Lacy, Steve +6 / Cry, the
Album: | Cry, the | Collection: | Jazz | |
Artist: | Lacy, Steve +6 | Added: | May 1999 | |
Label: | Soul Note |
Recent Airplay
1. | Jan 18, 2008: | Memory Select
Aggression |
Album Review
Craig Matsumoto
Reviewed 2008-01-18
Reviewed 2008-01-18
A "jam opera" mixing jazz, prog rock, and new classical. Quick tempos and long vocal lines sung by Lacy's wife, Irene Aebi, in her husky alto voice. Lacy uses the 7-piece band -- which includes harpsichord and accordion! -- to its fullest in a richly chaotic mix of rhythms and dissonance.
More important: The words being sung are a political commentary on the state of women in Bangladesh. Texts by Taslima Nasria, who received Islamic death threats much like Salman Rushdie did. Liner notes tell how she originally had a role in this opera.
DISK 1:
1- Short intro: Poetry over military snare
2- Chaotic and angry
3- Loping theme
4- Showcase for bass
5- Stomping, swirling beat
6- Harpsichord showcase
7- Jazzy; appropriately aggressive
DISK 2:
8- In French. Sparse, including a solo sax turn by Lacy
9* - Nice concrete theme, almost prog-rock
10- Complex and supposedly in "4/7" time
11- Burbly sax
12* - Powerful and brutal poetry, dissonant music. Describes the extreme brutality that's permitted against women, all in the name of making a wife love her husband, possibly ending with "suicide in a fit of ecstacy" -- which I think is a backhanded ironic reference to the loving "ecstacy" that this treatment is supposed to instill in a woman.
13- Taken from an ancient text, describes the sad effects of aging.
More important: The words being sung are a political commentary on the state of women in Bangladesh. Texts by Taslima Nasria, who received Islamic death threats much like Salman Rushdie did. Liner notes tell how she originally had a role in this opera.
DISK 1:
1- Short intro: Poetry over military snare
2- Chaotic and angry
3- Loping theme
4- Showcase for bass
5- Stomping, swirling beat
6- Harpsichord showcase
7- Jazzy; appropriately aggressive
DISK 2:
8- In French. Sparse, including a solo sax turn by Lacy
9* - Nice concrete theme, almost prog-rock
10- Complex and supposedly in "4/7" time
11- Burbly sax
12* - Powerful and brutal poetry, dissonant music. Describes the extreme brutality that's permitted against women, all in the name of making a wife love her husband, possibly ending with "suicide in a fit of ecstacy" -- which I think is a backhanded ironic reference to the loving "ecstacy" that this treatment is supposed to instill in a woman.
13- Taken from an ancient text, describes the sad effects of aging.
Track Listing
1. | Cannonade | 8. | Desir D'amour | |||
2. | Character | 9. | Body Theory | |||
3. | Straight Path | 10. | Dark and Handsome | |||
4. | Granary | 11. | Acquaintance | |||
5. | Divorce Letter | 12. | The Cry | |||
6. | Divided | 13. | Rundown (Ambapali Speaks) | |||
7. | Aggression | . |