Search - John Zorn :: Gift

Gift
John Zorn
Gift
Genres: International Music, Jazz, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1


     
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CD Details

All Artists: John Zorn
Title: Gift
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Tzadik
Release Date: 3/27/2001
Genres: International Music, Jazz, Pop, Rock
Styles: Avant Garde & Free Jazz, Jazz Fusion, Easy Listening, Oldies & Retro
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 702397733225

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CD Reviews

The other reviewers don't get it -- ignore them
01/10/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"the gift isn't any of the things you read here. it is lounge music for the 00's. some of ribot's stylish gutar playing is indeed surf like but the basis of the music is latin beats so this isn't surf. the melodies are strong, the band is excellent, and the arrangements (which is zorn's greatest tallent, exploiting the individual talents of the players in the composition as well as the arrangement) are ingeneous. this is no parody of lounge music (which is boring and of which there is enough already) it is respectful and exploits the values of lounge effectively in an updated context.that's all very well but what earns this disk 5 stars is its extraordinary feel. initially it sounds just like those 50's pop instrumentals: happy, carefree, upbeat. but you quickly get the idea that something is wrong. the smile is slowly turning into a sinister grin. as the cd moves on this aspect begins to dominate and the music becomes tense with evil. the intent is made clear with the last track; a grotesque reprise of the first. it's as though the music has been secretly invaded and taken over by an invisible, sinister force like in a cheesy horror movie: the face still has a vapid smile on it but you can see that behind it is a body posessed by evil.this therefore functions as a powerful critique of 50s american life: vapid, hypocritical and secretly sinister. this is quite an achievement for an instrumental cd. the packaging and art (which is really nothing to get excited about) is another metaphor of the same deciet: evil wrapped as a gift."
The quiet dream of a jazz-thrash artist
SPM | Eugene, Oregon | 10/26/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Zorn's reputation comes from his noisy cut-up music. It seems like he's either recording a complex collage of sound effects or he's squealing his way through a Masada improv. From Painkiller to Leng T'che, the guy knows how to melt a speaker or two.This album --- a collection of beautiful, playful melodies --- seems to be out of character. But it's not. Scattered throughout the massive Zorn catalogue are dozens of songs like these. Just
listen to Bar Kokhba or his soundtrack to Port of Last Resort and you'll see he's been here before.The real step forward on this album is an eerie tension that underlies every song. Somehow, there's a *threat* lurking in the surf music and the gentle trumpet solos. Is it in the composition, or should we credit the musicians? I have no idea. I just know that after the sixth or seventh time I heard this album, I heard more than pretty background music."
A beautiful piece of art with a very sinister reverse side
Henri Kovalainen | Finland | 10/28/2002
(4 out of 5 stars)

"It's very intelligible why some people find this album offensive. It is indeed quite provoking in many ways. On the other hand, it's a shame people have to flood these outbursts here where they might be seen as proper criticism.The musical style or the medium is something Zorn is no doubt very familiar with: 50's "Surf music". Musically speaking it's all easy, cool and serene and that's exactly the thing that makes it all work so well as a whole. If you never saw the covers and maybe never played the last couple of tracks, chances are you would never understand what the album is about.The "package" is not what it appears to be. That is the message both visually and musically.Some people take this personally and as I said it's only natural, but in my opinion the message is intended for all humankind. The history is filled with eras that could be subjected to the same kind of criticism. Who knows, maybe all of history could, but here Zorn gave the 50's a piece of its share."