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4.670 Ft
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1. | Prelude
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2. | Stephanie
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3. | Always Be Closing
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4. | Frederic
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5. | Teental Song
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6. | Chakradar 4
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7. | Interlude
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8. | Florentino and Fermina
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9. | What Do You Want To Be When You Grow Up?
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10. | Timshel
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11. | Dream
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12. | Postlude
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Jazz
Dan Weiss Drums Jacob Sacks Piano Thomas Morgan Bass
The best drummers, like Art Blakey, Max Roach and Billy Higgins, don't lead by propulsive pyrotechnics; rather, they lead by inspiring their fellow musicians to the heights of their musical plateaus. The endlessly inventive New York-born drummer, tabla player, and composer Dan Weiss, a seasoned veteran of the Manhattan jazz scene, as evidenced by his sterling sideman work with everybody from Lee Konitz, David Binney and Vijay Iyer, to Miguel Zenon, Uri Caine and Ben Monder, is such a drummer. Described as "Brooklyn's best-kept secret," Weiss, this debut release signals the end of his anonymity.
Timshel -- the Hebrew word meaning "thou mayest" -- accurately portrays the sound of this project by drummer/composer Dan Weiss and his trio, languishing in hushed tones and music stripped of energy, emphasizing subtlety. With pianist Jacob Sacks and bassist Thomas Morgan, Weiss plays sparse, wispy rhythms carried on gossamer wings of introspection. Where it is always more difficult to perform music slowly, these three are as patient in their virtuous resolve as any piano/bass/drums ensemble you may have ever heard, even Bill Evans in his most solemn repast. You might want to nap, sleep, or dream to this music, for the tones are exclusively pianissimo in dynamic content. Typically a languid music, sometimes sped up slightly on the lengthy "Stephanie" or similar to the Ecm sound in the Chopin tribute "Frederic," it can also assimilate sounds of the tabla drum as translated to the melody of the light funk of "Teental Song" or the two-beat piano/East Indian vocal style of "Chakradar #4." With variations more understated than overt, Weiss and his group have created an organ of beauty that acts as one complete piece. There is one caution, as the brief lyric on the world drum piece "Always Be Closing" includes expletives from the dialog of the film Glengarry Glen Ross. ~ Michael G. Nastos, All Music Guide |
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