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Shuffle Play: Elegies for the Recording Angel
John Schott, Ensemble Diglossia
Shuffle Play: Elegies for the Recording Angel
Genres: International Music, Jazz, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (28) - Disc #1

Composer-guitarist John Schott has a fascination with the past, as well as with the convergence of idioms. It shows up in his work with the band Junk Genius, in which he plays free jazz with a National steel guitar, but it...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: John Schott, Ensemble Diglossia
Title: Shuffle Play: Elegies for the Recording Angel
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: New World Records
Release Date: 10/3/2000
Genres: International Music, Jazz, Pop
Style: Avant Garde & Free Jazz
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 093228054825, 093228054825

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Composer-guitarist John Schott has a fascination with the past, as well as with the convergence of idioms. It shows up in his work with the band Junk Genius, in which he plays free jazz with a National steel guitar, but it's central to this extended composition, too. The basis of the work is a series of ancient recordings, scratchy near-inaudible cylinders from the end of the 19th century that include "Twinkle Twinkle, Little Star," whistling, speeches, and a bugle call. These are used as backdrops or central voices in several of the 28 pieces that make up Shuffle Play, pieces that range from pointillist modern classical composition to free jazz to mixtures of the two. Tracks vary in length from atmospheric bits as brief as 10 seconds to more than seven minutes, while Schott's Ensemble Diglossia expands from individual soloists through small improvising groups to reach an 11-member chamber ensemble of reeds, strings, and percussion for four tracks. Shuffle Play is intended to be played with a CD player's "shuffle" selector, each "performance" creating a new work with a different ordering of messages. Schott includes Julio Cortazar's novel Hopscotch in his bibliography, and his method seems directly derived from the book's instructions for varied reading sequences. The significance of individual parts changes with altered context, particularly as the most potent tracks move around. Track 21, combining eerie strings and the vibrating depths of contra-alto clarinet with a Passamaquody Indian snake-dance song, and track 20, virtually the Junk Genius quartet improvising on the early African American "Poor Mourner" by Cousins and DeMoss, are strong stuff. Though the compositional frame and its processes are intriguing, any of the longer tracks can stand alone as fully realized music. The improvised input from several players--clarinetist Ben Goldberg, saxophonist Dan Plonsey, trombonist Tom Yoder, and drummer Scott Amendola--is especially distinguished. --Stuart Broomer
 

CD Reviews

A Unique CD
L. L. Daugherty | San Jose, CA | 11/19/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I'll be honest - after my first listen of this CD I was mildly disappointed, thinking it dissonate but I liked the music. It reminded me of the Club Foot Orchestra with a bit of Mingus tossed in. I played it again on 'shuffle' and listened more carefully. The brilliance of the whole began to shine with that and subsequent playings.The leit motif of the CD is a song called 'Poor Mourner', an African American song recorded in 1897 by Cousins & De Mos (according to the liner notes) which Mr. Schott has sampled throughout. Other tracks sample various old recordings and recitals, layered with original pieces by a group of wonderfully talented musicians. Their original works (jazz with a nod toward classical from time to time) utilize Poor Mourner as inspiration; the music is intense, thoughtful, played with a precision that does not belay its emotion and power.It is a true elegy, a dirge for the wonder and creative possibilities introduced with the advent of sound recordings, an innocence that was quickly lost. Today, so much popular music is canned pap, fed to us by radio stations who feel justified in telling us what is and isn't appropriate to listen to, that it becomes difficult to break through the clutter.Let Mr. Schott lead you away from the cultural vacuity of today's popular music into a beautiful, strange landscape that frees your mind to soar, recreating the wonder and fancy of a bygone time mingled with the fiercely creative jazz of the current day."