Search - Marilyn (Trio) Crispell :: Storyteller

Storyteller
Marilyn (Trio) Crispell
Storyteller
Genres: Jazz, Special Interest
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

Pianist Marilyn Crispell has in recent times chucked the knotty angularity and tumultuous bursts of her free-jazz past for slowly tempered mediations on beauty and form. Her songs unfold with a balletic delicacy, each move...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Marilyn (Trio) Crispell
Title: Storyteller
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Universal
Original Release Date: 1/1/2004
Re-Release Date: 8/9/2004
Album Type: Import
Genres: Jazz, Special Interest
Style: Avant Garde & Free Jazz
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Pianist Marilyn Crispell has in recent times chucked the knotty angularity and tumultuous bursts of her free-jazz past for slowly tempered mediations on beauty and form. Her songs unfold with a balletic delicacy, each movement measured and sure--and, sometimes, static. There are definitely narrative dry spots on Storyteller, which lacks the ongoing sense of discovery that sparked 2001's Amaryllis. That album featured the great drummer Paul Motian and bassist Gary Peacock. This one, which substitutes Mark Helias for Peacock, creates intrigue in the way Motian provides the pulse that would usually be provided by the bassist, while Helias does a drummer-like job of pushing the rhythms. Half of Storyteller is comprised of Motian compositions from his long and varied career. At their best, and the trio's, they impart a radiant optimism that intensifies with repeated listenings. --Lloyd Sachs

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CD Reviews

I bow in humble admiration to Marylin Crispell's genius
Jan P. Dennis | Monument, CO USA | 05/30/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"It's always been my contention that, because the avant-garde typically goes places the traditional musician fears to tread, it has the possibility to produce sounds and moods of striking and unanticipated beauty that more traditional forms of music-making cannot approach, let alone reach.That certainly is the case with Marilyn Crispell's latest disc, Storyteller.It is precisely because she has carved out a huge and magnificent presence on the margins of jazz that can she bring back precious gems from its outer reaches.Sometimes, it seems as if one must simply OCCUPY avant-garde territory, until the absolute right circumstances present themselves. Then, and only then, does the opportunity land on one's doorstep, as it were, to make glorious, absolutely revelatory music.That's what's happened here, I'm thinking. It's a case of you can't get there from here. You have to probe, mine, fumble with artistic culs-de sac, until, serendipitously, you're handed the keys to music beyond the ken of ordinary mortals. You get the keys because of your faithfulness and singularity of vision.Which is what has happened here. If you don't jump to your feet in ecstatic, delirious joy when confronted with this stunning, mesmeric music, you're either aesthetically dead or simply clueless.Blather about static passages or narrative dry spots simply misses the point. This disc is beyond praise. It simply IS.Marilyn Crispell at the absolute of her game. Not to be missed."
Just how good is this album. . It's one of the BEST!!
J. Bewley | San Diego, CA | 03/16/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Mayilyn does not hide behind spacial minimalism, but casts shadows of melody and color onto sonic canvas. The interaction and "feeling" on this recording shows what good music can come form a single moment in time. This may sound like rambeling, but if you have heard Paul Motain or Marilyn Crispell live- you know what I'm talking about.



We can only hope to see more of this kind of music as too many young players are still caught up in trying to be John Coltrane or another hard-bop player."
Divine.
Lord Chimp | Monkey World | 06/03/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I'm not sure how to talk about this album without sounding cheesy. But what to say about Marilyn Crispell's most beautiful album on ECM to date? For starters, credit cannot go to Crispell alone, for the other composites of the trio (Mark Helias and Paul Motian) are equally blessed with the same superhuman talent and otherworldly intuition regarding ethereal, crystalline jazzy beauty. First thing of note about the lineup in the trio is that Mark Helias plays double-bass rather than Gary Peacock. Big shoes to fill, but Helias is a magical complement not just on a bass-playing level but as an integrated part of the trio's synergy. (His composed pieces especially show that his mind is on the trio and its essence.) That group interplay is the essence of _Storyteller_, so despite being rapturously lovely and pleasant there is profound musical depth. With the beginning of "Wild Rose", the trio quietly stirs to life, revealing a purity of beautiful creative instinct. "The Storyteller" is curiously "dark", ominous aura punctuated by dry cymbals with the bass weaving about the exotic, melancholy piano, engaging counterpoint and odd accents. Darkness can be beautiful too. "Cosmology I" is quite fast with long chromatic arpeggios splintering through a dexterous web of Helias and Motian. "Play" is very tight, bouncy and jazzy. The pieces are quite moving and progress through evocative measure after evocative measure, constantly building on the lower order perfection before. "So Far, So Near", the closing piece and around nine minutes in length, is especially demonstrative of this. Marilyn Crispell is one of the premiere jazz musicians in the world. You should procure a multitude of her albums, including this one. It's incredible."