Search - John Zorn :: Cartoon S&M

Cartoon S&M
John Zorn
Cartoon S&M
Genres: Jazz, Pop, Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (5) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #2


     
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CD Details

All Artists: John Zorn
Title: Cartoon S&M
Members Wishing: 4
Total Copies: 0
Label: Tzadik
Release Date: 12/5/2000
Genres: Jazz, Pop, Classical
Styles: Avant Garde & Free Jazz, Historical Periods, Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaCD Credits: 2
UPC: 702397733027
 

CD Reviews

Interesting, But Uneven
Christopher Forbes | Brooklyn,, NY | 11/12/2002
(3 out of 5 stars)

"As I have said in other reviews, I am not an uncritical fan of Zorn's concert music. I find him intermittently brilliant or archly referential depending on the piece. He is undeniably facile as a composer. The ideas seem to pour out of him. It's just that so often the ideas are not really his. This 2CD set is a case in point. Some of the works on it are really brilliant, and some are just annoying. The name of the CD says it all really. Music on the first disc is mostly inspired by Zorn's fascination with the cartoon music of Chuck Stallings or Tex Avery. As a result, on pieces like Cat 'o Nine Tails and Carny the ideas fly fast a furious, but with no significant development. What is humorous and wacky in Zorn's Naked City albums, ends up sounding pretentious in these pieces. And then there are bleeding chunks of everything from Tex Ritter to Varese thrown in. Quotation is not necessarily a bad thing in concert music, but you really have to have something new to say about the work you are quoting. Berio did this in the masterful third movement of his Sinfonia, summing up the progression of western history through brilliant commentary on an entire movement from Mahler. Zorn is just showing off here. We learn nothing new about the works quoted, or about Zorn. It comes off as pastiche. There are lovely moments in these works...but they are dropped. It's like listening to musings of a composer with ADD!On the other hand, some of the works here are wonderful, particularly on the second CD, S & M, though I am also partial to the chamber orchestra piece, For Your Eyes Only. (Seems to hang together betterl than the other cartoon material.) The second CD starts with The Dead Man, which is a structurally sound piece in small movements (ostensibly representing the sound track to an imagined S and M movie.) Though even in this piece, there is some Mickey Moused moments, it hangs together well and makes a statement of a sort. The rest of the second CD is uniformly good. Music for Children is a serious piece. In it, Zorn shows an uncanny ear for sound combinations, microtones and well constructed barrages of atonal runs. The work has an improvisatory quality, while still maintaining directionality. Memento Mori is perhaps the most serious work in the collection and my favorite Zorn string quartet. It is a long work in an unashmedly modernist style. At times it is reminicent of the work of Boulez or Stockhausen. At other times, is resembles Crumb. This is a great work and worthy of the price of the disc alone (though you can get this in other guises, by the Kronos Quartet or on Zorn's own label Tzadik.) Finally, my two favorite pieces on the CD are the two versions of Kol Nidre. This work is an homage to Arvo Part and late Beethoven. In fact, the opening and closing of the work could be lifted directly from Part's Fratres. However, the middle section is a soulful Klezmer style melody that seems closer to Zorn's real soul than anything else on the CD. This rediscovery of his Jewish identity is to me, the best thing that Zorn has done in his career. Long after his S and M pieces fade away, and the cartoon stuff looses it's meaning, the music of Kol Nidre, along with his Masada quartet and Bar Kolkba will remain fresh and deeply personal. The performances on these discs are outstanding, even in the most cartoonish material. The Dutch groups represented on the disc play with conviction and good modernist sensibilities. Though there is a lot of competition for particularly the string quartet material, the Mondrian quartet holds up very well next to the competition. So now to the reccommendation...I only gave three stars. On the basis of the strongest pieces I would give five...but there are alot of weak pieces on this CD so I had to take some stars off my rating. If you have heard some of Zorn's cartoon music and you like it, then add the two stars back and get this CD. Otherwise, you may want to see if you can find other versions of Memento Mori, Music for Children and Kol Nidre. They are, in my opinion, the works to savor from this collection."
John Zorn's classical masterpiece
SPM | Eugene, Oregon | 12/09/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"In 1999 and 2000, John Zorn went to the Netherlands to record some of his best chamber music with a foreign orchestra. The result is this double-disc album. It's arranged in two parts: The cartoon disc and the S&M disc. But the material on both discs is almost interchangeable --- Zorn tends to blend his influences, even when he's trying to keep them apart. (And the violence in cartoons is nearly sadomasochistic, anyway, which gives him a head start.)The cartoon disc is inspired by one of Zorn's heroes, Carl Stalling, the guy who wrote and conducted the music for Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck cartoons. Zorn's version of Stalling's music was written for imaginary, more adult cartoons. The three songs on this disc have three different arrangements. One is a full orchestra (For Your Eyes Only). It's loud and fast. The second, Cat O'Nine Tails, is for string quartet. It's just as fast, with sharp cuts between blocks of music. The third, Carny, is for solo piano. It re-creates the tone of the first two, but without the luxury of multiple instruments. It's also the best track on the disc.The second disc has three moody S&M pieces. They could be the soundtracks to a couple of avant-garde erotic films. In The Dead Man (indexed on the CD into thirteen blocks for some reason), the musicians explore brief melodies, sound effects, and single tones. The piece is very abstract. Music for Children follows the same theme. It begins as music and ends with violent cracks and snaps. There's a sound of splintering wood in there, too. The third piece, Memento Mori, is very challenging --- for 26 minutes, a string quartet plays one block of music after another, each stretched out and subtle, with no repeating melodies. The piece grows on you, but only if you listen intently about ten times.Both discs have a bonus track: Two versions of Kol Nidre, a ceremonial klezmer song that John Zorn wrote to evoke Jewish religious rites. On one disc, the song is played by a clarinet quartet. On the other, it's played by a string quartet. Although Kol Nidre doesn't fit the cartoon S&M theme, the song is a perfect coda.This isn't a good place to start if you haven't heard John Zorn's music. But if you've had a taste of his work --- or if you like any kind of avant-garde classical music --- you should hear this. There's a lot of music here, so you'll have to listen over and over to get it all. But the effort is worth it."
You want avant-garde?
IRate | 09/14/2007
(3 out of 5 stars)

"This bizarre double disc reiterates the fact deconstructionist Zorn is most comfortable playing into his own audience. For starters it seems clear that the recordings are available on other (arguably better) discs, and for finishers I cannot help but feel reworking these compositions into this two-disc release seems pretentious at best. Everyone should embrace their inner schizophrenic Zorn, but only few die-hards actually need to embrace this much. Amongst his "studies" into these sporadic, atonal, stringed freak-outs, the challenged-out composer offers seldom few hard reasons to stay musically invested inside these post-classical alienations. The longer compositions only are slightly more involving from their extended run time- Zorn's complete annihilation of melody and rhythm for more then a few seconds pervade both cartoon and s&m. To help clear the mind disc-to-disc, he has attached one of his slower, introspective compositions in different forms, a nice gimmick, but still no reason to invest in the experience outside of being a completionist. Still, as compositionally fractured as it all is, one can never accuse Zorn of hiring insensitive players to do his bidding, playing here with a ferocity as dazzling as it is confusing."