Prime Directive
Download links and information about Prime Directive by Dave Holland Quintet. This album was released in 1999 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 9 tracks with total duration of 01:15:55 minutes.
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Artist: | Dave Holland Quintet |
Release date: | 1999 |
Genre: | Jazz |
Tracks: | 9 |
Duration: | 01:15:55 |
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Buy on iTunes $11.99 | |
Buy on Amazon $11.49 | |
Buy on Songswave €2.16 |
Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Prime Directive (featuring Dave Holland) | 7:42 |
2. | Looking Up (featuring Dave Holland) | 13:15 |
3. | Make Believe (featuring Dave Holland) | 6:23 |
4. | A Searching Spirit (featuring Dave Holland) | 11:18 |
5. | High Wire (featuring Dave Holland) | 6:44 |
6. | Jugglers Parade (featuring Dave Holland) | 8:11 |
7. | Candlelight Vigil (featuring Dave Holland) | 4:45 |
8. | Wonders Never Cease (featuring Dave Holland) | 13:49 |
9. | Down Time (featuring Dave Holland) | 3:48 |
Details
[Edit]You may have to wait a while between Dave Holland-led releases, but it's always worth it. Tremendous taste prevents Holland from making unsatisfying music. He is a great leader in the truest senses of the word — he gives his team space, trusts their abilities and judgment, yet all the while remains firmly in command and infuses the results with his own style and personality. Prime Directive is a wonderful jazz album. These 77 minutes and nine tracks do not cheat or disappoint. The straight-ahead tunes — composed by double-bassist Holland and his talented band mates (one each) — all bear Holland's distinctive rhythmic patterns and harmonics. A fine example is the title track, on which Robin Eubanks on trombone and Chris Potter on saxophones hold a stimulating musical conversation over the rhythm section's driving groove. For listeners who prefer a more deliberate pace, there's the searching, contemplative "Make Believe," with Steve Nelson's lovely vibraphone work appointing the mood. On the hopeful, "A Seeking Spirit," fans will be tapping along to the rhythmic feast offered up by the leader and his pace-setting partner Billy Kilson on drums. The melancholy "Candlelight Vigil" presents Holland at his bowed best. Finally, "Wonders Never Cease" finds the entire band at the height of their collective, improvisational prowess. Prime Directive is recommended; a great leader is, indeed, hard to find.