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alan
silva and william parker
a hero's welcome:
pieces for rare occasions
(vol.1 of the silva/parker duos)
mte-017
6 march
1998 new york city
alan
silva orchestral arrangements,
string synthesizer, acoustic piano
william parker bass
1. I
(8:24)
2. II (7:26)
3. III (16:50)
4. IV (9:25)
5. V (13:45)
alan
silva's playing and live composition have been a highlight of the
avant garde's living history for the past 35+ years. from his work
with sun ra's arkestra, through extended relationships with bill
dixon, cecil taylor, and albert ayler, on into the celestial communications
orchestra and the frank wright center of the world band, silva
has been one of the music's most consistently valuable thinkers.
a child of alan silva's other-worldly strategies for double bass,
william parker is the premier bassist of the post-Vietnam era.
a hero's welcome is a spontaneous composition dedicated to the
spiritual essence of Sun Ra and to all the great string players
of the 20th century. it was recorded at the first duo performance
silva and parker undertook, and is the first installment of the
eremite silva and parker ongoing strings duo project, which among
other things will entail at least one duo (or extended duo) recording
by silva and parker for eremite per year from now until the big
O. two full orchestras couldn't mix it up more completely.
wire
magazine, 50 records of the year, 1999
wire
magazine records of the year 1999, jazz
jazziz
magazine critics' picks top ten recordings 1999
coda
magazine writers choice top ten recordings 2000
cadence
magazine reviewer's choice, top 10 recordings 2000
***(*)
"Two modern giants of the bull fiddle, united in a project of awesome power.
Silva's ambitions to write orchestrally have finally been fulfilled.
He used MIDI keyboards & old-fashioned acoustic piano to create a
body of sound that occupies a mid-territory between Duke Ellington or
Charles Mingus & Edgard Varese. The five relatively brief sections
might almost be movements in a romantic symphony, were the language & articulation
not so unmistakably American. Parker is by now beyond reproach & beyond
categorization: but what is surprising is how thoroughly & how completely
Silva still thinks/plays like a bass player, even if nowadays his imagination
ranges right across the strings & beyond. The good news is that this
is just the first release in a sequence featuring a remarkable modern
duo." --cook & morton, penguin guide to jazz on c/d
"Together,
Silva & Parker play a music that is stunningly decisive & seamless,
gorgeous & dramatic. It grooves like a motherfucker, but it's also
highflown, strident & abstract. The multilayered textures immediately
reference the classical tradition, suggesting two post-tonal orchestras
improvising in real time. The musicians grip each other's lines
as intimately & passionately as lovers, but the eloquence remains
symphonic... If only swinging the classics - or 'jazz' as some
call it - always sounded this succulent." --watson, the
wire
"A Hero's
Welcome is a phenomenal meeting. Silva provides orchestral arrangements
of massed instruments, midi keyboard work, & some excellent acoustic
piano. His genius is on high-beam throughout. Parker responds with
a masterful performance on double bass, one of the best he's given
on record, & is the diva in Silva's opera, singing his ass off
in this dark forest of sound. This record is volume one of their
duets, if you can call them that. Really, A Hero's Welcome is more
a collision of two spirited orchestra's - Silva's & Parker's. The
sound is that big, deep, evocative. This suite in five parts generates
reference to & reverence for some many visionary twentieth century
artists - Sun Ra, Lutoslawski, Penderecki, Partch, Crumb, Ellington,
Coleman, & some bluesman, too - that it's a fitting performance
to close the century." --doug lang, coda |