The Classic Guide To Strategy Vol. I & Ii
Download links and information about The Classic Guide To Strategy Vol. I & Ii by John Zorn. This album was released in 1996 and it belongs to Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, Free Jazz, Avant Garde Metal, Alternative, Classical genres. It contains 8 tracks with total duration of 01:17:42 minutes.
Artist: | John Zorn |
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Release date: | 1996 |
Genre: | Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, Free Jazz, Avant Garde Metal, Alternative, Classical |
Tracks: | 8 |
Duration: | 01:17:42 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Part 1 | 19:36 |
2. | Part 2 (Cartoon Music) | 19:30 |
3. | Aoyama Michi | 11:13 |
4. | Enoken | 3:19 |
5. | Katsumi Shigeru | 6:32 |
6. | Kondo Toshinori | 6:02 |
7. | Togawa Jun | 8:52 |
8. | Mori Ikue | 2:38 |
Details
[Edit]The Classic Guide to Strategy, Volumes One & Two presents two Zorn albums from the mid-'80s which have long been out of print. Featuring a variety of manipulated saxophones, clarinets, and duck calls, the album plays at the edges of sounds traditionally associated with reed instruments. The album is not entirely accessible, especially Volume One — if it were produced by a college student sowing his experimental oats after a giddy term at BAM, it would probably be labeled a failure for its eccentricity, abruptness, and lack of a coherent theme. However, when a line is drawn through Zorn's previous work, it ends up here — the playfulness of sound, the variety of textures, the use of silence and space as part of the composition — if the listener approaches this album expecting to find musical genius, he or she will not have to look too far. Zorn manufactures the sounds of animals, voices, squeaks, scraps of melodic lines, drowning (or at least dampened) beasts, and cartoon worlds with his reeds, paying homage to the work of Carl Stalling, as well as the sounds of Anthony Braxton and Evan Parker. The first two tracks on this collection represent the original volume one; the last five belonged to the original volume two. Stylistically, they are similar, with the second volume containing less spacial breaks between the musical bursts and each song paying tribute to avant-garde Japanese artists like Mori Ikue, Enoken, Kondo Toshinori, Katsumi Shigeru, Aoyama Michi, and Togawa Jun.