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Jaga Jazzist

Disco de Jaga Jazzist: “Livingroom Hush [Bonus Tracks]”

Información del disco :
Título: Livingroom Hush [Bonus Tracks]
Fecha de Publicación:2002-08-12
Tipo:Desconocido
Género:Jazz, Modern Jazz, Big Band/Swing
Sello Discográfico:Beat
Letras Explícitas:Si
UPC:4523132112602
Lista de temas :
1 Animal Chin Video
2 Going Down Video
3 Press Play Video
4 Airborne Video
5 Real Racecars Have Doors Video
6 Low Battery Video
7 Midget Video
8 Made for Radio Video
9 Lithuania Video
10 Cinematic Video
11 Plym (From 98'magqazine EP)(Bonus Track)
12 Animal Chin (Live) (Bonus Track)
13 Airbone (Live) (Bonus Track)
Análisis (en inglés) - :
{^A Livingroom Hush} is the debut by Norwegian {\jazz}/{\electronics} outfit {$Jaga Jazzist}, released in the United Sates on {@Ninjatune} a year later. {^A Livingroom Hush} is simply one of the most enigmatic outings to ever come out of either genre (and how many times can you say that?). Realized after the group had been together for nine years and led by the stunningly original compositions of {$Lars Horntveth} (who began composing for the group when he was 14 in 1994), {^A Livingroom Hush} is so deeply ingrained in its ensemble textures and striated harmonics that {$Jaga Jazzist} almost never sounds like a {\big band}. A horn section of winds, reeds, and brass, keyboards galore, drums both real and imagined ({\electronic}), vibes, glockenspiel, electric guitars and bass, {\electronic} keyboards, tape recorders, and a slew of other things give them the edge on virtually anyone who has attempted the same thing: a seamless blending of creative {\jazz} with {\electronic} exploration and beats. Yes, {^A Livingroom Hush} swings, rocks, rolls, and even spins from {\drum'n'bass} loops to extraordinarily subtle arrangements where dynamics are paid as much attention to as textural integration and harmonic interaction. Conscious counterpoint in the solo sections is not unusual and never mathematical or soulless. {&"Going Down,"} with its engaged and oppositional drums, the winding of horn lines around different rhythmic surfaces, and the shifting layers of keyboards atop a complex and heterogeneous bassline, makes for a dazzling balance of {\improvisation} and composition. Likewise, {&"Press Play"} is dazzling in its restraint and complexity, with its Brazilian rhythmic interlude and {$Gil Evans}-styled horn chart before glitches and rhythmic abnormalities enter the fray and eliminate them to leave a space for subtle samples, spare pianistic juxtapositions of rhythm and harmony, and a simple harmonic structure that leaves the melody somewhere between the notes before bass clarinetist {$Jørgen Munkeby} creates a theme for exploration by the ensemble. If one is looking for comparisons to {$St. Germain}, {$Les Hommes}, or {$Jazzanova}, forget it. This is hip and still {\jazz}; the music is first and appearances come later. {$Jaga Jazzist} is the very first group -- with no disrespect to {$Cinematic Orchestra} -- to successfully meld the lineages of the {\electronic} frontier with {\big band} {\jazz} aesthetics. [A Japanese version included bonus tracks.] ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide
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