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His sensitivity to the visual, as well as musical, realms makes him ideally suited to salute Basquiat's graffiti-inspired paintings. His music on this album dances between - and around - form and abstraction, tradition and confrontation, clarity and distortion.

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Comments Off on Review of Sucker Punch Requiem: San Diego Union-Tribune

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Despite Basquiat's frequent references to jazz, bassist/composer/painter Lisle Ellis is the first in the jazz world to create an album-length homage to the painter's life and work...The point of the project is as a springboard, something to be revisited time and again as Ellis solidifies the relationship between the painter's immense oeuvre and his own work.

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Comments Off on Review of Sucker Punch Requiem: All About Jazz

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Sembrerebbe che la musica al femminile si presenti gentile e delicata, ed invece no, il duo The Skein, composto dalla vocalista inglese Jessica Constable e dall´americana Andrea Parkins alla fisarmonica elettrica e strumentazioni elettroniche, fa subito pulizia con questo pregiudizio. …

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Comments Off on Review of Cities and Eyes: Musicboom.it

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I was surprised by the wealth of evocative and expressive sounds that this fine duo pulls off. Jessica seems to be singing in some strange invented language (when she is not singing in English) while Andrea adds layers of kaleidoscopic electronic sounds that are forever in flux.

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Comments Off on Review of Cities and Eyes: Downtown Music Gallery

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Gustavo Aguilar is a brilliant percussionist who grew up in Brownsville, where Texas meets Mexico. He now lives in New York . . . and has located himself in music at a point where composition and improvisation get into one another in extraordinary ways. . . . Gustavo Aguilar is himself a defiantly unorthodox musician - the kind we need - and this is a wonderful CD

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Comments Off on Review of unsettled on an old sense of place: The Wire

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'Minamo' is extraordinary, a series of tight, dramatic events. Even without written music the musicians have plenty of ground under their feet: vamps, patterns, echoed motions. Both play with virtuosic precision and a great range of technique, even when the music becomes gestural and built on hummingbird pulses, glassy wipes of the violin strings, dark rumbles of rubbed piano strings. The whole record, but especially the second concert, runs on its own vivid tension.

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Comments Off on Review of Minamo: The New York Times