Spirits Aloft | ||||
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Live album by | ||||
Released | 2010 | |||
Recorded | February 7, 2009 | |||
Venue | Gordon Theatre, Camden Center for the Arts, Rutgers University, Camden, New Jersey | |||
Genre | Free jazz | |||
Label | Porter Records PRCD - 4049 | |||
Producer | Margaret Davis Grimes | |||
Rashied Ali chronology | ||||
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Spirits Aloft is a live album by bassist Henry Grimes and drummer Rashied Ali. It was recorded in February 2009 at Rutgers University in Camden, New Jersey, and was released by Porter Records in 2010. [1]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
PopMatters | [2] |
In a review for AllMusic, Phil Freeman wrote: "On this recording, Grimes switches back and forth between bass and violin, and between somewhat conventional free jazz playing and atmospheric pieces during which neither he nor Ali offer any kind of melodic or rhythmic structure, instead improvising in a quietly intense way that forces the listener to wonder who's making what sound... When the bassist first reappeared on the scene, he was extremely rusty, but free jazz fans welcomed him back because of his pedigree. With this release, and a few before it, he proves that his chops have returned and he's every bit the player he was in the '60s." [1]
Writing for All About Jazz , Tim Niland commented: "The music appears to be completely improvised and works quite well, with Grimes deftly switching from plucked to bowed bass and adding swirls of violin to the action while Ali continually shifts the music... This was one of Ali's final recordings before passing away in 2009, and it is clear that he was a creative force right up until the end. Grimes continues to amaze, as his storybook comeback to the musical Universe continues unabated." [3]
Michael Kabran, in an article for PopMatters , stated: "Grimes and Ali are interacting with one another in real time and constantly exploring new ideas. Sometimes the result is a series of jarring scrapes, squawks, and slams... Other times Grimes and Ali combine to create ambient pitter-patter that seems almost techno- or dub-like... Still, in other moments... gorgeous harmony and blissfully swinging rhythm erupt without warning from a seemingly endless jittery blanket of chaos. Spirits Aloft also shows that Grimes and Ali, both in their 70s at the time of this recording, hadn't lost their chops or sense of adventure... Spirits Aloft isn't an album for the faint of heart. It is free jazz at its freest... if what exhilarates you, what makes your heart skip a beat, what keeps you up at night, is one more glimpse into the wild imagination... of two avant-garde jazz giants, then you may have just found a gold mine." [2]
Writing for London Jazz News, Geoff Winston remarked: "Both masters had that supreme confidence to jointly direct their dialogue and take the audience with them. Grimes said in his moving tribute at Ali's memorial celebration later in 2009, quoted in the sleeve notes, 'Rashied knew how to cause music to have life and give life.' The same can be said for Grimes, and this spirit is the essence of this wonderful recording, every nuance so expertly captured that the listener gets as close as is possible to being there on the night." [4]
Rashied Ali, born Robert Patterson was an American free jazz and avant-garde drummer who was best known for performing with John Coltrane in the last years of Coltrane's life.
Henry Grimes was an American jazz double bassist and violinist.
Interstellar Space is a studio album by American jazz saxophonist John Coltrane, featuring drummer Rashied Ali. It was recorded in 1967, the year of his death, and released by Impulse! Records in September 1974.
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Live at Ali's Alley is a live album by trumpeter Ahmed Abdullah, listed simply as "Abdullah" on the cover. It was recorded on April 24, 1978, at New York City's Ali's Alley, and released on vinyl in 1980 by Cadence Jazz Records as the label's inaugural release. On the album, Abdullah is joined by saxophonist Chico Freeman, hornist Vincent Chancey, cellist Muneer Abdul Fatah, bassist Jerome Hunter, and drummer Rashied Sinan.
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