Time Immemorial
Download links and information about Time Immemorial by David Liebman. This album was released in 2000 and it belongs to Jazz, Rock genres. It contains 4 tracks with total duration of 51:29 minutes.
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Artist: | David Liebman |
Release date: | 2000 |
Genre: | Jazz, Rock |
Tracks: | 4 |
Duration: | 51:29 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Before | 16:20 |
2. | Then | 10:40 |
3. | Now | 10:34 |
4. | After | 13:55 |
Details
[Edit]David Liebman conceived of this unaccompanied record as a more universal, less self-centered follow-up to 1985's Loneliness of a Long-Distance Runner. Walter Quintus engineered both discs, and on this one he's given credit as a co-artist, in acknowledgement of the project's extensive reliance on sound processing and recording technique. Liebman plays multiple horns — soprano, tenor, alto, and baritone, as well as bamboo flute and dudek. The music is divided into four long movements — "Before," "Then," "Now," and "After" — with two specific tone rows serving as a springboard for composition and improvisation. Only occasional passages feature solo horn; much of the time Liebman overdubs on top of some sort of rhythm or harmony track, which is itself a horn line that Quintus has manipulated beyond recognition. Liebman's "special effects" — clapping keys on the baritone, blowing through mouthpieces only, blowing through horn bodies without their necks, and so on — all become grist for Quintus's mill. The result is a powerful kind of electro-acoustic music, in which a saxophone can sound like a drum machine, a synth bass, an electric guitar. But Liebman's unprocessed horn looms large as well: his tenor solo on "Then" is phenomenal, as is his baritone work on "Now." Some may find the opening voiceover a bit cheesy, although it's worth noting that this kind of stage-setting intro is more often heard in hip-hop than in jazz. Overall, the highly abstract sonic landscapes of Time Immemorial won't please everyone, and the record certainly is not representative of Liebman's achievements as a "jazz" player. But it's a well-crafted and compelling artistic statement, a risky venture that turned out beautifully. ~ David R. Adler, Rovi