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Hilltop View
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Barnes and Noble
Hilltop View
Current price: $20.99
Barnes and Noble
Hilltop View
Current price: $20.99
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Pianist
Glen Hoiuchi
is certainly the type of artist that
Music & Arts
adores: smart, clever, and aggressive, and very egg-headed in his approach to improvisation. While it's true that his
jazz
includes many other kinds of music --
country
,
Delta blues
, microtonalism, Japanese timbral effects, etc. -- but all of those musics by virtue of them being jammed together in self-conscious ways, are literally stilted and not allowed to express their own identities apart from
Horiuchi
's reading of them. Interpretation is one thing, form fitting is another. With bassist
Roberto Miranda
and drummer
Jeanette Wrate
on half the set, and an augmented trio with playing shamisen and singing accompanied by tuba god
William Roper
and violinist
Francis Wong
(all as Unita) on the other half, there are plenty of opportunities for extraterrestrial exploration. And exploration happens, too, but it is all wired into
's musical formalism, and therefore stripped of its anarchic power to both create and destroy. Ultimately, this disc wears on the listener after only four selections; the rest is nearly unbearable with the exception of some of
Roper
's invention and remarkable soling techniques (microphonics, etc.). This set is proof positive that there are very few musicians who can take the academic approach all the way home into musical expansion. ~ Thom Jurek
Glen Hoiuchi
is certainly the type of artist that
Music & Arts
adores: smart, clever, and aggressive, and very egg-headed in his approach to improvisation. While it's true that his
jazz
includes many other kinds of music --
country
,
Delta blues
, microtonalism, Japanese timbral effects, etc. -- but all of those musics by virtue of them being jammed together in self-conscious ways, are literally stilted and not allowed to express their own identities apart from
Horiuchi
's reading of them. Interpretation is one thing, form fitting is another. With bassist
Roberto Miranda
and drummer
Jeanette Wrate
on half the set, and an augmented trio with playing shamisen and singing accompanied by tuba god
William Roper
and violinist
Francis Wong
(all as Unita) on the other half, there are plenty of opportunities for extraterrestrial exploration. And exploration happens, too, but it is all wired into
's musical formalism, and therefore stripped of its anarchic power to both create and destroy. Ultimately, this disc wears on the listener after only four selections; the rest is nearly unbearable with the exception of some of
Roper
's invention and remarkable soling techniques (microphonics, etc.). This set is proof positive that there are very few musicians who can take the academic approach all the way home into musical expansion. ~ Thom Jurek