Tyner is first among equals here in a meeting of special talents. It's the traditional quintet instrumentation of modern jazz, with trumpeter Terence Blanchard and altoist Gary Bartz in the frontline and Christian McBride and Lewis Nash in the rhythm section. Few contemporary drummers can spark the joyous conviviality that's the mark of this session, but Lewis Nash provides a rhythmic backdrop that's as secure and as sparkling as that of the late Billy Higgins. It shows in almost all of these 10 surprisingly concise performances, including Tyner's Latin-based "Angelina" (with wonderfully liquid lines from Bartz) and the soulful funk rhythms of "New Orleans Stomp." Tyner reveals some of the sheer trip-hammer brilliance of his right hand on the uptempo "Chase," a trio feature, but this is generally a relaxed session, full of collective spirit and wonderfully lyrical moments. Blanchard does some special things on the standards, including the signature half-valves that add emotional drama to "Alone Together." --Stuart Broomer
Illuminations,McCoy Tyner,Telarc,Jazz,Mainstream Jazz,Pop,Post-Bop
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Illuminations
Buffy Sainte-Marie Manufacturer: Vanguard Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000E9BG Release Date: 2000-05-16 |
Tracks:
- God Is Alive, Magic Is Afoot
- Mary
- Better To Find Out For Yourself
- The Vampire
- Adam
- The Dream Tree
- Suffer The Little Children
- The Angel
- With You, Honey
- Guess Who I Saw In Paris
- He's A Keeper Of The Fire
- Poppies
Customer Reviews:
Totally Superb magic!.......2006-08-29
Rich
Worth Waiting For..........2006-03-01
Bone Chilling Masterpiece.......2005-10-07
a for-real lost classic.......2004-01-29
At the same time, Sainte-Marie kept her folk roots and her social consciousness intact. The voice-and-acoustic "Suffer the Little Children," with its commentary on capitalism, would not sound out of place on her earlier albums, and the downright sensuous "Guess Who I Saw In Paris" is one of her best love songs.
The real fascination here, though, is how far afield Buffy goes. In "Keeper of the Fire" she provides a Jorma Kaukonen like guitar solo with her voice on the ride-out, and "Poppies" is outrageously trippy and far ahead of its time, reminding the listener of an early version of Enya or Loreena McKennitt.
The album was not a commercial success in its day, primarily because it was so "out of character" for what Buffy's fans wanted. But thirty-odd years later it still sounds subversive and strange. The album combines Buffy Sainte-Marie's natural warmth and power with eerie and transcendent moments quite unlike anything else out there at the time (or now). Very much a lost classic, "Illuminations" is not just for folkies. Anyone with an interest in psychedelia or the unusual will find a lot to like here. One of her best and well worth having.
A Masterpiece.......2000-10-20
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Illuminations
Santana & Alice Coltrane Manufacturer: Sbme Import ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000006ZUV Release Date: 2006-01-13 |
Tracks:
- Guru Sri Chinmoy Aphorism
- Angel of Air/Angel of Water
- Bliss: The Eternal Row
- Angel of Sunlight
- Illuminations
Album Description
Carlos' 1974 album for the Columbia label, a collaboration with Alice Coltrane. Five tracks, including 'Guru Sri Chinmoy Aphorism' and 'Angel Of Air/ Angel Of Water'.Album Description
Carlos' 1974 album for the Columbia label, a collaboration with Alice Coltrane. Five tracks, including 'Guru Sri Chinmoy Aphorism' and 'Angel Of Air/ Angel Of Water'.Customer Reviews:
Who dares, Win........2007-01-10
Anybody who bought this album some 30 years ago hardly understood this musical work, since Santana's audiences were totally into different kind of music. For that reason Illuminations was the first Santana release not to go to Gold.
After the release of "love, Devotion and Surrender" and "Caravanserai", both in 1972, Santana continued exploring different routes from the Rock and Latin sounds he already was famous for.
On this album Santana is fully into Fusion, Jazz and Rock; with David Holland on bass, Tom Coster on Keyboards and Alice Coltrane on Harp, topped by a Classical 18 member band. The result is one of Santana's finest accomplishments.
This album is mainly for the lovers of Fusion Jazz Rock, Santana fans and any guitar great sound lover.
If you like this album, make sure to listen to "caravanserai" and "Love, Devotion and Surrender as well". 3 Santana albums that go hand in hand.
Cinematic Orchestration.......2005-12-28
defintaly recommend this album if you are in to the Prog Rock sound and ambient jazz. Combined well to create a interesting album.
hernandoguitar69.......2005-09-03
Not what you think........2005-04-20
FREE!!!!!!!!!.......2004-07-06
Carlos Santana every did.Featuring brilliantly dramatic string accompanyment by harpist/arranger Alice Coltrane,her harp also
plays a big role.The music is typically otherwordly and if you close your eyes while listening you will believe you are being transported to another world!Wheather orchestral,rock or jazz
the stylistic blend of sound and YES-great sense of melody make
this a high point for both musicians.Alice Coltrane's entire
catalog,by the way,is also definately worth checking out if you like what you hear on this recording!
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Britten: Serenade for Tenor, Horn & Strings; Les Illuminations; Nocturne
Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000AXZE3U Release Date: 2005-11-08 |
Tracks:
- I. Fanfare
- II. Villes
- IIIa. Phrase
- IIIb. Antique
- IV. Royaute
- V. Marine
- VI. Interlude
- VII. Being Beauteous
- VIII. Parade
- IX. Depart
- Prologue
- Pastoral
- Nocturne
- Elegy
- Dirge
- Hymn
- Sonnet
- Epilogue
- On A Poet's Lips I Slept
- Below The Thunders Of The Upper Deep
- Encinctured With A Twine Of Leaves
- Midnight's Bell Goes Ting, Ting, Ting
- But That Night When On My Bed I Lay
- She Sleeps On Soft, Last Breaths
- What Is More Gentle Than A Wind In Summer?
- When Most I Wink, Then Do Mine Eyes Best See
Amazon.com
This is a wonderful record, in substance and execution. As Ian Bostridge writes in his passionately involved program notes, these three song cycles represent a pinnacle of the all-too-sparse literature for tenor and orchestra. We owe them to Britten's long personal and professional partnership with the great tenor Peter Pears, for whom he wrote all his vocal music. Listeners who remember Pears' unique and unmistakable voice and style will be astounded at how thoroughly Bostridge has made these works his own. His voice is very different but no less unique, and intoxicatingly beautiful. He has at his command colors and nuances which he uses so masterfully that they become an integral part of the music, never sounding artificial. Giving equal weight to words and music, Bostridge captures the lush sensuousness of the French cycle, set to poems of Rimbaud, the lyricism, lightness, serenity, horror and triumph of the Serenade, and the declamatory drama of the Nocturne (the last two use poetry from Shakespeare to Wilfred Owen). The cycles trace the development of Britten's style, from the tonal orientation and direct expressiveness of the first, through the greater emotional depth and variety of the second, to the descriptive, sardonic, wild, passionate rhetoric of the third. The orchestra's principals are superb in their extensive solos. Unfortunately, they are nameless except for Radek Baborák, a worthy successor to Dennis Brain, the virtuoso hornist for whom the Serenade was written. --Edith EislerCustomer Reviews:
Comparing Britten's 'Serenade' from Bostridge and rivals.......2006-06-26
Pears 1944: The Gramophone calls this, the premiere recording, 'usurpassable,' and so it would seem with the unique combination of Peter Pears, the tenor voice for which the work was written, Dennis Brain, the young horn virtuoso whom Britten also had in mind, and Britten himself conducting. There are some drawbacks, though, principally the ugly wartime sonics, which are murky and boxed-in. Pears is not as dramatic as he would become later on, and although Brain is very musical and supple in tone, he doesn't extract the last ounce of intensity from his part.
Pears 1964: Pears' remake is the unsurpassable one, perhaps. We get excellent stereo from Decca, and Britten's conducting is more or less perfect. Barry Tuckwell sets a new standard in the horn part, taking hair-raising risks and underlining the darker side of the score. Pears has grown immensely in his interpretation of the poetry, but one can't escape that he is 20 years older--his voice is obviously under strain in the more difficult passages and at loud volume. Even so, his depth and artistry quickly make you forget anything but the music itself--a great recording.
Rolfe-Johnson 1991: The Gramophone loved this recording when it came out on Chandos. The outstanding performer here is the tenor, Anthony Rolfe-Johnson, who took up Pears' artistic manetle. Like Pears he has a sweet, focused tenor with a prominent head tone (R-J's sound is less idiosyncratic than Pears'), but more importantly Rolfe-Johnson does almost as much with the poetry as his great predecessor. The conducting by Bryden Thomson is fine, and so is the horn player, Michael Thompson, though he is too cautious to take the kind of risks Tuckwell did.
Langridge 1994: This recording, originally on Collins Clasics, is on Naxos now. Philip Langridge is the doppelganger to Rolfe-Johnson, both bieng Britten specialists who have recorded most of his major tenor roles. Langridge has a bigger voice, with an unusual but pleasant nasality. It's less focused than Rolfe-Johnson's or Pears', so the pitch can spead a little, and some wobble creeps in under pressure. On this CD Langridge gives a notably quiet, tender reading, with a lot of variaiton in tone and poetic sensitivity. He is aided by the excellent conducting of Britten's disciple, Steuart Bedford. The horn playing of Frank Lloyd matches the singer in tenderness, even if he isn't the daredevil that Tuckwell ws--Lloyd's suppleness is closer to Brain in approach.
Bostridge 1999: The latest generation of Pears' descendants is represented by Ian Bostridgee, who has attained more fame than the previous two tenors outside Britain. Bostridge's voice started out quite slender and cooing, so he can't attack the Serenade's more strenuous parts head on. His solution is to give a lighter, quicker version that is refreshingly different. His hornist, Marie-Luise Neunecker, is a true virtuoso, more at home in this music than any player since Tuckwell. She is also caught in vivid, clear sound by EMI. Ingo Metzmacher's condcuting sometimes lacks zest and impact, though it passes muster well enough.
Bostridge 2005: Bostridge got to remake the Serenade for EMI after only a few years, not the twenty that Pears waited. In the interim his voice has acquired more weight--it's still the lightest of any being considered here, however--and that extra heft helps him to deepen his interpretation, adding more darkness and mystery to the text (mystery being one of this singer's best modes). The presence of Simon Rattle and the Berlin Phil. strings certainly ups the ante, and the first horn of the orchestra, Radek Baborak, at last brings us Tuckwell's equal in daring and risk-taking. British critics have acclaimed this recording as the only modern one to stand beside Pears/Britten, but I think Rattle and Bostridge are both a little guilty of fussiness; every syllable and musical phrase is underlined to the point where we notice the performers more than the music at times.
I have owned Serenades by other singers like Martyn Hill and John Mark Ainsley, both on EMI and both in the boyish tenor vein of Bostridge, if without his notable intelligence and musical insight. I would be hapy to own either of Bostridge's efforts, but the ones that send chills down my spine are by Rolfe-Johnson and Pears 1964.
Bostridge and Rattle Offer Definitive Britten.......2005-11-30
Each of the three cycles feels as though Bostridge and Rattle are in complete agreement with Britten's intentions. 'Les Illuminations', designated as a work 'for high voice and strings', here benefits greatly from the timbre of Bostridge's baritone-infused tenor voice. The poems by Rimbaud were written by a man for a man and thus it feels more appropriate to have the male voice singing (though the numerous performances by sopranos do hold a special glow). Supported by some of the most lush strings sound ever recorded, Bostridge sings the songs with more passion than most. These are heartfelt and not the cerebral exercise they often receive. Yes, there are moments when memories of other performances rise - such as during the downward glissando of 'et je danse' when other singers caress every note in the fall. But the overall effect is very dramatic and, well, luminous.
'Serenade for tenor, horn and strings' finds Radek Baborak in the horn role. Again the pulsing Berlin strings under Rattle are almost unbearably beautiful. Bostridge's perfect diction again demonstrates how Britten was the finest composer for the English language. The cycle is involving in its survey of an interesting variety of poems. Likewise the Nocturne 'for tenor, seven obbligato instruments an strings' is a mature work of Britten's and has echoes of phrases from what by the time of its composition were closely identified with the 'Britten sound'. Again Bostridge sings with such purity of line and intense communication. His voice and thinking are married in a perfect effect.
Perhaps it is the fact that Bostridge commits his concert time to demanding lieder recitals with piano that makes him one of the most sought after vocal artists of the day. When he steps in front of an orchestra, especially such as the Berlin ensemble with Rattle on the podium, he is wholly at home with these beautiful but technically difficult cycles, and the degree of communication of both the music and the poetry are extraordinary. An added bonus with this CD is the personal set of program notes written by Bostridge. Highly recommended. Grady Harp, November 05
EXCELLENT SINGING: OUSTANDING PLAYING.......2005-11-23
The very opening bars of Les Illuminations give a thrilling taste of excitements to come as the violins and violas throw the fanfares from side to side of the stereo spectrum. In the hands of the Berlin Phil, Les Illuminations reveals itself to be as big a compendium of string orchestra techniques as the Frank Bridge Variations. Here are wonderfully light harmonics, creepy harmonic glissandos, perfectly together full-bodied pizzicati, haunting cantilenas, rich thrumming accompaniments. Ensemble throughout is impressively immaculate. Antique is hauntingly beautiful, Being Beauteous achingly so. Bostridge's singing is also impressive in these Rimbaud settings, bringing to some of the songs a real baritonal quality to set beside his more familiar headtones - perhaps suggesting that a Pelleas from him might be an interesting proposition. For me, the sound of the original soprano voice works better in these songs (they were first done by Sophie Weiss): it rises freer and cleaner of the string accompaniments. But Bostridge is fine among the tenor versions, up there with Pears himself.
The Serenade fares a little less well after such an impressive opening. Maybe the horn player, Radek Baborak, is to blame. He seems a little cautious - the phrases of the Prologue and Epilogue seem a little disjointed, the keening sounds of Blake's Sick Rose lack the last ounce of passionate commitment, the scary glissandi in the Lyke Wake Dirge are barely touched in compared to the hair-raising whoops of a Tuckwell or even a Brain and Ben Jonson's Queen and Huntress doesn't have quite the lightness of step she should. Bostridge, too, seems to be straining a bit hard and Fischer-Dieskau-like to get the last ounce of meaning from the text. The plosive 't' at the end of 'elephant' in Cotton's Pastoral practically splashes the listener. He has recorded the Serenade before (also with a German orchestra) and despite the wonderful playing here of the Berlin strings - their splendour falls magnificently on Tennyson's castle walls - it's the earlier version I would prefer.
The horn player is better in his onomatopoeic Middleton song in the Nocturne. Indeed, all the soloists are excellent in this cycle and I would single out Stefan Schweigert's bassoon solo in The Kraken for particular praise. The Nocturne always seems to get rather short shrift in comparison to the Serenade or even Les Illuminations. For me it is the finest of the three cycles. It is a central piece among Britten's explorations of sleep around that time - the Dream, the guitar Nocturnal, the piano Notturno, 'Let us Sleep' in War Requiem and 'Dormi nunc' in the Cantata Misericordium are all roughly contemporaneous. It is also more of a cycle than the Serenade with its linking 'breathing' motif on the strings (which was actually rescued from a setting of Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal, written for but rejected from the Serenade). Bostridge is better here with a little less obvious pointing of words. He copes with the magical melismas of the Coleridge setting well. He holds nothing back in Wordsworth's nightmare recollections of the September Massacres with a full-bodied scream on the parlando 'Sleep no more'. Owen's Kind Ghosts sound more than ever like a precursor of the Owen settings in War Requiem and Rattle secures a wonderfully heavy tread from his string players. Perhaps only Pears had the secret of those magic Britten phrases that flow straight through the natural break in the voice (the arch of 'Thus I my best beloved's am' at the end of Canticle 1 or the rising Dona nobis pacem in War Requiem come to mind): Bostridge can't quite match him in the similar phrase for the last couplet of the Shakespeare Sonnet, but for the rest he does achieve a near perfect balance of melodic line with judicious pointing of Shakespeare's pun-fest.
The playing of the Berlin Philharmonic again is a joy to hear in this song. The voicing of the chord when all the obbligato instruments and the strings play together for the first time at the beginning of the Shakespeare is breathtaking and Rattle makes the climax of the Sonnet (and indeed the whole cycle) an overwhelming moment. The recording quality throughout this disc is superb - crystal clear but with true warmth and depth. Bostridge contributes a fascinating essay to the booklet and all the texts are there, too. All in all, an outstanding issue.
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Illuminations
Kartik Seshadri , and Arup Chaterjee Manufacturer: Trad. Crossroads ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000C6NNV0 Release Date: 2006-02-07 |
Tracks:
- Alap, Joe And Jhala
- Gat In Jhaptala
- Aochar And Gat In Teentala
Customer Reviews:
Amazing CD, Amazing Artist.......2003-11-08
I had the honor of attending his concert at the Pabst Theatre in Milwaukee. The Basant Mukhari gat is fantastic. He is a genius and a legend, and hearing him is a must!
Illuminating indeed........2003-04-06
Looking back, I would have to say that was one of the better CD-purchasing decisions of my life. The meditative beauty and rhythmic elegance of the music on this album is simply wonderful. It's next to impossible not to close your eyes and sway to the rhythm, and get lost in the depths of the soundscapes. The technical side of my music appreciation is also thankful for the excellent recording quality, with little noticable background noise and great tone.
If you enjoy classical Indian music at all, then buy this album and Guruvandhana, and you'll love it even more.
Good Alap: Bad Gat!.......2002-12-08
The good news is there's 25 minutes of alap. The bad news is there's 37 minutes of gat. (Basant Mukhari is mostly gat.)
Most Amazing Sitarist.......2002-03-17
Illuminations.......2000-08-19
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Ravel: Shéhérazade - Debussy: La damoiselle elue - Britten: Les illuminations / McNair, Graham, Ozawa
Maurice Ravel , Claude Debussy , Benjamin Britten , Seiji Ozawa , Sylvia McNair , Susan Graham , and Boston Symphony Orchestra Manufacturer: Philips ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000DI3P Release Date: 1998-11-10 |
Tracks:
- Sheherazade: Asie
- Sheherazade: La flute enchantee
- Sheherazade: L'indifferent
- Les illuminations: Fanfare
- Les illuminations: Villes
- Les illuminations: Phrase
- Les illuminations: Antique
- Les illuminations: Royaute
- Les illuminations: Marine
- Les illuminations: Interlude
- Les illuminations: Being Beauteous
- Les illuminations: Parade
- Les illuminations: Depart
- La damoiselle elue
Customer Reviews:
This is an excellent album........2007-01-28
a very good program, but poorly served by Ozawa.......2006-12-07
I'll go so far as to say that where Boulez is intoxicating with this music, Ozawa seems intoxicated: it's really not too much of a stretch to think that he might be slightly inebriated, not fully aware of what's going on in the score and, in his stupor, failing to understand how he might reveal the subtle nuances and shades of color and expression that it contains.
To be sure, McNair's singing is gorgeous, and the playing of the Boston Symphony leaves nothing to be desired. But there's no significant contribution of leadership and direction from their conductor.
What saves the disc, and the reason for three stars and not only two, is that the Britten and the Debussy that round out the program are fascinating lesser-known pieces. Furthermore they are not as subtle than the Ravel, and therefore more immune to Ozawa's daft, vapid conducting: their meaning and expression still come through, as they doesn't require the masterful interpretation that Boulez brings to Shéhérazade in order to convey their meaning.
In all, then, this is an admirable recital disc for McNair, a very important program to add to your collection, and as I am a real fan of the Boston Symphony, I'm glad to have another record of their playing. But Ozawa really detracts from a disc that might otherwise have been the equal of Boulez's genuine masterpiece of an album.
Typically French, Classically beautiful.......2001-04-05
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Britten: Serenade/Les Illuminations/Nocturne
Manufacturer: Nimbus Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00005YBAF Release Date: 1992-12-02 |
Customer Reviews:
Jerry Hadley: Ave Atque Vale.......2007-07-18
Jerry Hadley was another American product, born in the US, trained here and under the tutelage of Joan Sutherland and Richard Bonynge, and made it to the stages of the New York City Opera, the Metropolitan Opera, Glyndebourne, Covent Garden etc, and recorded not only superb performances of Mozart operas and others but also gave a bow to operetta and musical theater. His voice was rich, full, dark when necessary and thrillingly bel canto in roles too infrequently heard. His stage presence was that of a handsome, dashing leading man and audiences loved him.
For this listener this very special recording of the works of Benjamin Britten is one of his finest and while it is variably available, perhaps now it will be re-mastered for wider distribution. In each of the three works on this very well produced CD - 'Les illuminations' Op. 18, 'Serenade, for tenor, horn & strings' Op. 31, and Nocturne, for tenor, 7 instruments & strings, Op. 60 - Hadley's concept of the poetry is sincere and unlike many other recordings of these works his diction is flawless. One wonders why orchestral concerts across the country did not utilize Jerry Hadley more frequently for these works.
The recording is well balanced with fine collaboration from the English String Orchestra as conducted by William Boughton. Anthony Halstead provides the gentle and technically superb French Horn performance in the Serenade. Many still prefer the initial Peter Pears recordings of these works for sentimental reasons and there have been other excellent recordings by both women (in the 'Les illuminations') and other tenors, but Jerry Hadley approached these vocally demanding little jewels with a profound respect of the composer's intentions. It is a recording that will always be a fitting tribute to a very fine tenor whose career was tragically foreshortened. Recommendation: add this CD to your collection - it IS available! Grady Harp, July 07
Almost as good as Pears.......2003-05-30
Jerry Hadley doesn't quite match the intensity that Pears' performances had, but they are fine nonetheless. The differences are most notable in the middle sections of the Serenade, which Pears made absolutely electrifying. But it certainly is good to have these neglected works in up-to-date digital recordings.
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Britten: Serenade; Les Illuminations; Nocturne
Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000FIHMH6 Release Date: 2006-05-08 |
Tracks:
- Serenade For Tenor, Horn & Strings, Op. 31
- Les Illuminations, Op. 18
- Nocturne For Tenor, Seven Obbligato Instruments & Strings, Op. 60
Album Details
The Three Orchestral Song Cycles Collected Here Are Central to the Britten Canon of Recorded Repertoire and Whereas Pears' Other Recordings of the Serenade and Les Illuminations (With Boyd Neel and Benjamin Britten as Conductors) have Been in Circulation, this Mono Recording with Goossens Receives Its First and Much-anticipated Release on CD. All Three Recordings Date from the 1950s and Catch Pears in Full Vocal Flight.
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Illuminations
McCoy Tyner Manufacturer: Telarc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000294RQM Release Date: 2004-06-22 |
Tracks:
- Illuminations
- Angelina
- New Orleans Stomp
- Come Rain Or Come Shine
- Soulstice
- Blessings
- If I Should Lose You
- The Chase
- West Philly Tone Poem
- Alone Together
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Illuminations
Wishbone Ash Manufacturer: Renaissance ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000005NNX Release Date: 1996-11-19 |
Tracks:
- Mountainside
- On Your Own
- Top Of The World
- No Joke
- Tales Of The Wise
- Another TIme
- A Thousand Years
- The Ring
- Comfort Zone
- Mystery Man
- Wait Out The Storm
- The Crack Of Dawn (Bonus Instrumental Track)
Album Description
UK budget-price reissue of the British hard-rock act's long awaited comeback album, originally released in 1996. 12 tracks including the bonus instrumental 'The Crack Of Dawn'. Talking Elephant.Customer Reviews:
Viva Twin Guitars City.......2005-02-27
Nice.......2004-11-19
illuminations is " illuminating ".......2003-06-14
Cool album with "Yes"-like 70's quality made in 1996........2002-07-08
Air guitar heaven.......2002-05-21
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Illuminations
McCoy Tyner Manufacturer: Telarc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000294RQ2 Release Date: 2004-06-22 |
Tracks:
- Illuminations
- Angelina
- New Orleans Stomp
- Come Rain Or Come Shine
- Soulstice
- Blessings
- If I Should Lose You
- The Chase
- West Philly Tone Poem
- Alone Together
Amazon.com
Tyner is first among equals here in a meeting of special talents. It's the traditional quintet instrumentation of modern jazz, with trumpeter Terence Blanchard and altoist Gary Bartz in the frontline and Christian McBride and Lewis Nash in the rhythm section. Few contemporary drummers can spark the joyous conviviality that's the mark of this session, but Lewis Nash provides a rhythmic backdrop that's as secure and as sparkling as that of the late Billy Higgins. It shows in almost all of these 10 surprisingly concise performances, including Tyner's Latin-based "Angelina" (with wonderfully liquid lines from Bartz) and the soulful funk rhythms of "New Orleans Stomp." Tyner reveals some of the sheer trip-hammer brilliance of his right hand on the uptempo "Chase," a trio feature, but this is generally a relaxed session, full of collective spirit and wonderfully lyrical moments. Blanchard does some special things on the standards, including the signature half-valves that add emotional drama to "Alone Together." --Stuart BroomerCustomer Reviews:
a democracy of playing.......2006-11-07
the music here is all too contemporary, which isn't all bad when you consider the contemporary players, nash, blanchard, mcbride, tyner has chosen. but that's just it, he's chosen them almost as a showcase, and these established performers hardly need showcasing. the cd belongs to them, with tyner and bartz sitting in as elder statesmen of jazz.
gary bartz is a reflective saxophonist given to flights of magic when inspired by his personal muse and here that magic is missing.
a nice album, some latin tinged numbers and melodic pieces. and everyone under fifty gets plenty of time, particularly terance blanchard under whose rubic this cd could easily had been released.
Great...fabulous.......2006-02-20
good music with a medium quality sound.......2004-09-14
Excellent Music - Not So Good Recording.......2004-08-16
I got hooked on McCoy Tyner on his _Land of Giants_ CD - which is an amazing CD, great music and a truly spectacular recording and transfer to disc. Illuminations is even better for a music point of view - but in my stereo system at home - instead of being blown away, I was dissappointed.
The recording seems to have lost some of the brilliance of the drums (they sounded flat as if something was wrong with the drums or the miking of the drums) and the overall presence of the music was much less than it could have been (it sounded as if someone had tossed a veil over my speakers!) - it was billed as being a "direct from DSD transfer" but boy did that not seem to help at all! It got a little bit better on the following tracks, but the drums never seemed to get fixed which ruined the whole album for me. The average recording level seemed really low as well - making me crank up the volume to get the same level of loudness from most other albums making me think that someone had not adjusted the level and done their job in crafting the music. As you could see, I had spent a lot of my time wondering what went wrong rather than getting lost in the music as I had done upon pressing "play" in his Land of Giants disc. I consider something gone horribly wrong with the technical mastering/creation of this disc!
Since my home stereo is a bit revealing, I though I would give it a second chance and I listened to it in my car - and it sounded a bit better though the drums sounded really flat either way. For my money, I hoped that the sound engineers had done a better job in mastering, but CD recording quality is very uneven even today, even in Jazz titles. [Note that the sound is better than the Real Player samples on Amazon, though not a huge amount better!]
If you want stuff from this artist - check out Land of Giants which is a great performance and recording - I am not sure what went wrong in the transfer to disc, but I would not have bought this album in hindsight.
In summary: Great Artist, Great Music, Medoicre Sound Quality.
Public radio thank you for promoting jazz!!!.......2004-07-29
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- Les Hommes
- Longitude
- Matador
- Modern Jazz Quartet: 1957
- Monk Alone: The Complete Solo Studio Recordings of Thelonious Monk 1962-1968 [Original recording remastered]
