come arrangements of quite extraordinary dexterity and audacity, full of rhythmic complexity and imaginative harmony. Yet Bates' great skill as a composer is to make the fiendishly intricate sound effortless, light and entertaining. There are few jazz musicians with such a dry and elaborate sense of humour and fewer still who dare to make that sense of comedy an intrinsic part of their creations.

Common critiques of jazz music from those who find it a closed world open only to scholars and academics suggest that it sometimes seems like a music with a limited emotional and textural range, and that it is often too serious to be considered approachable. Appreciators of the music would of course dismiss this as nonsense - but Bates of course responds with superior intelligence, actually taking the trouble to craft a music that is both intellectually demanding and physically exciting.

If there's any kind of precedent for this thrilling music, it might be found in George Russell's superb extended compositions for jazz orchestras or the grand majesty of Keith Tippett's Centipede but Bates' irreverence places him squarely in a category of his own. Particularly impressive is his innovative use of voices, which are carefully woven into the detailed tapestry of his music, and treated as instruments in their own right. On `The Right to Smile' (brilliantly dedicated to the Russian man who won the legal right to smile in his passport photo), Bates declares his loathing of nationalism by gleefully deconstructing a string of recognisable national anthems, including our own. The short interlude `Early Bloomer' is essentially a choral work, but with harmonic progressions that play havoc with the conventions of sacred music.

As ever Bates is manically hyperactive, packing as many ideas and layers as possible into dense sound collages. On `May Day', he throws in some short hints at African music. Many find Bates' constant joviality and mirth irritating, but he has the musicality to make it all compelling. It's a bold assertion in itself that this form of intensely composed music is mutually exclusive from any sense of immediacy or fun. On `Something Less Soothing', the speech is apparently delivered over something referred to as `Django's Secret Pop Song', which is in fact performed by some of Britain's most accomplished jazz musicians (including Martin France and Michael Modesir). Bates even plays with the contested nature of what constitutes musical immediacy with the asymmetric contortions of `Subjective Hooks'.

It's baffling then that British jazz critics, showing a misguided blanket distrust of all whimsy or humour, have reacted so negatively to Bates' wisecracking. Perhaps this explains why he now bases himself in Copenhagen, at that city's wonderfully named Conservatory of Rhythmic Music. It now seems customary in this country to attempt to undermine the national success of some of our greatest talents through sheer bloody-minded stubbornness of opinion. One star reviews in The Times and The Independent for this record seem churlish and childish in the extreme. Could these writers compose at this level? This is music that is rich in joy and euphoria - a critique of the ills of the world that also has the imagination and spirit to celebrate what is magical about humanity.

posted by daniel a
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Spring is Here 11 July 2010
Format:Audio CD
A contemporary, style of vibrant, funky jazz. Fantastic arrangements utilising some intriging colourful sounds particularly from the human voice. Love the track "Sheep" - such a super poetic portrayal of a perhaps misunderstood animal.
Without hesitation, I rate this as a must for the contemporary, lively, jazz lover.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  3 reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
A bit hectic 7 July 2009
By Speedy - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Audio CD
I have followed Bates career since his Loose tubes, Human Chain & Bruford's earthworks days and i have noticed how little by little this composer challenges himself more and more with each passing project...to the point where his work is totally his own world ...and a fast, super complex and a bit hectic world it is! This newest project is surely not for everyone (either in Jazz or rock or jazz/rock camps). The compositions need a big band with several singers and a knack for breezing through complex charts without stumbling.
I liked it but it requires for the listener to be in a certain mood, i believe. Try to listen to a few samples before buying as this is truly an acquired taste.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Django should be recognized! 11 Nov 2008
By Christopher Siebold - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Audio CD
Being a tireless advocate for the music of Django Bates, I strongly recommend this CD and I'm happy to see it finally offered on Amazon USA. Django's music is truly inspired and very fully-packed. As a composer and arranger, he is one of the best in the genre of jazz or otherwise and has a unique voice that must be heard. This material is simultaneously light, dark, complex, simple, funny and serious as hell: all of it penned with intention and flawlessly performed by a big band with vocals! Anyway, my words cannot quite describe what lies within this disc. I urge any serious listener to check it out and play it loud! I would also recommend any other Django recording you can get your hands on.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Amazing Album 7 Aug 2008
By Riff Buster - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Audio CD
This is Django's first CD since joining the faculty as Professor of Rhythimic Music at Denmark's Rhythmic Music Conservatory and features its post-graduate big band called StoRMChaser. And what a CD it is! Absolutley amazing and, as an arranger myself, filled with awe-inspiring music.

IMHO, Django is without a doubt the most creative, innovative and astonishing composer/arranger of our time, bar none. These charts make even the best current big band writing in the U.S. sound boring and uninspired, and I don't say this lightly.

I highly recommend this album. It's very complex and yet very accessible. And rhythmically, it's in a class all by itself. I'll spare you a song by song commentary. Just buy it and listen. You won't be disappointed.
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