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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Shepp the dramatist,
By Swing King (Cincinnati, OH USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Kwanza (Audio CD)
"Kwanza" offers a nice collection of tracks recorded by Shepp in 1968 and 1969 for Impulse!, where the saxophonist is accompanied by a large assortment of performers. This album is a thematic exploration of Africa, with Shepp expressing his compositional ability with characteristic cultural and artistic feeling. The creative combination of artsy vocal arrangements and instrumental improvisation come together to produce one of Shepp's more theatrical releases, behind only 1972's "Attica Blues".
Trumpeter Woody Shaw helped to breathe brand new life into the old tune "Bakai", and the roll of musicians appearing on these tracks is exhaustive. The standout players seem to be Woody Shaw (t), Cedar Walton (p), Joe Chambers (d) and James Spaulding (as). There are many more, but these are the more notable members of Shepp's big band. A recording that encompasses free improvisation with a bit of infused funk, "Kwanza" will certainly please fans of Shepp's 1966 "Mama Too Tight" and 1972 "Attica Blues".
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Music that transcends symbolic language,
By
This review is from: Kwanza (Audio CD)
This is the kind of music that speaks more clearly than words, communicating things that can only be communicated in a zone of complete love and inspiration, as well as utter mastery of and connection with one's instrument. All the artists on this recording are in this zone, and the great thing about it is listening to something like this in the right way puts the listener into that zone as well, proving that music is truly the universal language. In "New Africa," Shepp screams 'Freedom!' in Swahili between powerful eruptions of melody, women moaning and wailing, drums like a solar freight train...all this concrete and metal and towers and rushing engines and vines and snakes and wood all on fire, swelling like an ocean absorbing a monsoon... and through all this, Love. Music like this can be not only a source of aural pleasure, but a tool to uplift, enlighten, and remember.
7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Swindle from Universal,
By ziryab (Bethlehem, PA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Kwanza (Audio CD)
This is a reissue of a collection of late sixties tracks. Great stuff indeed except if you already own "The way ahead". Two of the tracks "New Africa" and "Bakai" are the bonus tracks added at the end of 1998 reissue of "The way ahead". Don't waste your money for an expensive reissue of 3 songs (less than 20 minutes of music) unless you are a big fan of Shepp.
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