.:.impossible Posted December 22, 2003 Report Posted December 22, 2003 Dennis González .:. Earth and the Heart (1989) Nels Cline (Acoustic), Guitar (Electric), Devices Andrew Cyrille Drums Dennis Gonzalez Piano, Trumpet, Flugelhorn, Vocals, Voices Alex Cline Synthesizer, Percussion, Drums Ken Filiano Bass (Acoustic) Mark Hewins Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar .:. Is anyone here familiar with this recording? Any comments? I have received numerous recommendations for Dennis Gonzalez' recorded work, along with the Cline brothers. I am very interested in checking them out together and separately. Cyrille! Quote
relyles Posted December 22, 2003 Report Posted December 22, 2003 Not familiar with that one, but I do own two other Gonzalez recordings, Namesake and Old Time Revival, both of which I enjoy. I also caught Gonzalez show this past summer at Tonic in NYC with Ellery Eskelin, Mark Helias and Michael Thompson. It was a great set and I hear that Gonzalez is planning to release it in 2004. I am in no way advertising for another BBS, but Dennis Gonzalez has his own "ask the musicians" thread at Jazz Corner that he is very active on. He is obviously the best source for any additional recordings with the Clines. Quote
JohnS Posted December 24, 2003 Report Posted December 24, 2003 Is this the one that came out on Konnex. It's two different quartets. I had it briefly and didn't care for it but then it's so unlike the Silkhearts, which I love, that maybe it's not surprising. Must be those guitars. Quote
.:.impossible Posted December 25, 2003 Author Report Posted December 25, 2003 Thanks John. See, I didn't even know it was two separate quartets. I have never heard the Silkhearts either, so I'm still without a frame of reference. Would you mind going a little deeper into the memory banks if you could? In the meantime, I'll do some digging on the Silkhearts. Thanks. Quote
JohnS Posted December 29, 2003 Report Posted December 29, 2003 I think I found "Earth and Heart" bit noisy and unstructured for my taste, whereas the Silkheart discs are within the mainstream, melodic but still adventurous. Quote
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