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John Zorn - Dreamers (CD)

Dreamers
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Album Details: Dreamers

Release Date:02/19/2008
Label:Tzadik
UPC:702397736622

Pro Reviews: Dreamers

  • All Music Guide

    The Dreamers, by John Zorn and his septet, is for all practical purposes a sequel of sorts to 2001's The Gift, which was and perhaps remains Zorn's most "accessible" record. That said, there some key differences in the approach to this new set. Most of the band from the former record are back: guitarist Marc Ribot is here, as are keyboardist Jamie Saft, drummer Joey Baron, bassist Trevor Dunn (who was one of three bassists on The Gift), and percussionist Cyro Baptista. Zorn does play some alto saxophone as well, but his performance is not prevalent as an instrumentalist. Dave Douglas' trumpet is absent, and has been replaced by the vibes work of Kenny Wollesen. The music? It's funnier in a way, trickier and more exotic without being "exotica" the way The Gift was. In fact, one can hear the actual influences on Zorn's musical consciousness, literally pick them out track for track on The Dreamers. The devotion the composer has for popular styles is well documented whether from film no...ir and exploitation movie soundtracks, surf music, incidental commercial music, library records, etc. Things are fairly straightforward here until "Toys," track five of this 11cut, nearly 53minute album. "Mow Mow," which may be a play on the term "Mau Mau," is a nearly straightahead surf ballad that comes more from the Ventures than from Dick Dale. It's not blasted with reverb and its tempo is easy and breezy, offering a twilight look at the world. The beautiful organ work by Saft and the timing of Wollesen's vibes are uncanny, as they bracket Ribot's understated and elegant guitar work. The piece croons and drifts its way though several surf motifs before whispering to a close. "Uluwati" threatens to become another surf number, but instead it veers left and becomes a kind of incidental television theme number. One can picture a blend of The Simpsons and The Jetsons here, with the interplay between the guitars and vibes and the reverbed hand percussion skittering in the backdrop. This is the way Piero Umiliani would sound with Duane Eddy. As unlikely as it may seem, television theme music rears its head in the piece immediately following this one, too. "A Ride on Cottonfair" evokes no one if not Vince Guaraldi and his Peanuts themes. It swings and is full of striking, even knottily percussive righthand work by Saft, but it's woven so tightly into the melody that the improvisation that does take place pushed forward by the incredible brushwork of Baron and Dunn's upright bass solo feels like the interlude in an episodic cartoon. Wonderful stuff. "Anulikwutsayl," the fourth cut, is a nineminute workout for guitar, organ, and percussion that goes right to the heart of Santana during his Caravanserai/Welcome period. Ribot sounds nothing like him, using his edgy Fender as opposed to the Les Paul, but the impression is immediate. But it's more than this, too, because it sounds like Santana and Gregg Rolie's organ playing the soundtrack to an Italian spaghetti Western by Bruno Nicolai, Piero Piccioni, Stelvio Cipriani, or the master himself, Ennio Morricone, with odd bits of sound effects slipped into the mix at strategic places including the sounds of screaming, so perhaps there's a bit of Giorgio Gaslini or Claudio Simonetti here as well. No matter it's killer, and you get the idea. Things get a bit stranger on the brief "Toys," where surf, the Tijuana Brass, flamenco, fusion, and soundtrack music from noirish sources meet teensploitation beachblanket bongout flicks and insane Japanese hyperanimated cartoons. It's brief but big and changes the feel and direction of the record. Zorn is also is upfront with Ribot and Saft on this one, and Wollesen paints the backdrop with vibes about a quarter step behind the beat. Needless to say, in one of the two breaks, Zorn lets loose a torrent of his improvisational skronk, but picks up the tune seamlessly when it comes back around, letting his vibist take it out on the free side. always brilliant design work speaks directly to the inherent aesthetic bankruptcy on the part of NARAS.) - Thom Jurek, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

John Zorn

It is possible to call John Zorn a "jazz" musician, but that would be much too limiting a description. While jazz feeling is present in a good deal of his work, and the idea of improvisation is vitally important to him, Zorn doesn't operate within any idiom's framework, drawing from just about any musical, cultural or noise source that a fellow who grew up in the TV and... Read more