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Eddie Gale's Ghetto Music - The Remake and Beyond

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Download links and information about Eddie Gale's Ghetto Music - The Remake and Beyond by Eddie Gale. This album was released in 1968 and it belongs to Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, World Music genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 01:10:19 minutes.

Artist: Eddie Gale
Release date: 1968
Genre: Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, World Music
Tracks: 10
Duration: 01:10:19
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Rain (The Remake) [feat. Inner Peace Arkestra, Marcus Shelby & Virginia Roberts] 7:28
2. Fulton Street (The Remake) [feat. Inner Peace Arkestra, Georgette Gale & Karl Evangelista] 8:36
3. A Walk with Thee - The March (The Remake) [feat. Inner Peace Arkestra, Valerie Mih & Karl Evangelista] 6:08
4. A Understanding (The Remake) [feat. Inner Peace Arkestra] 9:26
5. Now Gwilu (The Remake) [feat. Inner Peace Arkestra & Brianna Stevens] 9:32
6. African Sunshine (feat. Inner Peace Arkestra & Destiny Muhammad) 8:42
7. Children of Peace (feat. Inner Peace Arkestra) 2:57
8. Meditation on World Peace (feat. Inner Peace Arkestra, Carolyn Jones, Deena Angeletti & Phil Jacklin) 7:04
9. Peace in the Night (feat. Inner Peace Arkestra, Faye Carol, Marcus Shelby & Karl Evangelista) 7:21
10. The Planet Apple - Planet of Imagination (To Be Continued) [feat. Cyberdelic Lobster] 3:05

Details

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The aesthetic and cultural merits of Eddie Gale's Ghetto Music cannot be overstated. That it is one of the most obscure recordings in Blue Note's catalog — paid for out of label co-founder Francis Wolff's own pocket — should tell us something. This is an apocryphal album, one that seamlessly blends the new jazz of the '60s — Gale was a member of the Sun Ra Arkestra before and after these sides, and played on Cecil Taylor's Blue Note debut, Unit Structures — with gospel, soul, and the blues. Gale's sextet included two bass players and two drummers — in 1968 — as well as a chorus of 11 voices, male and female. Sound like a mess? Far from it. This is some of the most spiritually engaged, forward-thinking, and finely wrought music of 1968. What's more is that, unlike lots of post-Coltrane free jazz, it's ultimately very listenable. Soloists come and go, but modes, melodies, and harmonies remain firmly intact. The beautiful strains of African folk music and Latin jazz sounds in "Fulton Street," for example, create a veritable chromatic rainbow. "A Walk with Thee" is a spiritual written to a march tempo with drummers playing counterpoint to one another and the front line creating elongated melodic lines via an Eastern harmonic sensibility. Does it swing? Hell yeah! The final cut, "The Coming of Gwilu," moves from the tribal to the urban and everywhere in between using Jamaican thumb piano's, soaring vocals à la the Arkestra, polyrhythmic invention, and good, old-fashioned groove jazz, making something entirely new in the process. While Albert Ayler's New Grass was a failure for all its adventurousness, Eddie Gale's Ghetto Music, while a bit narrower in scope, succeeds because it concentrates on creating a space for the myriad voices of an emerging African-American cultural force to be heard in a single architecture. This is militant music posessed by soul and spirit.