A Love Supreme Electric, Vinny Golia, John Hanrahan, Henry Kaiser, Wayne Peet, Mike Watt - A Love Supreme & Meditations (2020) [Hi-Res]
BAND/ARTIST: A Love Supreme Electric, Vinny Golia, John Hanrahan, Henry Kaiser, Wayne Peet, Mike Watt
- Title: A Love Supreme & Meditations
- Year Of Release: 2020
- Label: Cuneiform Records
- Genre: Jazz
- Quality: mp3 320 kbps / flac lossless / flac 24bits - 48.0kHz +Booklet
- Total Time: 01:47:40
- Total Size: 298 / 837 mb / 1.3 gb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01. A Love Supreme Acknowledgement
02. A Love Supreme Resolution
03. A Love Supreme Pursuance
04. A Love Supreme Pslam
05. Meditations The Father and The Son and The Holy Ghost
06. Meditations Compassion
07. Meditations Joy
08. Meditations Love
09. Meditations Consequences
10. Meditations Serenity
11. Meditations The Father and The Son and The Holy Ghost reprise
12. Meditations Acknowledgement reprise
A Love Supreme is rightly considered the ultimate achievement of John Coltrane's late work. It has been performed whole or in part by countless players, though usually just its first movement. Drummer John Hanrahan and guitarist Henry Kaiser have long histories with this music. Kaiser's dates to 1965 when he heard A Love Supreme as a 16-year-old college freshman. Hanrahan's dates to a lengthy 2003 interview with Coltrane drummer Elvin Jones and Ashley Khan's book length treatise on the original sessions. Though he's performed it across the country with an acoustic quartet, in 2017, he approached Kaiser about an electric version. The guitarist introduced him to Meditations as Coltrane's intended sequel, and they assembled various bands to perform both suites live over several years. The other players - saxophonist Vinny Golia, organist Wayne Peet, and bassist Mike Watt --brought their own experiences as they worked live in studio, recording both suites in one day in February of 2019. While this record is wildly exploratory, the source material is never eclipsed by excess or ego. This quintet approaches the work kaleidoscopically, investigating from a variety of musical angles. Kaiser's approach is informed by his studies of Indian raga, and a decades long decoding of Miles Davis's electric music on five Yo Miles! albums with Wadada Leo Smith. Hanrahan's and Peet's inspirations are spiritual and psychological; each performance adds depth and dimension to their liinner lives and and musical vocations. Golia's incantatory tenor introduces "Acknowledgement"'s as the band opens a frame around him. Later, Golia solos are free, though retain the modal melody as a central tenet. Kaiser, Peet, and Watt embellish, fill, and accent before engaging in lengthy solos atop a dynamic group dialogue driven by Hanrahan. Watt introduces "Resolution" solo, before Kaiser's distorted squall opens a door for Peet, who, with Hanrahan and Golia swing like mad through vanguard postbop. Peet's swirling organ acts as an engine for the collective modal improvisation in "Pursuance." Meditations' "The Father, The Son and the Holy Ghost" theme presents Golia's tstaement of it at once as a grounding centerpiece and the lift off point for focused group improv. "Consequences" offers abstract interplay as the hub for cohesive group conversation and aural mapmaking. A Love Supreme's "Acknowledgement" is reprised as a set closer with the entire band playing the vamp. It simmers and flows as Golia articulates its melody on tenor before switching to soprano in his solo as Peet adorns and underscores his lines with shimmering chords. Hanrahan guides the flow largely by feel; his empathy and receptivity inspires Kaiser to usher in a gripping intensity that shapeshifts interactions dynamically and texturally over nearly 13 sublime minutes. A Love Supreme Electric is not an endgame for these players. It is the next evolutionary chapter in a developing investigation that expands on the already important musical primacy, spiritual depth, and cultural resonance in these works.
01. A Love Supreme Acknowledgement
02. A Love Supreme Resolution
03. A Love Supreme Pursuance
04. A Love Supreme Pslam
05. Meditations The Father and The Son and The Holy Ghost
06. Meditations Compassion
07. Meditations Joy
08. Meditations Love
09. Meditations Consequences
10. Meditations Serenity
11. Meditations The Father and The Son and The Holy Ghost reprise
12. Meditations Acknowledgement reprise
A Love Supreme is rightly considered the ultimate achievement of John Coltrane's late work. It has been performed whole or in part by countless players, though usually just its first movement. Drummer John Hanrahan and guitarist Henry Kaiser have long histories with this music. Kaiser's dates to 1965 when he heard A Love Supreme as a 16-year-old college freshman. Hanrahan's dates to a lengthy 2003 interview with Coltrane drummer Elvin Jones and Ashley Khan's book length treatise on the original sessions. Though he's performed it across the country with an acoustic quartet, in 2017, he approached Kaiser about an electric version. The guitarist introduced him to Meditations as Coltrane's intended sequel, and they assembled various bands to perform both suites live over several years. The other players - saxophonist Vinny Golia, organist Wayne Peet, and bassist Mike Watt --brought their own experiences as they worked live in studio, recording both suites in one day in February of 2019. While this record is wildly exploratory, the source material is never eclipsed by excess or ego. This quintet approaches the work kaleidoscopically, investigating from a variety of musical angles. Kaiser's approach is informed by his studies of Indian raga, and a decades long decoding of Miles Davis's electric music on five Yo Miles! albums with Wadada Leo Smith. Hanrahan's and Peet's inspirations are spiritual and psychological; each performance adds depth and dimension to their liinner lives and and musical vocations. Golia's incantatory tenor introduces "Acknowledgement"'s as the band opens a frame around him. Later, Golia solos are free, though retain the modal melody as a central tenet. Kaiser, Peet, and Watt embellish, fill, and accent before engaging in lengthy solos atop a dynamic group dialogue driven by Hanrahan. Watt introduces "Resolution" solo, before Kaiser's distorted squall opens a door for Peet, who, with Hanrahan and Golia swing like mad through vanguard postbop. Peet's swirling organ acts as an engine for the collective modal improvisation in "Pursuance." Meditations' "The Father, The Son and the Holy Ghost" theme presents Golia's tstaement of it at once as a grounding centerpiece and the lift off point for focused group improv. "Consequences" offers abstract interplay as the hub for cohesive group conversation and aural mapmaking. A Love Supreme's "Acknowledgement" is reprised as a set closer with the entire band playing the vamp. It simmers and flows as Golia articulates its melody on tenor before switching to soprano in his solo as Peet adorns and underscores his lines with shimmering chords. Hanrahan guides the flow largely by feel; his empathy and receptivity inspires Kaiser to usher in a gripping intensity that shapeshifts interactions dynamically and texturally over nearly 13 sublime minutes. A Love Supreme Electric is not an endgame for these players. It is the next evolutionary chapter in a developing investigation that expands on the already important musical primacy, spiritual depth, and cultural resonance in these works.
Year 2020 | Jazz | FLAC / APE | Mp3 | HD & Vinyl
As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
- Unlimited high speed downloads
- Download directly without waiting time
- Unlimited parallel downloads
- Support for download accelerators
- No advertising
- Resume broken downloads