If you had a chance to watch Gold Rush last week you might remember that Parker’s team was having a brutal time with the elements. In fact the crew started to get on each other’s nerves as they embarked on the Klondike trail in search of gold. At the height of the gold rush stampede, over 7,000 boats traveled exactly where they are now, through the same northern lakes, racing each other to stake the best claims in the gold fields. Will Parker’s luck change? As you’ll see in the clip below Parker nails a little bit of gold from
Parker Schnabel Finds Gold in Gold Rush’s “Parker’s Trail”...
Parker Schnabel Finds Gold in Gold Rush’s “Parker’s Trail”...
- 4/14/2017
- by Nat Berman
- TVovermind.com
Farmers by Nature: Love and Ghosts (Aum Fidelity)
Farmers by Nature is an all-star trio: pianist Craig Taborn, bassist William Parker, and drummer Gerald Cleaver. Though it is sonically inevitable that the piano tends to dominate such a group's sound, these guys are truly equals. All the tracks on this two-cd set (containing a pair of French concerts) were spontaneously generated by all three individuals listening acutely to each other. The 18-minute title track that kicks off the set does find Taborn most prominent, by a narrow margin, but then the quiet rhythmic etude "Without a Name" tilts the balance toward Cleaver and Parker.
Taborn's distinctive sense of harmony is constantly enlivening. Yes, this is free jazz in which harmony plays a great role; not "chord changes," nor modal vamps, but a rather a distinct coloring of the forward motion through the placement of complex and often dissonant chords, sometimes brilliant,...
Farmers by Nature is an all-star trio: pianist Craig Taborn, bassist William Parker, and drummer Gerald Cleaver. Though it is sonically inevitable that the piano tends to dominate such a group's sound, these guys are truly equals. All the tracks on this two-cd set (containing a pair of French concerts) were spontaneously generated by all three individuals listening acutely to each other. The 18-minute title track that kicks off the set does find Taborn most prominent, by a narrow margin, but then the quiet rhythmic etude "Without a Name" tilts the balance toward Cleaver and Parker.
Taborn's distinctive sense of harmony is constantly enlivening. Yes, this is free jazz in which harmony plays a great role; not "chord changes," nor modal vamps, but a rather a distinct coloring of the forward motion through the placement of complex and often dissonant chords, sometimes brilliant,...
- 8/9/2014
- by SteveHoltje
- www.culturecatch.com
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