Re. Kinsmen by Rudresh Mahanthappa:
Kush wrote: the entire CD has the feel of a definite beginning, a middle and an end.
Very much so, within the tracks, and over the cd as a whole.
Introspection has a kind of 'tolling bell', calling you into the album. I've yet to listen to
Ganesha or
Kalyani properly, cos they didn't grab me, but I'll get to them.
Longing is excellent, with the long notes replete with longing, some effective 'confused bits', and a rain-beat background of bass and drums. There is an upbeat mood change towards the middle, with exquisite eastern riffs creeping in like they know where to take this longing. I really enjoy the way the violin works alongside the sax. Of the tracks named after the various musicians, where they do their individual things, my favourite is the violinist's -
Kanya-Alap (right after Kadri's, which finishes on a very fine sustained note, and leads right into it). The violin is haunting. It creates a sense of dancing deep sadness, and of something being stretched to its furthest reaches. It's like longing that has been heightened by the hopeful expectation of fulfillment. Fitting then then that it comes before
Convergence, about the final third of which in particular,
you wrote:it seems Rudresh and Kadri are following each other around on alto sax drawing from the same source material , but upon closer listening they are not really doing the same thing. Each is improvising slightly differently, each is providing different ornamentation to the same source while at the same time repeating the notes of the other. Similar but different.
It's like they are having an intense conversation, agreeing with each other, but retaining their distinctive own views. Lots of complexity in this track especially (and then at the end, there is a peaceful drifting away).
I am floored by this cd. No way would I have listened without you guiding me to it, Kush. Muchas gracias!
I have also just received
Tell No Lies, the latest album from Justin Adams and Juldeh Camara - unbelievably good, even more intense and complex than
Soul Science - it's like Soul Science was just practicing and they have found their zenith in this album. I recommend it, big time. So, at the moment I have these two supreme albums to listen to. I'm happy as Larry.
Two Rivers will have to wait for a few weeks, I can't keep up:-)
No samples from this album on Justin's site, but scroll down for the press reviews:
http://www.myspace.com/justinadamsproducer