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Gordon Grdina Quartet - Gordon Grdina: Inroads '2018

24bit
Gordon Grdina: Inroads
ArtistGordon Grdina Quartet Related artists
Album name Gordon Grdina: Inroads
Country
Date 2018
Genreavant jazz / fusion
Play time 57:40 min
Format / Bitrate 24 BIT Stereo 2429 Kbps / 96 kHz
Media WEB
Size 1018 MB
PriceDownload $8.95
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Tracks list

“Grdina continues to passionately explore the depths of jazz
improvisation, cross-cultural fusions and the fun that comes with cutting loose.
Lately, he’s been tearing it up in a new combo from New York City.”

–Stuart Derdeyn, Vancouver Sun

 This wild, eclectic project combines intricate counterpoint with the ebb and
flow of dynamic yet focused improvisation. Grdina takes inspiration from the
complexity of Bartok, the freedom of Ornette Coleman, the energy and logical
construction of ideas in Soundgarden, and the delicacy of Webern.

Grdina’s debut recording, Think Like the Waves, was a trio with his
mentor Gary Peacock and Paul Motian, and there is something of that
group’s deep improvised jazz roots at work here, along with the
compositional, classical music bent of his East Van Strings project (The
Breathing of Statues). It’s also a reaction to his rock playing in recent
years in Dan Mangan’s band and his own instrumental duo Peregrine Falls.
Says Grdina, “I felt a strong inner urge to write music that was more
unexpected, that didn’t repeat itself so much and was more challenging
than what I had been playing. Forms can sometimes feel like you’re being
strangled and talked down to. I wanted the music to continually move, feeling
free but clearly directed.

“Compositionally this also came out of the work I’d done with Gary
Peacock but in a very different way. We worked a lot on composition being a
distilled idea that is the germ that sparks improvisation. I wanted to see what
would happen if I composed the development of the ideas, keeping the same
focused writing style, asking the same questions…The process of writing
was similar to what I went through with East Van Strings, which was informed by
listening to a lot of Webern and the second Viennese school. Ornette always
being present is a given but Soundgarden came up while on the road with Dan
Mangan. When I was young I was a fan but didn’t really dig into it, as I
was too interested in jazz at the time. I started listening to them again and
was really excited and inspired by the energy and careful construction of ideas,
intricate yet logical. I was also listening to a lot of Tim Berne and started to
feel a connection between the two. So there was something between that intricacy
and energy that I was really inspired by.”

“The musicians came together over a two-year process of getting more
involved in the NY scene. Oscar [a member of Berne’s Snakeoil], Russ and
Satoshi are all amazing, incredibly well rounded, multi-faceted musicians with
unique voices. They are also master improvisers, but the chemistry of the band
wasn’t apparent at the start. We had a lot of short rehearsals, a gig and
then not seeing each other for two months. We did that for about a year. We then
went on the road for a string of dates and everything changed. The band just
solidified, everyone’s unique voice began to shine and the compositions
started to click. It’s not easy music to grasp fully while you’re
playing it, as it is very contrapuntal. Each instrument is focused on their own
part and it takes a while before you hear it click with the other lines and the
logic becomes apparent.”

“Over the course of the last few years I’ve started to connect some
disparate directions musically. The oud and the guitar are starting to become
interchangeable in a way…How I’m approaching each instrument is
becoming more and more similar. I’m moving further away from the original
Arabic sound of the oud and starting to push my own voice through its history.
“Fragments” is a departure for me and is a path I would like to
further develop with this band. Oud and piano in particular work so well
together but are fundamentally opposed instruments. It really is like the
meeting of two completely different worlds. The clash of ideologies is exciting
to me.”

“I hear so many connections to so many genres in this music and from these
musicians that I feel it has an extremely broad appeal…I’ve gotten
compliments from folk, jazz and classical music fans both young and old, as well
as fans of Soundgarden…What it demands though is deep listening. There are
moments where it is energetic and in your face, bringing the music to you, but
it always goes back in, requiring the listener to come closer and bring their
own experience to it.”

01. Gordon Grdina Quartet - Giggles (4:03)
02. Gordon Grdina Quartet - Not Sure (11:39)
03. Gordon Grdina Quartet - P.B.S. (8:10)
04. Gordon Grdina Quartet - Semantics (2:30)
05. Gordon Grdina Quartet - Fragments (9:35)
06. Gordon Grdina Quartet - Casper (5:45)
07. Gordon Grdina Quartet - Kite Flight (1:57)
08. Gordon Grdina Quartet - Apocalympics (9:38)
09. Gordon Grdina Quartet - Giggles II (4:23)

Gordon Grdina Quartet


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