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Live at the Village Vanguard
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Live at the Village Vanguard
Current price: $17.99


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Live at the Village Vanguard
Current price: $17.99
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It might be more concise to list what musical genres
Marc Ribot
hasn't explored than the ones he has, but his approach to the guitar has often reflected the freedom, reinvention, and elastic boundaries of jazz, no matter what the specific context. On this date, recorded in mid-2012 during a handful of shows at one of New York's most iconic venues,
Ribot
gives himself the luxury of stretching out with a pair of gifted accompanists, bassist
Henry Grimes
(who worked with
Albert Ayler
, one of
's key influences) and drummer
Chad Taylor
(a veteran of
the Chicago Underground Duo
and
Trio
), and the result is one of
's most explicitly jazz-focused dates in some time.
Live at the Village Vanguard
certainly embraces
's particular tastes in jazz, featuring two
Ayler
compositions ("The Wizard" and "Bells") as well as two pieces recorded by
John Coltrane
("Sun Ship" and "Dearly Beloved") and a pair of old standards ("Old Man River" and "I'm Confessin' [That I Love You]"). In the grand tradition of the genre, the key here is the interplay between the musicians, not simply the bandleader, though the sharp report of
's tone and the volleys of notes he fires off during the more extreme passages will sound more than familiar to anyone acquainted with his work. On the standards,
,
Grimes
, and
Taylor
may seem relaxed, but they dig deep into the melodies and find rich, expressive treasure despite the deceptively accessible surfaces. And as the trio explores the selections from
Coltrane
's songbooks, the communication between the players is total, with each in full flight as individuals and as a group, honoring the masters and finding a voice of their own at the same time. The great free jazz guitarist
Sonny Sharrock
once quipped that he didn't consider himself a guitarist, but a sax player with a very messed-up horn;
suggests a bit of the same thinking lurks inside
Mark Ribot
, but in spite of that, he and his axe seem to be getting along just fine. ~ Mark Deming
Marc Ribot
hasn't explored than the ones he has, but his approach to the guitar has often reflected the freedom, reinvention, and elastic boundaries of jazz, no matter what the specific context. On this date, recorded in mid-2012 during a handful of shows at one of New York's most iconic venues,
Ribot
gives himself the luxury of stretching out with a pair of gifted accompanists, bassist
Henry Grimes
(who worked with
Albert Ayler
, one of
's key influences) and drummer
Chad Taylor
(a veteran of
the Chicago Underground Duo
and
Trio
), and the result is one of
's most explicitly jazz-focused dates in some time.
Live at the Village Vanguard
certainly embraces
's particular tastes in jazz, featuring two
Ayler
compositions ("The Wizard" and "Bells") as well as two pieces recorded by
John Coltrane
("Sun Ship" and "Dearly Beloved") and a pair of old standards ("Old Man River" and "I'm Confessin' [That I Love You]"). In the grand tradition of the genre, the key here is the interplay between the musicians, not simply the bandleader, though the sharp report of
's tone and the volleys of notes he fires off during the more extreme passages will sound more than familiar to anyone acquainted with his work. On the standards,
,
Grimes
, and
Taylor
may seem relaxed, but they dig deep into the melodies and find rich, expressive treasure despite the deceptively accessible surfaces. And as the trio explores the selections from
Coltrane
's songbooks, the communication between the players is total, with each in full flight as individuals and as a group, honoring the masters and finding a voice of their own at the same time. The great free jazz guitarist
Sonny Sharrock
once quipped that he didn't consider himself a guitarist, but a sax player with a very messed-up horn;
suggests a bit of the same thinking lurks inside
Mark Ribot
, but in spite of that, he and his axe seem to be getting along just fine. ~ Mark Deming