
These 16 pieces take just over 70 minutes to complete, and use mostly conventional notions of melody to poetically weave their way through the jazz tradition -- and yes, he does that by using the lineage in these pieces, evoking Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, Ben Webster, Sonny Rollins, John Coltrane, Anthony Braxton, and contemporaries like Greg Osby and Don Byron -- while offering new notions of song. These pieces, which range from just over two minutes to seven and a half with many points in between, more often than not turn on themselves, returning to a theme that offers itself as a first step and as a return to hear what has changed in the interval between. Not merely scalar exercises, these pieces, all of them inseparable from one another by their very placement in both sequence and the evolution in the sound they offer, are parts of an extended meditation on a pulsing, growing universe, perhaps inconceivable to the listener's imagination before hearing these ideas as "sung" in a more conservative sense. Coleman also extends the language of the horn, and offers something new in the way of way solo recordings. In fact, Invisible Paths: First Scattering is not the revelation of what he has learned as a musician so much as what he perceives may be possible since he is one. Hosting Coleman's recording is a coup both for the artist and for Tzadik, which hasn't, for all of its forward thinking and radical reinvention of many musical languages, ever hosted a recording quite like this one before, so inside a jazz tradition that is regenerative and creates newness because of its past rather than in spite of it. This is Steve Coleman as you have never heard him before; with every note here, he communicates in improvisational song how necessary he is to the continued evolution of jazz in particular and to 21st century music in general. Invisible Paths was worth waiting 22 years for.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1. Ascending Numeration: Reformed 4:05
2. Shift 2:07
3. Possession Of Images 6:35
4. Negative Secondary 4:41
5. The Witness 5:26
6. Invisible Paths 3:11
7. Fundamental Disturbance I 4:02
8. Fecundation: 070118 4:32
9. Embodiment 5:04
10. Facing West 5:05
11. Clouds 7:29
12. Back At The Crib 3:06
13. Cardinal-Fixed-Mutable 2:36
14. Fundamental Disturbance II 4:30
15. Individualization 4:14
16. Fecundation: 070118 (Another View) 4:19
Credits :
Alto Saxophone, Written-By – Steve Coleman
1. Ascending Numeration: Reformed 4:05
2. Shift 2:07
3. Possession Of Images 6:35
4. Negative Secondary 4:41
5. The Witness 5:26
6. Invisible Paths 3:11
7. Fundamental Disturbance I 4:02
8. Fecundation: 070118 4:32
9. Embodiment 5:04
10. Facing West 5:05
11. Clouds 7:29
12. Back At The Crib 3:06
13. Cardinal-Fixed-Mutable 2:36
14. Fundamental Disturbance II 4:30
15. Individualization 4:14
16. Fecundation: 070118 (Another View) 4:19
Credits :
Alto Saxophone, Written-By – Steve Coleman
Could we get a new link please?
ResponderExcluircaro Monte. novo link no post do Steve ... enjoy !
Excluirhttps://nitroflare.com/view/1156810E2D3DA13/Steve_Coleman_—_Invisible_Paths_-First_Scattering_(2007
_Tzadik_–_TZ_7621_US)_FLAC.rar