Paul Motian Band - Garden of Eden (2006)

Posted By: InFocus

Paul Motian Band - Garden of Eden (2006)
EAC | APE(image)+CUE+LOG+COVERS > 306Mb | MP3 320 > 137Mb | 56:42 min
Jazz | ECM


Track listing:

01.Pithecanthropus Erectus
02.Goodbye Pork Pie Hat
03.Etude
04.Mesmer
05.Mumbo Jumbo
06.Desert Dream
07.Balata
08.Bill
09.Endless
10.Prelude 2 Narcissus
11.Garden of Eden
12.Manhattan Melodrama
13.Evidence
14.Cheryl

Personnel:

Chris Cheek- tenor and alto saxophone
Tony Malaby- tenor saxophone
Jakob Bro- guitar
Ben Monder- guitar
Steve Cardenas -guitar
Jerome Harris- bass
Paul Motian -drums

EAC extraction logfile from 3. March 2006, 22:52 for CD
Paul Motian Band / Garden of Eden

Used drive : ASUS DRW-1604P Adapter: 1 ID: 0
Read mode : Secure with NO C2, accurate stream, disable cache
Read offset correction : 0
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No

Used output format : C:\Program Files\Exact\Plugins\wapet.exe (User Defined Encoder)
320 kBit/s
Additional command line options : %d -t "Artist=%a" -t "Title=%t" -t "Album=%g" -t "Year=%y" -t "Track=%n" -t "Genre=%m" mac.exe %s %d -c4000

Other options :
Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Installed external ASPI interface


Range status and errors
Selected range
Filename E:\Share\Paul Motian Band - Garden of Eden.wav

Peak level 99.9 %
Range quality 100.0 %
CRC 8B00A3A4
Copy OK

No errors occured

End of status report


Drummer Paul Motian leads a septet here with saxophonists Chris Cheek and Tony Malaby (the tenor tandem of Charlie Haden's Not in Our Name) and three guitarists—-Steve Cardenas, Ben Monder, and Jakob Bro—-along with Jerome Harris on bass. It's almost as if Motian has multiplied his usual all-star trio with Joe Lovano and Bill Frisell, most recently heard on I Have the Room above Her. The expansion somehow creates a more open field, matching ECM’s characteristically spacious sound with richly-textured, overlapping and echoing lines. This is ensemble music with a sense of continuous, collective collaboration, the band taking a fresh look at the canon with inspired versions of Monk, Mingus and Charlie Parker tunes (the tenor dialogues can suggest a Mingus band). It's also a forum for Motian's own lyrical writing, while Cardenas contributes the beautiful "Balata," a reflective tune with a Caribbean undercurrent. –Stuart Broomer

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