Uri Caine - Moloch: The Book of Angels, Vol. 6

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Album Details

Title: Moloch: The Book of Angels, Vol. 6
Artist: Uri Caine
Release Date: 11/21/2006
Label: Tzadik Records
UPC: 702397736028
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Modern Creative, Modern Composition, Folk Jazz, Avant-Garde Jazz, Jazz Instrument, Saxophone Jazz
Moods: Complex, Passionate, Reflective, Searching, Exuberant, Playful, Sophisticated, Autumnal, Elegant, Organic, Ambitious, Cerebral, Freewheeling, Provocative, Rollicking, Romantic
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 2
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Rimmon
  2. Domiel
  3. Mehriel
  4. Savliel
  5. Tufrial
  6. Jerazol
  7. Harshiel
  8. Dumah
  9. Harviel
  10. Segef
  11. Sahriel
  12. Shokad
  13. Zophiel
  14. Hayyoth
  15. Nuriel
  16. Ubaviel
  17. Hadrial
  18. Cassiel
  19. Rimmon

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2006CDTzadik Records7360

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Six is a balanced number. There is no tipping it into the ether. Therefore, Uri Caine's volume in John Zorn's second Masada book, Moloch is the perfect sixth. It is a series of 19 short solo piano pieces from just under two minutes to just over six. They range from jazz, classical and near stride pieces -- sometime in the same selection, as in "Segef" -- to mysterious pieces with jewish folk melodies inserted into their spines: "Kebriel," "Cassiel" and "Sabriel" all come to mind. In addition to Zorn's compositions, Caine's sense of playfulness and drama is everywhere present. He is a jazz and roots music pianist almost non pareil. One question is whether this record is as outside and manic, say, as Koby Israelite's brilliant volume four, Orobas, is. No, it's not. It's a bit more mysterious, a lot more elliptical and conventionally "melodic," whatever that means. Israelite's Orobas was as stunning an interpretation of Zorn's Masada work as there is. But like that volume, and indeed every one in the Book of Angels series, this one is as much a collaboration as an interpretation. There is never a place here where Zorn's identity is in the music and Caine's is not, or vice versa. Check both versions of "Rimmon" that open and close the disc. One is under five minutes and the latter is over six. Check the way Caine handles Zorn's melody and harmonies and the way he finds room inside them to express his unique voice as a pianist. He is also a composer and arranger of no small skill, and his manner of moving through the material and engaging it harmonically from different places in the composer's syntax is nothing less than astonishing. That said, there also isn't a note here that doesn't drip with soul. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Heung-Heung "Chippy" ChinDesign
John ZornProducer
Kazunori SugiyamaAssociate Producer
Scott HullMastering
Silas BrownEngineer
Uri CaineArranger, Piano