Julian Priester & Marine Intrusion - Polarization

Polarization
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Album Details: Polarization

Release Date:01/01/1977
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Pro Reviews: Polarization

  • All Music Guide

    Julian Priester and his group Marine Intrusion produce sounds that are mostly polarized between gentle Europeanized reflections and probes into the avant-garde, all unified by the soft-focused, airy ECM sonic perspective. Priester does sound very much like J.J. Johnson in the forward thrust of his attacks, and his flutter effects bring back spaced-out memories of his work in the Herbie Hancock Sextet. The opening title track is a thoughtful overdubbed Priester duet with himself that empties directly out into "Rhythm Magnet," with Heshima Mark Williams' electric bass ostinato and relaxed Spanish-tinged piano by Curtis Clark. "Wind Dolphin" begins with a drum solo and soon becomes a series of gentle, then agitated free-form tumblings, all soothed by the ECM ambience. Welcome quantities of funky rhythmic instability and hard-rock flash from guitarist Ray Obeido enter the picture on "Anatomy of Longing." This is an often engaging record from a trombonist too seldom heard as a leader. - Ric...hard S. Ginell, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Julian Priester

Julian Priester was a versatile and highly advanced trombonist capable of playing hard bop, post-bop, RB, fusion, or full-on avant-garde jazz; however, he remains under-appreciated due to the paucity of sessions he recorded under his own name. Priester was born in Chicago on June 29, 1935, and started out on the city's thriving blues and RB scene, playing with artists l... Read more