| 1. Your Inviolable Freedoms |
| 2. DPM |
| 3. Prophethood of Chaos |
50th Birthday Celebration, Vol. 12,Painkiller,Tzadik,Avant-Garde Jazz,Free Funk,Free Jazz,Int'l & World Music,Pop,Post-Rock/Experimental,Rock/Pop
Average customer rating:
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50th Birthday Celebration, Vol. 12
Painkiller Manufacturer: Tzadik ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000AA4IX0 Release Date: 2005-09-20 |
Tracks:
- Your Inviolable Freedoms
- Dpm
- Prophethood Of Chaos
Customer Reviews:
Great Performance - Awful Mix.......2005-12-09
That said as a performance it is excellent with Laswell and Zorn still using a Painkiller approach to the music. Hamid Drake does some really great playing as well though he is in much more of a supportive roll.
However the mix on this recording is awful. I assume it is from the desk so Zorn and Patton are very loud while Laswell and Drake are much too low in the mix (from being loud in the room at the time I guess). This is a problem with all the Painkiller live recordings, but this is the first where it makes listening very hard. If only they could drag in a multichannel tape machine sometime.
Frantic improvs and deep grooves........2005-10-24
Billed as Painkiller, the band features 2/3 of the original Painkiller lineup in John Zorn and Bill Laswell, but replacing Napalm Death drummer is Hamid Drake. This changes the sound of the music eventually-- Drake, with a pedigree in free jazz, reggae, and African percussion, brings a far different sound to the band. Rather than rhythmically moving in the death metal/grindcore directions, Drake instead lays down funky grooves, marchish cadences, and tribal rhythms. Laswell, for his part, seems far more at home with this, sinking way into the groove alongside the drummer. But certainly as big an influence on the sound of hte disc as Drake is vocalist Mike Patton. Eschewing anything typically resembling singing and running his vocal through a processor, Patton screams, clicks, pants, chants, mumbles and burbles, as often serving as part of the rhythm section as a "soloist". Zorn, for his part, seems inspired by the whole preceedings-- alternating between frantic wailing and extended saxophone techique and funky lines pairing alongside the rhythm section.
Patton fans should note there is no doubt this is a John Zorn record-- Patton contributes frantic vocals to the piece more in line with his solo records or Fantomas.
Bottom line-- its another superb release in the birthday series. If you picked up the Hemophiliac disc, it's quite similar in terms of the sort of sounds coming from Zorn and Patton, with Laswell and Drake's considerable presence adding a deep rhythmic groove to the piece. Highly recommended.
Rock Music:
- A L'Origine [Import]
- Adios Nonino
- Air Mail Music: Capoeira - Brazil
- Another Country
- Anthem
- Arabo-Andalusian Sufi Songs
- Au Nom de la Lune [Import]
- Babes in the Woods
- Bambay Gueej
- Bogalusa Boogie
Recommended Music:
Slip N Slide Ibiza V.2 [Import]
Anataga Sobani Itara: Live at Carnegie Hall [Import]
B.J. Thomas - Greatest Hits [Rhino]
Ace Combat, Vol. 5: The Unsung War [Box set] [Soundtrack] [Import]
Backwards and Forwards [EP] [Import] [Live]
20th Century Superstar [Box set] [Import] [Original recording remastered]