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Composer and big-band leader Darcy James Argue's blog (secretsociety.typepad.com) contains some of the most literate and invigorating writing about modern jazz and its context--free of cliché, wary of dogma, catholic about tastes, and fastidious about details. The same can be said of Mr. Argue's compositions for the extraordinary ensemble he conducts. A few years ago, this was something of a secret society, playing Manhattan clubs in semi-obscurity. An audience steadily grew, attracted in part via the blog's free downloads of performances, which chronicled the music's development. This debut studio recording reveals something fully matured: brimming with fresh ideas; elegant in its combination of disparate influences (from distorted electric guitar to magisterial wind-instrument arrangements to minimalist rhythms); and accomplished in execution.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
chillingly gorgeous and fantastically retro futuristic,
By Jamimicah (Madison, WI) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Infernal Machines (MP3 Download)
i am less adept at this then i would wish, so i am going to quote Newsweek. suffice it to say, this is a hauntingly gorgeous, beautifully and masterly spun web of sound. A+! *******"For a wholly original take on big band's past, present and future, look to Darcy James Argue, a 33-year-old Brooklynite who has composed a batch of manifestoes that draws on past legacies, and adds a little postpunk energy to boot. A onetime student of big-band visionary Bob Brookmeyer, Argue himself seems a natural product of an era in which genres can be shuffled with ease on iPod playlists. Talking with him, you go from discussing obscure Italian serialist composers to indie bands like TV on the Radio. The composer calls his music "steampunk big band," a reference to the niche art movement that fantasizes about modern tech innovations existing in the steam-powered era. That range is reflected--and, more important, is made frictionless--on Argue's debut record, "Infernal Machines." Argue's tunes can command your attention anywhere--no small feat in our media-saturated world. He and his 18-piece Secret Society band pull off the trick by pairing electro-influenced rhythms with fuzzed-out guitars, fearsome horns and chamber-music voicings in the woodwinds. For all this panstylistic erudition, though, Argue's music still swings hard whenever it wants. "Transit" explodes with an elaborate fire that recalls Mingus's "Let My Children Hear Music." The song "Jacobin Club," named after Robespierre's merry band, slinks with the sly wit of "Such Sweet Thunder"-era Ellington, proving Argue is no enemy of history. Listen on headphones, and you can hear a lot of rocklike production layering. Two thirds through "Habeas Corpus (for Maher Arar)"-- a civil-rights ode that's timely in light of the Obama administration's release of Bush-era "torture memos"--the production supports its trombones, stabbing like sirens, with a guitar that chugs ominously low in the mix.
Argue is one of a handful of musical free-thinkers who have found a home on New Amsterdam Records, an upstart label that has been releasing one quality disc after another since its founding. Built around old traditions (mostly classical, and now jazz), each New Amsterdam record also reaches out to the beat-focused worlds of other contemporary music. This is not a condescension to the market, but a reflection of the artists' own desire to knock down genre boundaries. These are albums, says Judd Greenstein, one of the label's cofounders, specifically produced to sound good on an MP3 player during your commute. Just as Argue brings non-jazz elements to bear in his music, "Now," from Greenstein's NOW Ensemble, imports a catchy inflection to classical forms. One Greenstein composition on that release is titled "Sing Along"--a command that doesn't apply all that frequently to contemporary chamber music. On the whole, New Amsterdam is making a nice little tradition out of breaking tradition. The real question is whether its music will find its way into the hands of hungry young performers in ensembles outside the metropolises. Perhaps local high-school music directors should strike a deal with their charges. Yes, you still have to wear the big-band uniforms or those god-awful tuxes, but with those outfits comes a copy of "Infernal Machines" or "Now." Striking a balance between the old and the new has rarely sounded this good".
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Get in on the ground floor,
By Hank Schwab (Indianapolis, IN USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Infernal Machines (MP3 Download)
Infernal Machines
Honestly, this album doesn't floor me. But for a 34-year-old composer, this is heady stuff. Think Frank Zappa without the silliness, Danny Elfman without the hyperactivity, Gil Evans updated for the new millennium. Jazz needs this kick in the rear. It's not mothballed history, it's not superficial smooth Jazz, it's not hard-to-listen-to avant garde. Four stars on a project this ambitious is, for me, a vote of confidence in what's to come. I've seen the band live, and they are already better than the CD, they are evolving that fast. In particular, I love the sax solo by Erica von Kleist on Obsidian Flow. Buy this now, so you can tell everyone else in a couple years, Yeah, I've been listening to the Secret Society all along.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
No Longer a Secret,
By
This review is from: Infernal Machines (Audio CD)
Overview:
Darcy James Argue has made one of the most impressive debuts in recent jazz history. The "secret society" is a jazz big band consisting of 18 members (Erica vonKleist, Sam Sadigursky, Rob Wilkerson, Mark Small, Josh Sinton, Seneca Black, Laurie Frink, Tom Goehring, Nadje Noordhuis, Ingrid Jensen, Mike Fahie, James Hirschfeld, Ryan Keberle, Jennifer Wharton, Sabastian Noelle, Mike Holober, Matt Clohesy, and Jon Wikan). While "Infernal Machines" is first and foremost a jazz album, Argue incorporates elements of rock and electronica to give the CD a ultra modern sound. At times it almost sounds like Pink Floyd. Infernal Machines is perhaps the best integration with electric guitar and a jazz orchestra that I've ever heard. Here Argue is not trying to fit the electric guitar into the jazz orchestra he crafted songs that make the jazz orchestra embellish what can be done with the electric guitar. The use of drums and guitar feedback is simply astonishing. Each song on the CD is five-star and is filled with lots of clever parts. Each song is unique and endearing in its own way, yet the album flows together beautifully as a whole. Song Highlights: Phobos: This song is named after the doomed moon of Mars, Phobos. The echoing drums that open this song and the album do a great job of setting the mood. Next, a sad melody of interwoven horns is combined with some subtle guitar feedback. After that the mood swells and a single note guitar line with slight distortion sets in. Around the 9 minute mark the song sounds like it is winding down, and then the electric guitar rips in again. What a start to the CD. Redeye: Redeye showcases guitarist Sebastian Noelle. Noelle combines feedback, sound effects, and noodling guitar lines to create a dreamy, fuzzy headed, sonic exploration. While the liner notes indicate the song is about how you feel when you are over tired, it could just easily be a soundscape of the red eye of Jupiter. This tune is really out there. Transit: This song features the trumpet of Ingrid Jensen. While Jensen's playing is remarkable what is really amazing about this tune is the driving pulse of this tune. The combination of the constantly pulsing and pushing drums and killer guitar/horn rhythm line make the song a hybrid jazz and rock tune. The tune reminds me a bit of Black Sabbath's instrumental piece, "the Straightener" from vol. 4. Jacobin Club: This song has a mysterious, noirish, early 20th century mood to it. The main melody features intertwining airy horn lines, with a descending bass line. This is one of the more traditional arrangements on the CD. This CD gets my highest recommendation. I can't wait to see what comes next from Darcy James Argue.
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