Jan Garbarek Quartet Afric Pepperbird

Jan Garbarek Quartet - Afric Pepperbird (1970) {ECM 1007}  Music

Posted by tiburon at Oct. 6, 2019
Jan Garbarek Quartet - Afric Pepperbird (1970) {ECM 1007}

Jan Garbarek Quartet - Afric Pepperbird (1970) {ECM 1007}
EAC 1.0b3 | FLAC tracks level 8 | Cue+Log+M3U | Full Scans 600dpi | 282MB + 5% Recovery
MP3 CBR 320 Kbps | 95MB + 5% Recovery
Genre: Free Jazz, Contemporary Jazz, Avant-Garde, Experimental

Long ago, before he achieved relative stardom with his Nordic, somewhat new-agey recreations of medieval music, Jan Garbarek produced a handful of spectacular, robust albums for ECM where the influence of free jazz, particularly Albert Ayler, was paramount. Afric Pepperbird was his first recording for the then fledgling label and it features his quartet at the height of their powers, embellishing his muscular and imaginative compositions with outstanding, individualistic playing. From the eerie keening of the opening "Scarabee," framed by Jon Christensen's pinpoint delicate drums, to the hard-driving "Beast of Kommodo" with the leaders wailing bass sax to Rypdal's manic explorations on Blow Away Zone, this is one stellar effort.

VA - Sky Music: A Tribute To Terje Rypdal (2017)  Music

Posted by SERTiL at Feb. 21, 2018
VA - Sky Music: A Tribute To Terje Rypdal (2017)

VA - Sky Music: A Tribute To Terje Rypdal (2017)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks)+cue, log, front cover | 414 MB
Label: Rune Grammofon – RCD2194 | Tracks: 09 | Time: 79:50 min
Jazz, Fusion

"Born in Oslo on 23rd August, Rypdal was already a star at home in his teens with pop-rock group The Vanguards. This was followed by the timely and inevitable passage through psychedelia with quartet The Dream, releasing their only album, Get Dreamy, in 1967. In 1968, still only 21 years old, Rypdal released Bleak House, the first, quite extraordinary album under his own name, fully showing what direction he was moving into. Min Bul, his trio with Bjornar Andresen and Espen Rud, followed with their only album two years later. Rypdal and fellow Norwegians Jan Garbarek, Arild Andersen and Jon Christensen were quickly picked up by Manfred Eicher, starting his ECM label.