Radiale

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (16 ratings)
Radiale album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 42:28

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Like indie rock and jazz?

ettett

I first heard this record two years ago (2005) at a Fort Collins, CO indie rock shop. To me, with my limited jazz knowledge, it sounded like Coltrane fronting Fugazi, in a great way. When the allmusic reviewer writes "These tunes sound free, but probably aren't; drummer Jacopo Battaglia and bassist Massimo Pupillo are locked in too tightly for this to be improv" they are spot on. I give this four stars for my visceral, initial reaction. I am a jazz novice, but it really fit in well to my indie world view, resting largely on the wonderful Zu tracks (Spaceways is a bit too funked out for me). Give it a chance and enjoy! You just might learn something.

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Interesting split album

Librarian

This is an interesting split album. The first half of the disc finds Ken Vandermark sitting in with the free-improvising trio Zu on four original tunes and the second half finds the members of Zu returning the favor by sitting in with Spaceways Inc. and jamming on four tunes associated with Funkadelic and Sun Ra. This is a very successful disc, third in a string of great discs for Spaceways Inc. I would have preferred having the whole Spaceways ensemble on all songs, but Zu held their own quite well. Recommended.

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They Say All Music Guide

The helpful folks at Atavistic suggest the term “bronto-bassism” to describe the music of this ad hoc collective, which includes members of the Italian free jazz trio Zu and Chicago noisemakers Spaceways Inc. It’s as good a designation as any, especially on the vaguely funky, ponderous-yet-agile opening tracks, which are provided by Zu in collaboration with Spaceways Inc.’s reedman, Ken Vandermark. These tunes sound free, but probably aren’t; drummer Jacopo Battaglia and bassist Massimo Pupillo are locked in too tightly for this to be improv, and it’s a good thing, too, given the snarling flights of fancy in which Vandermark and baritone saxophonist Luca Mai indulge. Things get even better on the second half of the program, when Spaceways Inc. takes over with four deconstructions of compositions by Parliament, Sun Ra, and the Art Ensemble of Chicago. Parliament’s “Trash A-Go-Go” gets a tribal-minimalist treatment that leaves it virtually unrecognizable until the surprisingly disciplined horns come in, and “You and Your Folks, Me and My Folks” is handled with similar loving violence. The group’s rendition of the Art Ensemble’s “Theme de Yoyo” is a bit more straightforward (whatever that word means in the context of an Art Ensemble tune), and they give Sun Ra’s “We Travel the Spaceways” and “Space Is the Place” a suitably abstract and affectionately skronky treatment. Though it wouldn’t be exactly accurate to call this music easily approachable, and not even consistently attractive, there’s a deep sweetness and generosity of spirit in evidence here that makes the whole proceedings unusually satisfying. Recommended. – Rick Anderson

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