Create account Log in

Blue Balkan - Then & Now

[Edit]

Download links and information about Blue Balkan - Then & Now by Larry Vuckovich. This album was released in 2002 and it belongs to Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, World Music genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 01:13:19 minutes.

Artist: Larry Vuckovich
Release date: 2002
Genre: Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, World Music
Tracks: 13
Duration: 01:13:19
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Serbo Samba (featuring Eddie Marshall, Vince Delgado, Eric Golub, Jeff Chambers) 5:50
2. Blue Balkan (featuring Bobby Hutcherson, Paul Breslin, Eddie Moore, Eric Golub) 8:46
3. Suite Sanna (featuring Eddie Marshall, Vince Delgado, Jeff Chambers) 8:40
4. Belgrade Blues (featuring Bobby Hutcherson, Paul Breslin, Eddie Moore, Eric Golub) 6:55
5. After Hours (featuring Paul Breslin, Eddie Moore) 4:07
6. Larry's Dance (featuring Bobby Hutcherson, Paul Breslin, Eddie Moore, Eric Golub) 6:06
7. Loving Linda (featuring Bobby Hutcherson, Paul Breslin, Eddie Moore) 5:11
8. Adriatic Nights (featuring Eddie Marshall, Vince Delgado, Eric Golub, Jeff Chambers) 6:03
9. Motherless Child/ O Javore (featuring Eric Golub) 3:55
10. Changes (featuring Eddie Marshall, John Heard) 4:29
11. In Your Own Sweet Way (featuring Bobby Hutcherson, Paul Breslin, Eddie Moore) 6:14
12. Mediterranean Nights (featuring John Heard, Eric Golub) 3:53
13. O Javore (featuring Eric Golub) 3:10

Details

[Edit]

Pianist Larry Vuckovich revisits his landmark 1980 recording on this combined reissue and new release. Prefiguring the much-lauded work of Dave Douglas and the Tiny Bell Trio, guitarist Brad Shepik, and even John Zorn, the Yugoslavian-born Vuckovich combines the ethnic melodies and rhythms from his native Balkans with modal jazz. Never as avant-garde as his contemporaries, Vuckovich nonetheless pushes the boundaries of both jazz and folk styles. The original tracks featured the brilliant vibe playing of Bobby Hutcherson, who unfortunately does not reprise his role on the four new pieces. Nonetheless, with the adroit violinist Eric Golub returning and the capable hands of Tommy Kesecker replacing Hutcherson on marimba, the new tracks on Blue Balkan are superb additions that set this album securely in a modern context. Taken as a whole, these are angular, cubist, post-bop compositions reminiscent of late-'60s McCoy Tyner and John Coltrane. The gypsy-style melodies, authentically believable on their own, work effortlessly with the modal underpinning of Vuckovich's writing, making for an edgy and often incendiary listen. A forgotten connection to world music, fans of Dizzy Gillespie's Latin jazz forays and even the downtown New York Knitting Factory scene would do well to check this out.