Scrapbook

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (42 ratings)
Scrapbook album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 6   Total Length: 40:38

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Dylan Hicks

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
One of '00s jazz's great rhythm sections makes you dance and makes you think.
Label: Thirsty Ear

Scrapbook has square dances and funk, gospel and kids 'songs, and it all sounds like Abstract Expressionist folk music. Bassist William Parker and drummer Hamid Drake can make you dance and they can make you think; they might be the finest rhythm section in contemporary jazz. Here they cede center stage to swinging and screeching Vietnam vet Billy Bang, whose violin chases airplanes like dogs chase cars. Watch out, though — once you get hooked on collecting albums by the prolific Mr. Parker, you're in for an expensive (and rewarding) hobby.

Write a Review 4 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Just listen to it

thirdpol

One of William Parker's best, and that is saying a lot. Melodic in the most unfamiliar ways, and Parker and Drake can carry whole albums by themselves (see Piercing the Veil and Summer Snow, also on emusic). Here Billy Bang is at his keening best. A remarkable trio.

user avatar

Wonderful

wordnerd

I am not sure where this stuff comes from, but its great, William Parker's stuff is sometimes just beyond description, wild.

user avatar

great but not excellent

Porieux

I really like this stuff, for example the rhythm section on 'Dust on a White Shirt' is incredible. The violin adds an interesting texture as well, but unfortunately the violin playing has serious intonation problems---he's rather consistently flat and it drives me crazy. Not so bad in the more freely improvised sections but where melodies are being played it can be pretty distracting.

user avatar

Why no pick tick?

UncleSon

Why none? This is currently my very favourite download album, with Bang at his intense, unstoppably inventive best and Parker and Drake in typically unpredictable but commanding, support. Beyond that, suffice to say I agree with the extended review above.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Post-Millennial Jazz

By Dylan Hicks, eMusic Contributor

No one, even the list makers among us, discovers music in an orderly fashion. Curious pop fans typically work "backwards": Muddy Waters by way of the Rolling Stones; the Last Poets through Mos Def; first Franz Ferdinand, then Duran Duran, then eternal damnation. With jazz, the listening trajectory tends to be more linear. In general, jazz doesn't come to you, not via mass media at least. So you come to it, often with direction from… more »

They Say All Music Guide

William Parker’s Violin Trio band is one of the more surprising and delightful bands to come out of New York’s modern free jazz scene. Parker and his truly singular tone and ingenious modes of attack, violinist Billy Bang, and drummer Hamid Drake conjure the notion of song as it processes itself not only through the simulation and presentation of improvisation but also through the process of memory — allegorical, perceptual, cultural, and personal — and they turn it back in itself in creating something brand new from the various shards that lay upon the pavement in the dark, highlighted only by an errant street lamp. The possibilities for music like this — lyric, harmonic, and tonal — is one of the great surprises this trio brings with them. The six selections here are not “compositions” in the formalist sense but are in fact songs. They are “tunes,” with rhythmic, harmonic, and melodic bodies that are flexible and transparent enough to allow for each player to move about freely, carry with him something from the body of each piece, and wind it around the other two in a free manner without being held to the concept of breaking down barriers — because they are artificial anyway. Bang’s minor key solo on “Sunday Morning Church” against Parker’s rhythmic, hypnotic bassline recalls a singer mournfully chronicling regret and then affirmation. The funky blues at the heart of “Singing Spirits,” with Parker popping his bass under Bang’s elongated line, and Drake’s tom tom work that presents the appearance of shuffle while dancing all around it are stunning in their assuredness of musical purpose. When Bang takes it outside, Parker doesn’t race to catch him but flows through a series of changes with ever more stress put upon tension as Drake dances him through. The final cut, “Holiday for Flowers,” is a shimmering exercise in the dynamics of balladry and its various seams, where a free for all could develop at any time. Bang lies close to the melody and Parker goes walking, and walking through the blues, swing, soul, and always back to the original blues, those of New Orleans in 1929 and Kansas City in 1931. This is a restrained and lovely album that possesses real firepower in places, but it’s almost never necessary because the level of communication runs so deep between these players that everything feels light as a breeze, poignant as a memory, and as fresh as a wound. – Thom Jurek

more »