| Wednesday, |
|||||||
| US/Canada: Reviews |
FLY HOME
|
||||||
|
Rudresh Mahanthappa featuring Kadri Gopalnath & The Dakshina Ensemble - Kinsmen |
|
||||||
|
Please note this is an old page and Fly Global Music has now moved. Please follow this link and search for the entry in the new site. Rudesh’s previous credits include working with hip-hop jazz expeimentalist Mike Ladd and Vijay Iyer on the album award winning In What Language? and he is regularly listed in the “Rising Star” poll in Down Beat magazine’s annual who’s who in jazz. Kinsmen is his collaboration with Kadri Gopalnath (who is a well known saxophonist in Indian classical music) and The Dakshina Ensemble. For all that, on first hearing, the thing you get with this album is how ‘jazz’ it is. Whilst you don’t want it to be an update of the ground-breaking John Mayer/Joe Harriott Indo Jazz Suite (his aim was to “harmoniously synthesize” the cultural and musical divide), perhaps he and the band we’re a little too succesfull with this; in particular ‘Longing’. That said, ‘Snake!’ is pure class on musical visualisation of “multicultural, transnational collaboration” with Mahavishnu Orchestra overtones as in addition to the sax leads all the band are hot as madras; Avasarala Kanyakumari (violin), Rez Abassi (guitar), Poovalur Sriji (mridangam), Carlo de Rosa (bass), Royal Hartigan (drums). Mahanthappa attended Berklee college and toured India with the Berklee College of Music All-Stars but it wasn’t until his elder brother gave him a CD called Saxophone Indian Style by Golpalnath that he saw the potential of merging the music of his heritage and jazz (he grew up in Boulder, Colorado to Indian immigrant parents). He started work on Kinsmen with Kadir in 2005 in Madras and the piece received a world premiere in New York City at the Asia Society. The ragas and rhythmic cycles are his starting point and then the sax melodies link them to the jazz world; ‘Kalyani’ probably is the best example of this (you can hear the ‘roots’ of Albert Ayler in there somewhere). And talking of which, ‘Kadri-Alap’ is a beautiful sax solo that’s worth repeated listens. Indeed, the whole album is a bit of a grower as your ears get use to this style. Perhaps it’s just the shock of Indian music that doesn’t involve a sitar. Perhaps it’s just a long warm-up for the title track, a massive 15 minute opus that is the climax. Expect this album to be an award winner this year. Check out the interview with Rudresh on http://www.wnyc.org Reviewed: Rudresh Mahanthappa featuring Kadri Gopalnath & The Dakshina Ensemble - Kinsmen (Pi Recordings) Cat. No: PI28 Release date: September 2008 Links |
|||||||
|
Visit Fly's new Amazon shops: Fly Music Shop UK / Fly Music Shop US |
|||||||
| US/Canada: Reviews V/A - Watch The Closing Doors: A History Of New York's Musical Melting Pot Vol. 1 1945-1960 Easy Star All-Stars - First Light Wiley - 100% Publishing Jessica 6 - See The Light Charlie Haden Quartet West feat. Cassandra Wilson, Diana Krall, Melody Gardot, Norah Jones, Renée Fleming, Ruth Cameron - Sophisticated Ladies |
Search Google for more about: Rudresh Mahanthappa featuring Kadri Gopalnath & The Dakshina Ensemble - Kinsmen
|
||||||
| CC Some Rights Reserved
FLY 2011 ||
|
|||||||