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Free Music Notes for The DreamersFree Music Review: More consistent than The Gift Hit: 4 Stars
I liked this one a lot. It takes the time to explore the group's sound and isn't as scattershot as were The Gift, Taboo & Exile, or Music For Children. The band gets an absolutely wicked groove going on "Exodus." Certainly fans of Zorn's more outrageous material might find this a bit tame, but it's also a sort of all-killer, no filler Zorn - a good point of entry. Marc Ribot and Joey Baron are outstanding on this album.
Free Music Review: More Mediocre Crap from Zorn Hit: 1 StarsI found my way to John Zorn's thrash-jazz band Naked City via the music library at Miskatonic University here in Arkham. They had one of the Filmworks albums there and I had a listen. It sounded cool so I took a look at our local music store and found the first Naked City album, my first Zorn album. I found it incomprehensibly good, and I thought for sure that all the quick changes and jump-cuts were done on a mixer and not performed live (Youtube has now proved me wrong on that.) Then I looked in the credits for my favorite album from high school, the elaborately produced first album by Mr. Bungle, and my fate was sealed when I saw that Zorn had produced it.
Since then I have grown disenchanted. The Naked City first album was the only Zorn work that I knew until the box set for that band came out. I bought it, and that box set is arguably the finest avant-garde musical recording ever made.
But I am sad to say that everything I have ever heard from Zorn that was not Naked City was garbage that I never would have bought or listened had it not been recorded by Zorn et al. He has his own record label now, Tzadik, who are mainly distinguished by the purple prose they insert into their CD packages, which is such over-the-top praise that you would think Tzadik was the greatest label in the universe.
But they're not. Even when Zorn composes exotica like this album, the Dreamers, or on Music for Children II: The Gift, it is repetitive, simplistic and boring. My solution for all the Zorn albums I had accumulated since college, except for the Naked City box set, was to dump them in a parking lot so that no one else would get ripped off if I sold them to a used music store.
Don't let Zorn fool you. His music is mediocre crap now. The Dreamers would never have been distributed or critically praised if it didn't have the Zorn name and record label on it. Because it sucks, and there is much better music of this type out there.
Free Music Review: John Zorn's "The Dreamers" Hit: 5 StarsJohn Zorn's "The Dreamers" is a delightfully lyrical and poetic journey through instrumental fairy tales from the Electric Masada all-stars. Album opener "Mow Mow" sets the tone for a marvellous dream-like tour into a mesmeric world of exotica music. Listen for Jamie Saft's piano via "A Ride On Cottonfair", John Zorn's alto-sax on "Toys", both Marc Ribot's guitar and Kenny Wollesen's vibes on "Of Wonder And Certainty". "The Dreamers" is a varied and vibrant release perfect for fans who fell in love with John Zorn's "The Gift". Tzadik's incredible artwork for this album also features a sheet of sixteen collectable character stickers in a stunning CD package.
Free Music Review: giving this 5 stars because I just bought it and do not want to get it and hate it Hit: 5 Starswhat's more I do not plan on hating it from what I've heard from it already. Hence the 5 stars rating. Really nothing intellectual to add like other big shot Zorn reviewers other than I am not Jewish and I think MOST of his albums are untouchable by anyone. I couldn't care less if this has any disturbing artwork in it like the Gift, although that WAS a pretty neat surprise. Would be just as cool if this turns out to be the Gift Vol. 2. Thanks Zorn, I hate most music but yours I do not.
Free Music Review: Wake me up - 2 and a half stars... Hit: 2 StarsI hate to say it, but lately it seems that John Zorn's been going off the rails a little bit. It no doubt started when 1996's Bar Kokhba (chamber reworkings of the Masada songbook) became Tzadik's best seller. It was indeed a fantastic album, but what followed was album after album with a similar flavour - the last dozen or so Filmworks, The Circle Maker, the Masada anniversary series, etc. And of course 2001's The Gift - similar in lineup to the Masada chamber ensembles but a different vibe, more surf, latin, lounge and exotica.
The Dreamers follows in a similar vein, though without that hint of 'darkness' that The Gift had. To be honest I'm a bit torn about this album. On one hand it sounds great, as all Zorn's albums do. And it's hard to fault any of the performances. But the compositions are just so repetitive and one-dimensional, there's really nothing to 'explore' like in most of Zorn's output.
It kind of feels like everything's on autopilot, and it lacks the meticulous arrangements of the past. "Anulikwutsayl" could have been a highly atmospheric ambient piece but it gets disrupted by basically everyone in the band banging on things at inappropriate moments. There is a beautiful mood created on "Forbidden Tears", but Jamie Saft really fumbles through his Rhodes solo (and one also wonders if he maybe should have taken his keyboard in for a checkup before the session, there are some really out notes there!).
Zorn features on one track, the playful "Toys". It's a fun tune, but the solos are ridiculously noisy and random, and ultimately this piece probably doesn't fit on what is otherwise a very laid back album (though I am aware that despite this being a quite 'easy listening' album, Zorn is still Zorn and never likes to settle into a pattern for too long).
So all in all it's not an absolutely terrible album, but Zorn can do so much better. 2 and a half stars...
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