Brass Orchestra
Download links and information about Brass Orchestra by J. J. Johnson. This album was released in 1997 and it belongs to Jazz, Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 01:10:33 minutes.
![]() |
|
---|---|
Artist: | J. J. Johnson |
Release date: | 1997 |
Genre: | Jazz, Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal |
Tracks: | 14 |
Duration: | 01:10:33 |
Buy it NOW at: | |
Buy on iTunes $9.99 | |
Buy on iTunes $6.99 |
Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | El Camino Real | 6:10 |
2. | Enigma | 6:26 |
3. | Gingerbread Boy | 5:21 |
4. | Canonn for Bela | 3:22 |
5. | Comfort Zone | 7:48 |
6. | Wild is the Wind | 5:03 |
7. | If I Hit the Lottery | 4:08 |
8. | Cross Currents | 6:53 |
9. | Ballad for Joe | 4:26 |
10. | Cadenza | 1:40 |
11. | Why Indianapolis, Why Not Indianapolis? | 5:52 |
12. | Horn of Plenty | 3:33 |
13. | Ballad | 6:30 |
14. | Swing Spring | 3:21 |
Details
[Edit]J.J. Johnson finds himself at the helm of a dream band here — a full brass orchestra with French horns, euphoniums, tubas, and a harp — and gets to exploit its possibilities wherever they might lead. The results are beyond category, where the veteran trombonist's writing has a feathery richness, urbanity, and a depth charge in the bass reminiscent of, but not really indebted to, Gil Evans. There is plenty of straight-ahead jazz grooving but also several episodes of formal, almost classical writing, as in the suitably joyous "If I Hit the Lottery," and rigorous combinations of both, like the angular tribute to Béla Bartók, "Canonn for Bela." The generous Johnson doesn't even appear on a piece he commissioned from Robin Eubanks called "Cross Currents" — Eubanks performs the sputtering trombone solo — nor on Slide Hampton's blazing "Comfort Zone." He also revisits some of his early third stream experiments from the '50s and '60s; "Ballad for Joe" derives from his "Poem for Brass" and "Horn of Plenty" and "Ballade" from the Perceptions album (the latter two sound a bit staid under the current light). Johnson's own trombone solos are always imaginative, authoritative, and irresistibly swinging; at 72, he plays as well here as he ever did. This is a must-buy for all J.J. fans and those who thought that the third stream could never rise again. ~ Richard S. Ginell, Rovi