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Streamer in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $17.99

Streamer in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $17.99
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Size: OS
Norwegian trumpeter
Nils Petter Molvaer
's live recording
Streamer
was issued in Europe on the
Sura
label in 2004. Finally issued here in the United States in
Thirsty Ear
's celebrated Blue Series, it is
Molvaer
's third U.S. CD, and it almost catches us up with his catalog (
NP3
is still not in print in the U.S.).
features material from
's second album on
ECM
,
Solid Ether
, as well as
. Present here is the trumpeter's standard accompanying band which includes atmospheric guitar powerhouse
Eivind Aarset
, drum master
Rune Arnesen
, as well as sidemen
DJ Strangefruit
, and French
electronic
programmer
Raymond C. Pellicer
creating loops and interspersing samples and effects. The four cuts performed from
"Frozen,"
"Marrow"
"Little Indian,"
and
"Simply So"
differ substantially from their studio counterparts in that the rhythmic intensity on the former two are more dynamic, and on the latter two, the sounds and placements are more relaxed and organic. The dreaminess inherent in this mix proves beyond the shadow of any doubt that
is a master of his music in a live setting, creating dreamy, shimmering soundscapes in one moment and
tribal
, ecstatic ones the next, never losing his melodic invention or sense of control. The material from
includes the title cut and
"Kakonita."
In this latter tune, perhaps the most stirringly beautiful cut on the set, the music seems to drift toward the listener without hurry or particular purpose but stays very focused, its delivery being spun out only a little at a time with
's trumpet becoming a slow, languid singer in the heat as it rises from the pavement. It drones its way into
"Sauna,"
a track that is as full of strange, intersecting melodic lines and musical traditions as it is guitar delays; it ominously threatens to explode at various moments, but its tension is held guardedly and tightly by
. The set winds its way to a close with
"Hurry Slowly,"
a rhythmically intense vamp intercut with vocal samples and that ever slowly unwinding trumpet line that never gives the listener much to hold on to as it creates a skeletal frame for the rhythmic invention. It ends with
"Solid Ether,"
another snaky cut that becomes rhythmically more intense moment by moment, its trancelike beat distortedly running home while swirls and textures of
noise and samples wind in and out of the foreground and
Aarset
gets to stretch a bit. It's
that may be the
recording to start with, as it reveals his considerable range not only as an instrumentalist and composer, but as a performer as well. ~ Thom Jurek
Nils Petter Molvaer
's live recording
Streamer
was issued in Europe on the
Sura
label in 2004. Finally issued here in the United States in
Thirsty Ear
's celebrated Blue Series, it is
Molvaer
's third U.S. CD, and it almost catches us up with his catalog (
NP3
is still not in print in the U.S.).
features material from
's second album on
ECM
,
Solid Ether
, as well as
. Present here is the trumpeter's standard accompanying band which includes atmospheric guitar powerhouse
Eivind Aarset
, drum master
Rune Arnesen
, as well as sidemen
DJ Strangefruit
, and French
electronic
programmer
Raymond C. Pellicer
creating loops and interspersing samples and effects. The four cuts performed from
"Frozen,"
"Marrow"
"Little Indian,"
and
"Simply So"
differ substantially from their studio counterparts in that the rhythmic intensity on the former two are more dynamic, and on the latter two, the sounds and placements are more relaxed and organic. The dreaminess inherent in this mix proves beyond the shadow of any doubt that
is a master of his music in a live setting, creating dreamy, shimmering soundscapes in one moment and
tribal
, ecstatic ones the next, never losing his melodic invention or sense of control. The material from
includes the title cut and
"Kakonita."
In this latter tune, perhaps the most stirringly beautiful cut on the set, the music seems to drift toward the listener without hurry or particular purpose but stays very focused, its delivery being spun out only a little at a time with
's trumpet becoming a slow, languid singer in the heat as it rises from the pavement. It drones its way into
"Sauna,"
a track that is as full of strange, intersecting melodic lines and musical traditions as it is guitar delays; it ominously threatens to explode at various moments, but its tension is held guardedly and tightly by
. The set winds its way to a close with
"Hurry Slowly,"
a rhythmically intense vamp intercut with vocal samples and that ever slowly unwinding trumpet line that never gives the listener much to hold on to as it creates a skeletal frame for the rhythmic invention. It ends with
"Solid Ether,"
another snaky cut that becomes rhythmically more intense moment by moment, its trancelike beat distortedly running home while swirls and textures of
noise and samples wind in and out of the foreground and
Aarset
gets to stretch a bit. It's
that may be the
recording to start with, as it reveals his considerable range not only as an instrumentalist and composer, but as a performer as well. ~ Thom Jurek
Norwegian trumpeter
Nils Petter Molvaer
's live recording
Streamer
was issued in Europe on the
Sura
label in 2004. Finally issued here in the United States in
Thirsty Ear
's celebrated Blue Series, it is
Molvaer
's third U.S. CD, and it almost catches us up with his catalog (
NP3
is still not in print in the U.S.).
features material from
's second album on
ECM
,
Solid Ether
, as well as
. Present here is the trumpeter's standard accompanying band which includes atmospheric guitar powerhouse
Eivind Aarset
, drum master
Rune Arnesen
, as well as sidemen
DJ Strangefruit
, and French
electronic
programmer
Raymond C. Pellicer
creating loops and interspersing samples and effects. The four cuts performed from
"Frozen,"
"Marrow"
"Little Indian,"
and
"Simply So"
differ substantially from their studio counterparts in that the rhythmic intensity on the former two are more dynamic, and on the latter two, the sounds and placements are more relaxed and organic. The dreaminess inherent in this mix proves beyond the shadow of any doubt that
is a master of his music in a live setting, creating dreamy, shimmering soundscapes in one moment and
tribal
, ecstatic ones the next, never losing his melodic invention or sense of control. The material from
includes the title cut and
"Kakonita."
In this latter tune, perhaps the most stirringly beautiful cut on the set, the music seems to drift toward the listener without hurry or particular purpose but stays very focused, its delivery being spun out only a little at a time with
's trumpet becoming a slow, languid singer in the heat as it rises from the pavement. It drones its way into
"Sauna,"
a track that is as full of strange, intersecting melodic lines and musical traditions as it is guitar delays; it ominously threatens to explode at various moments, but its tension is held guardedly and tightly by
. The set winds its way to a close with
"Hurry Slowly,"
a rhythmically intense vamp intercut with vocal samples and that ever slowly unwinding trumpet line that never gives the listener much to hold on to as it creates a skeletal frame for the rhythmic invention. It ends with
"Solid Ether,"
another snaky cut that becomes rhythmically more intense moment by moment, its trancelike beat distortedly running home while swirls and textures of
noise and samples wind in and out of the foreground and
Aarset
gets to stretch a bit. It's
that may be the
recording to start with, as it reveals his considerable range not only as an instrumentalist and composer, but as a performer as well. ~ Thom Jurek
Nils Petter Molvaer
's live recording
Streamer
was issued in Europe on the
Sura
label in 2004. Finally issued here in the United States in
Thirsty Ear
's celebrated Blue Series, it is
Molvaer
's third U.S. CD, and it almost catches us up with his catalog (
NP3
is still not in print in the U.S.).
features material from
's second album on
ECM
,
Solid Ether
, as well as
. Present here is the trumpeter's standard accompanying band which includes atmospheric guitar powerhouse
Eivind Aarset
, drum master
Rune Arnesen
, as well as sidemen
DJ Strangefruit
, and French
electronic
programmer
Raymond C. Pellicer
creating loops and interspersing samples and effects. The four cuts performed from
"Frozen,"
"Marrow"
"Little Indian,"
and
"Simply So"
differ substantially from their studio counterparts in that the rhythmic intensity on the former two are more dynamic, and on the latter two, the sounds and placements are more relaxed and organic. The dreaminess inherent in this mix proves beyond the shadow of any doubt that
is a master of his music in a live setting, creating dreamy, shimmering soundscapes in one moment and
tribal
, ecstatic ones the next, never losing his melodic invention or sense of control. The material from
includes the title cut and
"Kakonita."
In this latter tune, perhaps the most stirringly beautiful cut on the set, the music seems to drift toward the listener without hurry or particular purpose but stays very focused, its delivery being spun out only a little at a time with
's trumpet becoming a slow, languid singer in the heat as it rises from the pavement. It drones its way into
"Sauna,"
a track that is as full of strange, intersecting melodic lines and musical traditions as it is guitar delays; it ominously threatens to explode at various moments, but its tension is held guardedly and tightly by
. The set winds its way to a close with
"Hurry Slowly,"
a rhythmically intense vamp intercut with vocal samples and that ever slowly unwinding trumpet line that never gives the listener much to hold on to as it creates a skeletal frame for the rhythmic invention. It ends with
"Solid Ether,"
another snaky cut that becomes rhythmically more intense moment by moment, its trancelike beat distortedly running home while swirls and textures of
noise and samples wind in and out of the foreground and
Aarset
gets to stretch a bit. It's
that may be the
recording to start with, as it reveals his considerable range not only as an instrumentalist and composer, but as a performer as well. ~ Thom Jurek
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