Parallels

Parallels

Parallels

Track Listings
 
1. Leave the Past Behind
2. Life in Still Water
3. Eye to Eye
4. Eleventh Hour
5. Point of View
6. We Only Say Goodbye
7. Don't Follow Me
8. Road Goes on Forever

Parallels,Fates Warning,Warner Bros / Wea,Heavy Metal,Pop,Popular Music,Progressive Metal,Rock
True Parallels
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Trust Company Review - True Parallels
  • I Love This Band
  • 3-1/2 stars -- Good company
  • Every song sounds the same.
  • And they did it again
True Parallels
Trust Company
Manufacturer: Geffen Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Alternative MetalAlternative Metal | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
Hard RockHard Rock | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
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  1. The Lonely Position of Neutral
  2. Twelve Year Silence
  3. Someone in Control
  4. Lo-Pro
  5. Two

ASIN: B0007TKHX4
Release Date: 2005-03-22

Tracks:

  1. Stronger
  2. The War Is Over
  3. Surfacing
  4. Slave
  5. Fold
  6. The Reflection
  7. Breaking Down
  8. Someone Like You
  9. Crossing The Line
  10. Silently
  11. Erased
  12. Without A Trace
  13. Unknown
  14. Unknown
  15. Unknown
  16. Unknown
  17. Unknown
  18. Unknown
  19. Unknown
  20. Unknown
  21. Unknown
  22. Unknown
  23. Unknown
  24. Unknown
  25. Unknown
  26. Unknown
  27. Unknown
  28. Unknown
  29. Unknown
  30. Unknown
  31. Unknown
  32. Unknown
  33. Unknown
  34. Unknown
  35. Unknown
  36. Unknown
  37. Unknown
  38. Unknown
  39. Unknown
  40. Unknown
  41. Bonus Track 1

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Trust Company Review - True Parallels.......2006-03-20

Now, This CD is Awesome. Way better then the 1st. This song is a little more (not much), heavier then their 1st CD, but it's mostly the same. Either this CD makes you want to "Mosh" and jump around, or to listen to when you wanna get Hyped about something. I hope they come out with more great songs!

4 out of 5 stars I Love This Band.......2006-02-21

I LOVE Trust Company and for that I really liked the CD. However, I could see where someone who isn't really familiar with them - would care too much for this CD. It sounds very much like their first one - which I REALLY love. This CD is good if you like Trust Company OR really liked 'Lonely Position'.

3 out of 5 stars 3-1/2 stars -- Good company.......2005-12-08

TRUSTcompany is another one of those hard rock bands that seem to get lost in the shuffle of all the other bands. It's not to say they aren't good, but it seems that they just don't get as much cred as other bands. Anyway, I didn't get to hear their first album, but I decided to check out their latest, True Parallels.

This album is decent, but there really isn't much else to say about it. The songs are basically okay; not "filler" okay, but they're not extraordinary songs either. The band kind of reminds me of Linkin Park without the rapping (that's not a bad thing, because I know some people don't like Linkin Park) because vocalist Kevin Palmer tends to sound like Chester Bennington. Anyway, the only real negative thing I can say about the album is that the great production in "Breaking Down" is thrown off by the off-tempo singing in the chorus.

While nothing to run and tell a friend about, True Parallels would still be a nice purchase for hard rock enthusiasts. But if they want to get more recognition with their next album, they should follow what they said in the first single and make it stronger.

Anthony Rupert

1 out of 5 stars Every song sounds the same........2005-09-05

My musical interests have changed slightly since "the lonely position of neutral", so I wasn't first in line to get "true parallels". I got it two months after it's release, and when I put it on, I knew i wouldn't like it. The War Is Over and Stronger and two great tracks...if they were done by hoobastank. The rest of the album stucks way worse. all the songs after those first two are awful and sound the same. TLPON was atleast original and had some siganture sound to it, this crap just sounds like every other band out there. Not catchy, not interesting, and the lead singer (kevin, who's a real jerk) sounds way worse than he did on the last record. Not that I like TLPON either, I'd give it maybe 3 stars tops, but it was better than this. BTW, the band broke up last month (well, actually, kevin quit like the loser he is and left two other band members angry and upset with him, which is obvious in their posts on the TC message board) so don't expect any better follow-ups either. I'd sell my copy back, but I'd only get .90 for it, so I think i'll pass. What a waste. Avoid!

5 out of 5 stars And they did it again.......2005-07-21

I must say this is another album where I love EVERY single song. Unbelievable. I was blown away by their first album, and blown away again by this again. Buy this CD.
Parallels
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Fifteen Years of Neglect
  • Another amazing Fates album
  • Intelligent Emotional Metal
  • Progressive hard rock/metal GENIUS! Incredible!
  • THE Progressive Metal Masterpiece
Parallels
Fates Warning
Manufacturer: Metal Blade
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Progressive MetalProgressive Metal | Progressive | Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
MetalMetal | Hard Rock & Metal | Rock | Indie Music | Stores | Music
ProgressiveProgressive | Rock | Indie Music | Stores | Music
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  1. Perfect Symmetry
  2. Pleasant Shade of Gray
  3. No Exit
  4. Inside Out
  5. Disconnected

ASIN: B000007T6W
Release Date: 1998-07-14

Tracks:

  1. Leave The Past Behind
  2. Life In Still Water
  3. Eye To Eye
  4. The Eleventh Hour
  5. Point Of View
  6. We Only Say Goodbye
  7. Don't Follow Me
  8. The Road Goes On Forever

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Fifteen Years of Neglect.......2007-08-02

Fifteen years! That's how long Parallels sat gathering dust on the shelf after I purchased it. Oh, I listened to it once or twice when it first came out; just enough to deem it unimpressive. The dust that gathered on the cd cleared up a bit each of the dozen times I moved from apartment to apartment over the next 15 years, but I never played it during that period - not once. Finally, about a year ago, I made my first acquaintance with an 80GB Ipod, and decided I had enough room to dump nearly all of my cd collection onto it without worrying that some of the music was unlistenable pap (Does anyone want my Radio Active Cats album? Anyone? Please, I tried to sell it back to the used cd store where I bought it - something I never do except in the most extreme of cases - but the counter clerk just laughed claiming he'd never have sold me something as awful as R.A.C.).

Last winter, I carried that magical ipod with me for a long stay in the Ethiopian highlands. Many months of foggy days and frigid nights spent in near isolation provided me with a wonderful opportunity to re-explore my music collection. By April, I'd begun scraping the bottom of the barrel - and that's where I found Parallels. I sure didn't expect much from it, and on first listen, I was not especially impressed - `meandering songs that seemed to go nowhere' was my conclusion. Still, something I heard told me to give it a second chance, and about a week later, I listened to that little voice in my head and dutifully played Parallels again.

Suddenly, it was like puzzle pieces that had been lying in a heap in the corner of the basement came together and formed a beautiful picture. I was almost overwhelmed by the beauty of Parallels - a mournful, yet uplifting, song cycle where every note seems perfectly chosen. I felt a certain `giddiness' at having discovered a lost classic in my music collection that was sure to continue growing on me for months, perhaps years, to come. Repeated listens over the remainder of my stay in the highlands revealed an album that combined clinical musical precision with exceptional emotional weight to an extent I'd never heard before. From the galloping bass line of `Point of View' to the soaring vocals of `Life in Still Water', Parallels is never less than satisfying, achieving a level of consistency and emotional resonance shared by very few albums in my collection. And to think Parallels had been sitting unplayed on the shelf for 15 years before my new ipod gave it the opportunity to capture my attention.

Upon my return from Ethiopia about a month ago, I ordered a copy of Parallels for my sister whom I was sure would love it (she does) and set to work building up a collection of Fates Warning cds for myself. I doubt any of their other albums will have the same staggering effect on me as Parallels but I sure look forward to exploring the remainder of Fates Warning's catalogue nevertheless. I hope that my rediscovery of Parallels will strike a chord with others, either by inspiring people to buy Parallels and experience this special album or by inspiring them to give some of the albums long-buried in their collections a second chance. The next album that captures your imagination might just be one that has been sitting neglected on a shelf in your home or in the deepest recesses of your ipod. Unless your entire collection consists of albums by the Radio Active Cats, that is. If you find yourself in that alarming situation, you'll need to go out and buy some new albums immediately - preferably starting with Parallels.

5 out of 5 stars Another amazing Fates album.......2006-12-26

Fates Warning decided to write an insightful and complex album that will appeal and reflect every listener. Such a difficult and complex work for a band to do. Without much trouble they succeeded! That is what parallels is all about. 8 songs dealing with everyday human life matters and while they sound simple there is much more to them that meets the eye. The songs are not as complex as their later works but one can easily notice the work given to every song. This is a very nice album to get to know the band as it's very simple to listen and fully abbrevate. Highly recommended!

5 out of 5 stars Intelligent Emotional Metal.......2006-05-17

The vocals are so powerful. The songs sound like they were sung by someone who really believes in what he's saying and that the songs are actually personal experiences being told. That's what I notice most about this album/band, the sheer authenticity and true emotion that they convey in each song makes fates warning sound 'heavier' than the heaviest metal band, (and I like "heavier" metal bands too). Fates crush them all on this album! Of course the excellent drumming and guitars help too! Recommend this and the other Fates Warning CDs '88 to present be listened to with good head phones / ear buds.

5 out of 5 stars Progressive hard rock/metal GENIUS! Incredible!.......2006-01-13

Fates Warning is an amazingly talented and underrated band. 'Parallels' is an incredible, highly engaging, world class piece of prog metal music. It is VERY dynamic, with gorgeous, subtle soft musical passages and vocals interspersed with heavier riffing and wails that showcase diversity and raw heartfelt emotion. They have that powerful, clockwork early Queensryche sound but with their own original signature. Truly one of the best hard rock/prog rock bands EVER.

5 out of 5 stars THE Progressive Metal Masterpiece.......2005-12-09

This is the definition of progressive metal. While accessible, the intricacies and subtlety that lie below the surface will amaze any discerning listener. Like a fine wine or high end audio system only those who listen carefully or those who know will be able to detect the sheer genius in the songwriting on this album. How many modern "progmetal" bands have aspired to be what Fates was and is, including the mighty Dream Theater, even they could not reach the subtlety of Fates. The drumming by Mark Zonder on this album is beyond phenomenal, the guitar riffs are incredible. I guess you would say this is Frank Aresti's swan song as this was his best collaborative work with Jim Matheos ever, the dual guitars creating layered melodies. Every track is a monument unto itself.
Parallels of Infinite Torture
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • Brutal Death Metal
  • Not the disgorge, i once liked...
  • Good... but a little monotonous!!!!
  • Terrible... Sounds way too repetetive...
  • I can't believe the reviews here
Parallels of Infinite Torture
Disgorge
Manufacturer: Crash Music
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Death MetalDeath Metal | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
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  1. Mark of the Legion
  2. Crown of Souls
  3. Consume the Forsaken
  4. Reduced to Ashes
  5. She Lay Gutted

ASIN: B0007Z9QAS
Release Date: 2005-05-17

Tracks:

  1. Revealed in Obscurity
  2. Enthroned Abominations
  3. Atonement
  4. Abhorrent Desecration of Thee Iniquity
  5. Forgotten Scriptures
  6. Descending Upon Convulsive Devourment
  7. Condemned to Sufferance
  8. Parallels of Infinite Torture
  9. Asphyxiation of Thee Oppressed
  10. Ominous Sigils of Ungodly Ruin

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Brutal Death Metal.......2006-11-23

This is my favorite Disgorge album; the one that I would recommend first to anyone new to the band or even brutal DM. Disgorge continues to stay true to their music writing with Parallels. They play two or three themes, modify them, as well as throwing in frequent interludes and development sections. However, they've matured musically since their last album making this release their most technical. The guitars go on more frequent runs playing more scales and returning to the themes less, which makes the music formatting even more unpredictable than previous releases. They break down the scales often with melodies and chord progressions, which adds depth to the musicianship. The scales are played with more speed, intensity, and on average, are more complicated than the ones in previous albums. Putting all instruments together, there are more odd time signatures, abrupt tempo changes, and grooves. This album is also more diverse than previous ones because some of the main themes have a more powerful sound making them epic sounding. There are also a few instances where the direction of the music turns to borderline doom emphasizing a dark atmosphere. Despite the increased technicality and slight progression, this album is just as brutal as the others. The vocals are just as deep and guttural as ever and the drums rely on gravity blast beats for the most part.

Time: 43:56

1 out of 5 stars Not the disgorge, i once liked..........2006-05-16

Speaking from some one who has disgorge's other albums such as she lay gutted, consume the forsaken and their other works... I didnt like disgorge's "parallels of infinite torture" at all and i was very dissapointed because, i realy love this band but their previous materiels were actullie damn good but parallels isn't. From the first song to the last ? It gets old so quick. Disgorge ? If your read this ? Why you didnt sound brutal like in your previous efforts ? A let down fan. Step up your sounds next time !

4 out of 5 stars Good... but a little monotonous!!!!.......2005-12-23


I really like Disgorge, the musicianship here is at the top, but the vocals and certain parts make's the album way repetitive, and boring in some parts. So, don't situate them on Cryptopsy's throne, they don't fit!!! The quality of their music is compared for the likes of: Devourment, Deeds of Flesh and etc...

1 out of 5 stars Terrible... Sounds way too repetetive..........2005-10-08

How can people compare the boring and unoriginal and repetetive sounds of disgorge to cryptopsy ? Thats blasphemy! Not to mention that their drummer is one of the worse in the genre by far besides cannibal corpse's drummer which both are lame as hell... Disgorge's "parallels of infinite torture" shoulnd even be consider a deathmetal album period, because to me deathmetal is talent,originality, great lirycs ,skilled musicians, which disgorge has none of that whats so ever!

2 out of 5 stars I can't believe the reviews here.......2005-09-05

Any comparison to Cryptopsy is something I take very seriously. I can't believe people are thinking that Disgorge is on the same level as other bands mentioned. Cryptopsy, in particular, occupies a plane that is situated orders of magnitude above this band.

The first time I listened to this CD, I was so bored and disappointed that I didn't even make it through the whole thing. This is while sitting in hours of construction-strangled traffic with *nothing* else to listen to. That says something.

I suppose this CD is valuable in one sense: it makes painfully clear the fact that the Canniblast cannot stand on its own. It only really works in small doses, and when mixed with other techniques (see: Necrophagist, Behemoth). The blasting is almost entirely Canniblast, with a few precious seconds of bomb-blasting thrown in. It is truly perplexing why a band of this technical ability would limit themselves to the slowest-sounding of all blast beats. (It sounds slow because the hands and feet are not alternating, so you get half the perceived number of impacts.)

Well, I went back and gave it a second chance recently. It completely lacks subtlety, originality, nuance, etc. But it is reasonably enjoyable. It's exactly the kind of music that your friends think death metal is: monotonous, indiscriminate bludgeoning. If you've already grown to appreciate bands like Cryptopsy (again, *why* the comparison? I just don't get it), Necrophagist, Iniquity, Theory in Practice, Commit Suicide, and Gorguts, there is nothing for you in "Parallels of Infinite Torture". This will seem like a joke band to you. There are too many ingenious, brutal, light-speed bands out there to waste your time on this one.
Formulate a Tragedy
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Formulate a Tragedy
    All Parallels
    Manufacturer: The Orchard
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
    Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
    ASIN: B000MCID3W
    Release Date: 2006-12-26

    Tracks:

    1. Work
    2. Lousy Reasons
    3. World We Be Living In
    4. Marrow
    5. Such Fragile Things
    6. Weight of the World
    7. Damaged Goods
    8. Vapors
    9. You Won't Feel a Thing
    10. All Nighter
    11. Push
    12. Lost Wager
    Parallels
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      Parallels
      Fates Warning
      Manufacturer: Warner Bros / Wea
      ProductGroup: Music
      Binding: Audio CD

      GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
      Progressive MetalProgressive Metal | Progressive | Rock | Styles | Music
      GeneralGeneral | Hard Rock & Metal | Styles | Music
      Similar Items:
      1. Inside Out
      2. Perfect Symmetry
      3. Perfect Symmetry

      ASIN: B00000E9PJ
      Release Date: 1991-10-29

      Tracks:

      1. Leave the Past Behind
      2. Life in Still Water
      3. Eye to Eye
      4. Eleventh Hour
      5. Point of View
      6. We Only Say Goodbye
      7. Don't Follow Me
      8. Road Goes on Forever
      Corridors & Parallels
      Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
      • An Experiment - Not Quite an Accomplishment
      • The well will never dry
      • A splendid new direction for David S. Ware
      • Diggable
      Corridors & Parallels
      David S. Ware Quartet
      Manufacturer: Aum Fidelity
      ProductGroup: Music
      Binding: Audio CD

      Avant Garde & Free JazzAvant Garde & Free Jazz | Jazz | Styles | Music
      GeneralGeneral | Jazz | Styles | Music
      GeneralGeneral | Jazz | Indie Music | Stores | Music
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      ASIN: B00005Q6KH
      Release Date: 2001-09-18

      Tracks:

      1. Untitled
      2. Straight Track
      3. Jazz Fi-Sci
      4. Superimposed
      5. Sound-a-bye
      6. Untitled
      7. Corridors & Parallels
      8. Somewhere
      9. Spaces Embraces
      10. Mother May You Rest In Bliss
      11. Untitled

      Amazon.com

      Tenor saxophonist David S. Ware's quartet has become a key institution of the "ecstatic" movement--latter-day free jazz--delivering nonstop intensity with the leader's vast, harrowing wail, the complex detailing of pianist Matthew Shipp and bassist William Parker beneath, and the roll and tumble of a series of drummers. Corridors and Parallels maintains much of the band's heat, but breaks new ground with Shipp's shift to synthesizer. Whether it's the distancing effect of electronics or the suddenly broadened sound palette, the group is essentially reborn, pressing into fresh territory and touching on genres unheard in their previous work.

      Some of the tracks seem frankly experimental, testing the possibilities of the electro-acoustic relationship. "Straight Track" has Shipp developing a Sun Ra-like mix of the cosmic and the kitsch before Ware roots the music in his familiar, soulful expressionism. "Jazz Fi-Sci" further exploits that contrast with call and response between the acoustic trio of Ware, Parker, and drummer Guillermo E. Brown against Shipp's passages of burbling, skittering electronics. The music is far more compelling when the elements are integrated. "Superimposed" uses marimba-like programming to layer dense polyrhythms of electronics and percussion, creating an African-sourced field for Ware's sustained power. The title track is the most arresting, a brilliant amalgam of funk beats and Middle Eastern sonorities, with the bowed drone of Parker's bass bridging the shennai-like call of Ware's tenor and Shipp's own electronic figures. Occasionally, the results are more interesting than musically successful, but this is an important CD for both the quartet and the style that they center. --Stuart Broomer

      Customer Reviews:

      3 out of 5 stars An Experiment - Not Quite an Accomplishment.......2004-03-23

      Much has been made of the "new" direction that this album represents for the Ware quartet. Most of this hype centers around the presence of electronics on the disc. Certainly this disc represents a radical departure from Ware's more mainstream but still impressive albums for Sony. Where on the Sony albums, Ware seemed to be channeling late Coltrane through Charles Lloyd, this disc marks the return of Ware the ecstatic Ayler disciple. So to me, rather than marking a new direction in Ware's work, this disc is a return to form, albeit with a few gimmicks and some twists.

      The album does mark some interesting departures for the group. Stylistically, the work on the album is less compositionally based and ranges freely between avant-garde energy jazz blowouts, an Africanized romp, some very impressive Middle Eastern inspired blowing and even a ballad. Though there are "tunes" like Corridors and Parallels, which obviously has a predetermined theme, much of the album sounds like a studio experiment, with grooves and general shape as the determining factor rather than the earlier free jazz "heads" that were the stock in trade of the group in the 90s. The results are mixed. Straight Track noodles around for a while until Ware enters, then things ignite. Jazz Fi-Sci is centered an old-fashioned "trading fours" session between Ware on tenor and Shipp on synthesizer. As interesting as this concept might be in theory, the effect is rather weak, partly because Shipp's chosen program is not particularly interesting as a solo voice. Superimposed, the African jam is one of the outstanding tracks. It features a percussion jam centered on a synthesized marimba sound, over which Ware blows a scorching solo. Sound-a-bye is an interesting sonic texture ballad, but it goes on too long and too little happens. Corridors and Parallels is the other really outstanding track, featuring a beautiful bowed melody from William Parkers inimitable bass over which Ware blows with the intensity of a Sufi musician. Somewhere is another wonderful Parker feature. The bass player coaxes some amazing sounds out of his instrument over an otherworldly soundscape. Spaces Embrace has a bluesy quality that is intriguing, and Ware's tone is at it's raspy best. And Mother May You Rest In Peace is a gospelized ballad and dedicated to the memory of the tenorist's mother.

      To me though, the album's central gimmick mars it. I have struggled long and hard to come to terms with Matthew Shipp as a pianist. For years I didn't get the hype. Now I am learning to appreciate his strong points, an interesting sense of construction, a unique blending of the tone clusters of Cecil Taylor with a piano style that owes almost as much to hard boppers like Horace Silver and Bobby Timmons as it does to any 60s pianist. But the synthesizer just isn't his instrument. The "ingenious programming" that many reviewers have commented on is actually not that ingenious. Any user of a Roland keyboard product will recognize the programs as straight "out-of-the-box" Roland user programs. This in itself is not such a big deal, though it shows no special ingenuity on Shipp's part. But his approach to the instrument is fairly unimaginative. On Jazz Fi-Sci Shipp noodles around like Sun Ra at his kitschiest, and it's not particularly attractive. On Superimposed, he uses a pad sound, which is meant as a background wash, as his solo instrument voice and it is singularly ineffective. On some of the other tracks, his use of the instrument is a little more in keeping with the nature of it, but even in such tracks like Corridors and Parallels, the use of synthesizer relegates Shipp to a subordinate role in the quartet, effectively negating him as an equal creative member of the group. Perhaps the best thing that could have been done with this disc would have been to hire an expert, as Shipp has done on his two "jazztronica" albums for Thirsty Ear, and let Shipp do what he does best, play the piano. Then the disc would have less of a gimmicky sound, and we would get the well-oiled machine that we've come to expect from the Ware Quartet.

      In closing, this is not a bad album at all. It is even a welcome return to form from Ware himself after his "mellow" Sony phase. But it doesn't represent the group at it's best, or even a "new direction" for them. Rather it represents a stylistic experiment of the kind that musicians often attempt to get themselves out of a creative rut. It has much in common with similar experiments like Miles' late flirting with hip-hop, Ornette's Skies of America recording, or Charlie Parker with Strings...it represents not so much a bold new direction, as an attempt to inject life into a style that may fit the musicians too well. Perhaps with some work, this could truly develop into a new direction for the Ware quartet. But as it stands, this is a good album...not a great one. Worth checking out, surely; but not destined to go down as a classic album for this group, which is capable of much greater things.

      5 out of 5 stars The well will never dry.......2003-09-04

      David S Ware is one of the most important post-Coltrane tenor saxophone players, and is easily my favorite. His playing is nothing short of thrilling, and his saxophone tone is so beautiful and personal that I fell in love with his music after the first 5 seconds of "Surrendered" (convenient title).

      That said, Ware was not one to reinvent the wheel when it came to instrumentation. The vast majority of his albums feature a classic quartet lineup. This is not meant as an attack on Ware; rather, it makes this release just a little more interesting.

      Released alongside a solo album, "Live in the Netherlands" (which you can't seem to get in the US), Corridors and Parallels features a fresh new approach to the quartet. Rather than simply recycle the tenor sax/piano/bass/drums of his earlier albums, Ware reaches out into the newer style of jazztronica (although god, I hate that term). His longtime pianist, Matthew Shipp doubles on synths, and the band also at times utilizes programmed beats (at least to my ears).

      The result, while occasionally uneven, is nevertheless mind-blowing. Ware's playing is as one would expect it - intense dramatic playing coupled with a surprisingly warm tone. Sometimes the synths can be a little too much - I don't care for the opening track, for instance, as it delves a little too much into kitsch. However, the majority of the album finds a beautiful combination of his more standard playing with the newer styles.

      That said, the finest track on the album, "Mother May You Rest in Bliss" is synth free. It features David S Ware playing over a Parker's arco bass and Brown's cymbal work, and it is one of the finest moments in music I've heard in quite a while.

      Ultimately, I even find myself returning to some of the track I don't care for as much. Ware is stretching even farther with this album than before, and this album is a brilliant, if slightly flawed, testament to that. This is an album that deserves far more recognition that it appears to have received.

      5 out of 5 stars A splendid new direction for David S. Ware.......2003-03-26

      Just because Matthew Shipp plays a synth doesn't make this free-jazz muzak. This is not a "quiet" album. Really, can you imagine David S. Ware, perhaps THE free-jazz sax ambassador of our era, notwithstanding Fred Anderson, Ken Vandermark, Jon Butcher, and Ivo Perelman, teamed up with William Parker and Guillermo Brown producing anything but take-no-prisoners, in-your-face sonic assaults? I'd want my money back, if that's not what I got here. And I do get it. In spades.

      Take "Straight Track," for instance--or, really, just about any cut ("Jazz Fi-Sci," a free-robotic number, "Superimposed," with its free-jungle vibe, "Corridors and Parallels," a free-hip-hop groove); it would be difficult to imagine a more committed, burning free-jazz sensibility than this.

      Maybe it's the faux "ballad" numbers--"Sound-a-Bye," "Somewhere," "Space Embraces"--not ballads, really, but more like Matthew Shipp's ambient jazz, and the neo-gospel number, "Mother May You Rest in Bliss," that have led some to regard this as something other than full-bore David S. Ware.

      I for one absolutely affirm this new direction for Ware. May his tribe increase.

      4 out of 5 stars Diggable.......2003-02-13

      A great, quiet album by the David S. Ware Quartet. They seem to have been able to find a more concentrated vision for this project than for others, and the result is a slow and sublime piece of music which manages both to be meditative and highly experimental. Even the synthesizers sound good (which is kind of hard for me, an avowed synthesizer hater, to admit)! To me, this echoes some of the Chicago Underground Duo's works. Excellent album.
      Contrasts + Parallels
      Average customer rating: Not rated
        Contrasts + Parallels

        Manufacturer: M.a. Recordings
        ProductGroup: Music
        Binding: Audio CD

        GeneralGeneral | Jazz | Styles | Music
        GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
        GeneralGeneral | Chamber Music | Classical | Styles | Music
        ASIN: B0001K63QO
        Release Date: 2004-06-29

        Tracks:

        1. Piano Improvisation, No.1
        2. Trio Improvisation
        3. Inspiration Of Variation II
        4. Rondino
        5. Inspiration Of Variation XXL
        6. Inspiration Of Variation XXV
        7. Piano Improvisation, No.2
        8. Rubato
        9. Con Fuoco
        10. Passacaglia
        11. Ad Libitum
        12. Fughetta
        13. Allegro Giusto
        14. Hommage A Bela Bartok
        Formulate a Tragedy
        Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
        • Awesome
        • formulate a tragedy ~ awesome
        • Absolutely amazing
        • Amazing
        Formulate a Tragedy
        All Parallels
        Manufacturer: Law of Inertia
        ProductGroup: Music
        Binding: Audio CD

        GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
        GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
        Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
        ASIN: B0006FO8YI
        Release Date: 2004-11-30

        Tracks:

        1. Work
        2. Lousy Reasons
        3. World We Be Living In
        4. Marrow
        5. Such Fragile Things
        6. Weight of the World
        7. Damaged Goods
        8. Vapors
        9. You Won't Feel a Thing
        10. All Nighter
        11. Push
        12. Lost Wager

        Customer Reviews:

        5 out of 5 stars Awesome.......2005-02-23

        I was first a fan of All Parallels when they released the songs "Day Like This" and "Drive My Hearse".

        I loved those songs when I heard them but at the first listen of this album I was not impressed. Second listen, I fell in love and haven't stopped listening since.

        This album is perfect.

        Not convinced?
        Got to http://www.purevolume.com/allparallels and give a few songs a listen.

        5 out of 5 stars formulate a tragedy ~ awesome.......2004-12-16

        great cd, it will rock you!
        every track is great!
        this one is a must have!!!

        5 out of 5 stars Absolutely amazing.......2004-12-13

        I used to see these guys in Boston. They just keep getting better and better. Original tracks that rival anything going on in the hard rock scene today. Check out their website at www.allparallels.com

        4 out of 5 stars Amazing.......2004-12-05

        This cd was full of great tracks. I read about them on theprp.com and had to get it. You wont be dissapointed.
        Parallels
        Average customer rating: Not rated
          Parallels
          Lee Konitz
          Manufacturer: Chesky Records
          ProductGroup: Music
          Binding: Audio CD

          Bebop GeneralBebop General | Bebop | Jazz | Styles | Music
          GeneralGeneral | Jazz | Styles | Music
          Modern PostbebopModern Postbebop | Jazz | Styles | Music
          GeneralGeneral | Jazz | Indie Music | Stores | Music
          Modern Post BopModern Post Bop | Jazz | Indie Music | Stores | Music
          ASIN: B000075A65
          Release Date: 2002-11-26

          Tracks:

          1. How Deep Is the Ocean?
          2. For Hans
          3. Skylark
          4. Lt
          5. 317 East 32nd Street
          6. Palo Alto
          7. Eyes
          8. Subconscious Lee
          Parallels
          Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
          • A master in congenial company
          Parallels
          Lee Konitz
          Manufacturer: Chesky Records
          ProductGroup: Music
          Binding: Audio CD

          Bebop GeneralBebop General | Bebop | Jazz | Styles | Music
          GeneralGeneral | Jazz | Styles | Music
          Modern PostbebopModern Postbebop | Jazz | Styles | Music
          Bebop & Post-BopBebop & Post-Bop | Compilations | Jazz | Styles | Music
          GeneralGeneral | Jazz | Indie Music | Stores | Music
          Modern Post BopModern Post Bop | Jazz | Indie Music | Stores | Music
          ASIN: B00005JH7K
          Release Date: 2001-05-22

          Tracks:

          1. How Deep Is The Ocean
          2. For Hans
          3. Skylark
          4. LT
          5. 317 East 32nd
          6. Palo Alto
          7. Eyes
          8. Subconscious Lee

          Amazon.com

          The Chesky label, known for its audiophile recordings whereby spontaneous music is captured faithfully by high-resolution technology, seems perfectly suited to altoist Lee Konitz. Having mastered an effortlessly smooth alto sound over the past four decades, Konitz can be counted on to deliver flawless performances of tunes played countless times, altered subtly to fit the mood of the date. On this occasion, supported by the longtime Phil Woods rhythm team of drummer (and coproducer) Bill Goodwin and bassist Steve Gilmore, the mood is decidedly relaxed. Tunes such as Lennie Tristano's "317 East 32nd" and Konitz's own pun-laden titles such as "Palo Alto" and "Subconscious Lee" are taken at slow- to mid-tempo, and though they lack fire and risk-taking, they nonetheless exude the comfortable assuredness of music played among friends. Young tenorist Mark Turner, who has developed a remarkably close likeness to Konitz's sound, brings some punch and pizzazz to the session; he's an inspired addition to the recording. --Wally Shoup

          Customer Reviews:

          4 out of 5 stars A master in congenial company.......2001-08-16

          This one's grown on me a lot--indeed, perhaps of Konitz's recent "mainstream" discs this is one I'm fondest of, even more than rather more attention-grabbing discs like _Three Guys_ or _The Sound of Surprise_. Lovely sound on this disc, from a recording in a church by the audiophile label Chesky. The band has the fine guitarist Peter Bernstein--no surprises from him, as he works a seam somewhere in the vicinity of Wes Montgomery & Grant Green, but he does it well--& the frequently-encountered team of Steve Gilmore on bass & the wonderfully sly drummer Bill Goodwin. The session is split into two parts. The first half has the more interesting repertoire: a brisk reading of "How Deep Is the Ocean", a welcome & unexpected rendition of "Skylark" (one of Carmichael's most demanding tunes); & two originals, neither of them apparently based on standard chord-changes: the angular "For Hans" (dedicated to the saxophonist Hans Koller, who contributed the cover-art), & a slinky minor-key tribute to Tristano, "LT". The second half of the album brings on the young tenor player Mark Turner, whose playing is informed like most younger players by Coltrane but who has entirely immersed himself in Warne Marsh's oeuvre too. Together he & Konitz run down three Tristanoite chestnuts ("317 East 32nd"--compare this to Turner's reading with Joshua Redman on Turner's self-titled Warner debut--, "Palo Alto", & "Subconscious Lee") & a themeless improvisation based on "Star Eyes". There's real sparkle in the interplay here: Konitz's soloing nowadays is pared down & relaxed, a far cry from the overwhelmingly intricate lines he was essaying on classic early albums like _Motion_, but nonetheless the saxophone pairing has much of the empathetic but jousting quality of the classic Marsh/Konitz recordings.

          A lovely album. On the whole the greatest Konitz performances in recent years have come in less comfortable situations--check out the superb disc on Palmetto of French impressionist music for Konitz & string quartet, for instance, or the excellent free-ish disc _Rhapsody_. But there's a place for the kind of comfortable but alert jazz he produces in less unusual contexts too, & this is a highly worthwhile disc.

          Music Info:

          1. Premeditated Murder
          2. Quest [Import]
          3. Reign Forever World [Import]
          4. Return Fire [Import]
          5. Rock Champions [Import]
          6. Rock Champions [Import]
          7. Rock Champions [Import]
          8. Rock Champions [Import]
          9. Sail Away
          10. Seppuku

          Music Info

          music info

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