<< FLAC Michael Brecker - Pilgrimage PS3 SACD 24bit 96khz
Michael Brecker - Pilgrimage PS3 SACD 24bit 96khz
Category Sound
FormatFLAC
SourceCD
BitrateLossless
GenreJazz
TypeAlbum
Date 1 decade, 2 years
Size 1.79 GB
 
Website http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=25722
 
Sender heman (3f3EYw)                
Tag highqualityaudio        
 
Searchengine Search
NZB NZB
 
Number of spamreports 0

Post Description

The importance of saxophonist Michael Brecker's final recording, Pilgrimage, is densely multidimensional. The romantically inclined will attach significance to the fact that the nine compositions were conceived and recorded while Brecker was aware of the gravity of his final illness. Pilgrimage falls into an artistic/musical category that includes such disparate music as Mozart's Requiem, Puccini's Turandot, Billie Holiday's Lady In Satin and Johnny Cash's American Recordings, Volumes 5 & 6. All of these examples were conceived during the artists' autumnal periods and, in these cases, represent something of pinnacles in their outputs.

High art in the face of destiny is not always the case, however. June Carter Cash's final Wildwood Flower, while heartfelt, did the singer disfavor because she was obviously ill during the recording. Anita O'Day's final recording, Indestructible, similarly sincere, was recorded much too far past the singer's prime, and the aesthetic value of trumpeter Chet Baker's final recordings remains up for debate. So, what of Michael Brecker's final output?

In 2005, Brecker was diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome, a diverse collection of hematologic disease all sharing in common the inappropriate production of blood cells and their propensities for transforming into acute myelogenous leukemia. Unable to find a suitable stem-cell donor, Brecker passed away on Saturday, January 13, 2007. While Brecker did remain active during the period of his illness, appearing on Beatle Jazz's With A Little Help From Our Friends and Leni Stern's Alu Maye (Have You Heard), he had been inactive a year before these recordings.

Thus, the artist's largest late effort was reserved for Pilgrimage. He is joined by pianists Herbie Hancock and Brad Mehldau, guitarist Pat Metheny, bassist John Patitucci and drummer Jack DeJohnette, all sacred to Brecker's generation of jazz musicians. The notable absence of Randy Brecker is acknowledged for the life-long collaboration he had with his brother in their various music endeavors (noting that Randy Brecker never appeared on his brother's solo projects). Save that, Brecker chose his group wisely as the results of the recording reveal.

Brecker's tenor tone is strong and muscular. His composing is the best of his career. His melodic head-lines are organic, approximating a flock of small birds flying scattered one second and then in unison the next. Brecker and Metheny share a Bill Evans-Scott LaFaro empathy throughout the recording, both buoyed by the impressionistic piano of Hancock and Mehldau. The heart of the disc exists in its center with the pieces "Tumbleweed and "When Can I Kiss You Again. On the former, Brecker sets up a fast rolling theme and harmonics over which the soloists take quick flight including an aggressively distorted Metheny solo that gives way to one by Brecker. The rhythm section of Patitucci and DeJohnette creates a funky tonk with powerful momentum. No matter what, Brecker is in complete command.

"When Can I Kiss You Again is Brecker's introspective lullaby to his children, whom he could not see while in medical isolation. Again, his superior composing provides a carefully complex melodic introduction with a modal concept over which to solo. Composition and improvisation weave in and out of one another; constructing a silken fabric over which Metheny gives one his most inspired and introverted solos. Hancock provides his trademark abstraction as solo, depicting anxiousness as music. Brecker's solo is middle to low register and impeccably structured (as are all of his solos). The disc's title cut is a moody, Coltrane-esque meditation over electric piano with bass and drums occupying all sonic spaces. The piece grows in density and freedom as an open improvisation develops over the barest harmonic structure. And that was just the extended introduction. Brecker pulls all involved into an extended obbligato that is serpentine and seamless.

foobar2000 1.1.7 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
log date: 2012-06-25 01:33:11
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Analyzed: Michael Brecker / Pilgrimage
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DR Peak RMS Duration Track
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DR13 -0.85 dB -18.02 dB 6:59 01-The Mean Time
DR14 -1.72 dB -19.55 dB 7:41 02-Five Months From Midnight
DR14 -1.68 dB -19.54 dB 10:11 03-Anagram
DR14 -0.20 dB -16.80 dB 9:39 04-Tumbleweed
DR13 -0.10 dB -18.44 dB 9:46 05-When Can I Kiss You Again?
DR14 -1.16 dB -19.38 dB 7:34 06-Cardinal Rule
DR14 -1.48 dB -19.71 dB 7:19 07-Half Moon Lane
DR15 -0.70 dB -19.27 dB 8:37 08-Loose Threads
DR14 -0.24 dB -18.91 dB 10:02 09-Pilgrimage
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of tracks: 9
Official DR value: DR14
Samplerate: 96000 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 24
Bitrate: 2972 kbps
Codec: FLAC

Comments # 0