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3.796 Ft
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1. | Ora
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2. | Madrid
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3. | Bass Suite No.1
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4. | Reunion of the Souls
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5. | Dror
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6. | No Change
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7. | Bass & Bone Fantasy
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8. | Adama
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9. | Bass Suite No.2
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10. | Besame Mucho
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11. | Gadu
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12. | Jasonity
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Jazz / Fusion; Post-Bop; Hard Bop; Contemporary Jazz
Avishai Cohen - acoustic bass Claudia Acuna - vocals Steve Wilson - soprano saxophone Steve Davis - trombone Jason Lindner - piano Brad Mehldau - piano Danilo Perez - piano Chick Corea - Fender Rhodes Amos Hoffman - guitar, oud Jeff Ballard - drums, percussion Jordy Rossi - drums Don Alias - congas
Avishai Cohen showed enormous promise as both a composer and an acoustic bassist on his first album as a leader, Adama, which he produced with Chick Corea for the company Corea co-owned, Stretch records. Reminding listeners of his Israeli heritage, the post-bopper brings a heavy Middle Eastern influence to such impressive originals as "Reunion of the Souls," "Ora," and "No Change." Although Cohen's 1997 music wasn't innovative -- John Coltrane, Yusef Lateef, and Miles Davis successfully experimented with Middle Eastern elements when they embraced modal jazz in the late '50s -- Adama has a certain freshness to it. "Madrid," "Dror," and the title song find one of Cohen's sidemen, Amos Hoffman, putting down his guitar in favor of the oud, and his use of this lute (which is prominent in traditional Arabic music) works so well in a jazz setting that one wishes Cohen employed Hoffman on the instrument even more. Cohen's Spanish-influenced "Gadu," meanwhile, features Corea on electric keyboards. Captivating from start to finish, Adama made it clear that Cohen was someone to watch out for. ---Alex Henderson, AMG |
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