John Zorn Music
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Used price: $12.92
Disc 1
- City City City
- The Legend of Enos Slaughter
- Who's on First?
- On Golden Pond
- The Warning Track

More Bailey than Zorn...Review Date: 2005-07-28
Listen-proof ZornReview Date: 2004-04-27
If you like his really, really difficult music, then you might go for this one. It's improv, and there's little structured musical content here. Not hardcore--just not pleasurable.
Superb!Review Date: 2001-05-03
Used price: $3.99
Disc 1
- City City City
- The Legend of Enos Slaughter
- Who's on First?
- On Golden Pond
- The Warning Track

More Bailey than Zorn...Review Date: 2005-07-28
But there's some early recordings where this isn't the case, where Zorn was still developing his vocabulary and his sounds, where he was still the "game piece" guy rather than anything else. "Yankees", recorded in 1982, is just one of those pieces-- still playng an assortmetn of reeds and game calls and before any of his classic albums were completed, its little wonder that Zorn's personality is somewhat subsumed beneath the elder Derek Bailey.
This trio (Bailey on guitars, Zorn on reeds, George Lewis on trombone) exists largely inside Bailey idiom-- the scratching, scraping, and meandering and vast use of space that Bailey's music has at its best is apparent here, and the three play improvisations in these regards. At its best, its evokes imagery more powerful than one would believe possible-- "City City City" FEELS like a walk down a city block, but at its worst, its feels like nothing ("On Golden Pond").
I suspect Bailey fans would be more interested in this than zorn fans-- for myself, Derek Bailey's music appeals to me more from a theoretical than an actual standpoint. Its a decent listen, but I doubt I'll ever pull it out of my racks more than once or twice a year.
Listen-proof ZornReview Date: 2004-04-27
If you like his really, really difficult music, then you might go for this one. It's improv, and there's little structured musical content here. Not hardcore--just not pleasurable.
Superb!Review Date: 2001-05-03

Disc 1
- City City City
- The Legend of Enos Slaughter
- Who's on First?
- On Golden Pond
- The Warning Track

More Bailey than Zorn...Review Date: 2005-07-28
But there's some early recordings where this isn't the case, where Zorn was still developing his vocabulary and his sounds, where he was still the "game piece" guy rather than anything else. "Yankees", recorded in 1982, is just one of those pieces-- still playng an assortmetn of reeds and game calls and before any of his classic albums were completed, its little wonder that Zorn's personality is somewhat subsumed beneath the elder Derek Bailey.
This trio (Bailey on guitars, Zorn on reeds, George Lewis on trombone) exists largely inside Bailey idiom-- the scratching, scraping, and meandering and vast use of space that Bailey's music has at its best is apparent here, and the three play improvisations in these regards. At its best, its evokes imagery more powerful than one would believe possible-- "City City City" FEELS like a walk down a city block, but at its worst, its feels like nothing ("On Golden Pond").
I suspect Bailey fans would be more interested in this than zorn fans-- for myself, Derek Bailey's music appeals to me more from a theoretical than an actual standpoint. Its a decent listen, but I doubt I'll ever pull it out of my racks more than once or twice a year.
Listen-proof ZornReview Date: 2004-04-27
If you like his really, really difficult music, then you might go for this one. It's improv, and there's little structured musical content here. Not hardcore--just not pleasurable.
Superb!Review Date: 2001-05-03
Used price: $3.27
Disc 1
- Xu Feng (Excerpt)
- Improvisation on Halfinet
- Radio's Broken
- How Scientific Theories Are Verified
- Gateway
- 4 Corners, Pt. 3
- Mumbul
- Ap: 27 Bits
- Railyard Meditation
- Weave, Unravel (For Baci)
- Recent Music
Related Subjects:
More Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
But there's some early recordings where this isn't the case, where Zorn was still developing his vocabulary and his sounds, where he was still the "game piece" guy rather than anything else. "Yankees", recorded in 1982, is just one of those pieces-- still playng an assortmetn of reeds and game calls and before any of his classic albums were completed, its little wonder that Zorn's personality is somewhat subsumed beneath the elder Derek Bailey.
This trio (Bailey on guitars, Zorn on reeds, George Lewis on trombone) exists largely inside Bailey idiom-- the scratching, scraping, and meandering and vast use of space that Bailey's music has at its best is apparent here, and the three play improvisations in these regards. At its best, its evokes imagery more powerful than one would believe possible-- "City City City" FEELS like a walk down a city block, but at its worst, its feels like nothing ("On Golden Pond").
I suspect Bailey fans would be more interested in this than zorn fans-- for myself, Derek Bailey's music appeals to me more from a theoretical than an actual standpoint. Its a decent listen, but I doubt I'll ever pull it out of my racks more than once or twice a year.