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Hargreaves, Noyes, Duplant - Malachi FLAC album

Tracklist

Porter Attention À Ce Qui Va Suivre
Se Lever Avant Le Jour
Garder Les Choses Comme Elles Sont
Parfois Ne Penser À Rien
Oublier Que Le Temps Passe
Demander À La Poussière
S'aimer Le Temps D'une Éternité
Croire Que Tout Est Possible
Écouter Systématiquement Son Coeur

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
insubcdr07 Hargreaves*, Noyes*, Duplant* Hargreaves*, Noyes*, Duplant* - Malachi ‎(CDr) Insubordinations insubcdr07 Switzerland 2009
insubcdr07 Hargreaves*, Noyes*, Duplant* Hargreaves*, Noyes*, Duplant* - Malachi ‎(9xFile, MP3, Album) Insubordinations insubcdr07 Switzerland 2009

Hargreaves, Noyes, Duplant - Malachi FLAC album

Musician performer: Hargreaves

Title: Malachi

Country: Switzerland

Date of release: 2009

Style: Free Improvisation

Genre: Jazz

Size FLAC: 1609 mb

Rating: 4.3 / 5

Votes: 432

Other Formats: MOD MP1 VOC FLAC MP4 AC3 AAC

Related to Hargreaves, Noyes, Duplant - Malachi FLAC Albums

CrazyDemon
Phil Hargreaves, Lee Noyes & Bruno Duplant - Malachi (Insubordinations, 2009) ****½This is a piece of modern jazz that I really like. A sax trio that improvises freely, without melody and rhythm, yet with a very controlled and sensitive approach to their music. It all sounds vulnerable and hesititating, which is surprising for musicians that have their background in experimental electronic music and punk, but who play purely acoustic here. The trio consists of Phil Hargreaves on sax, Lee Noyes on percussion and Bruno Duplant on bass. All pieces fall within the same mode of playing: soft, slow, with lots of open spaces and with the three instruments filling the open space with pointillistic phrases and sounds, but sufficiently extended to create a great sense of lyricism. Total free form often leads to a level of abstraction that makes listening difficult, but that is less the case here : the music flows organically, through very concentrated interaction, with lots of respect for each other and the fragile music they create. Yet it intense throughout, and that's possibly the greatest result of the music : the slow tension full of contradictions between freedom and form, between openness and density, between avant-garde and sometimes simple phrases. But it works. It works really well.This album is available for free download on the internet, or in hard copy in limited edition. In my humble opinion, this again demonstrates the lack of knowledge of many labels. This trio deserves to be officially released. While the summer jazz festivals are crammed with commercial artists who are hard to classify as jazz, the real creative jazz artists are kept far away from the undiscerning multitudes. Too bad, too bad. How can we bring the new and creative jazz under a broader attention? It was the objective of this blog, but we're preaching to the converted...Review by Stef Gijselshttp://www.freejazzblog.org/2009/06/phil-hargreaves-lee-noyes-bruno-duplant.html
CrazyDemon
Phil Hargreaves, Lee Noyes & Bruno Duplant - Malachi (Insubordinations, 2009) ****½This is a piece of modern jazz that I really like. A sax trio that improvises freely, without melody and rhythm, yet with a very controlled and sensitive approach to their music. It all sounds vulnerable and hesititating, which is surprising for musicians that have their background in experimental electronic music and punk, but who play purely acoustic here. The trio consists of Phil Hargreaves on sax, Lee Noyes on percussion and Bruno Duplant on bass. All pieces fall within the same mode of playing: soft, slow, with lots of open spaces and with the three instruments filling the open space with pointillistic phrases and sounds, but sufficiently extended to create a great sense of lyricism. Total free form often leads to a level of abstraction that makes listening difficult, but that is less the case here : the music flows organically, through very concentrated interaction, with lots of respect for each other and the fragile music they create. Yet it intense throughout, and that's possibly the greatest result of the music : the slow tension full of contradictions between freedom and form, between openness and density, between avant-garde and sometimes simple phrases. But it works. It works really well.This album is available for free download on the internet, or in hard copy in limited edition. In my humble opinion, this again demonstrates the lack of knowledge of many labels. This trio deserves to be officially released. While the summer jazz festivals are crammed with commercial artists who are hard to classify as jazz, the real creative jazz artists are kept far away from the undiscerning multitudes. Too bad, too bad. How can we bring the new and creative jazz under a broader attention? It was the objective of this blog, but we're preaching to the converted...Review by Stef Gijselshttp://www.freejazzblog.org/2009/06/phil-hargreaves-lee-noyes-bruno-duplant.html