Antennae (album) explained

Antennae
Type:studio
Artist:Joe Morris
Cover:Antennae_Morris_Cover.jpeg
Released:1997
Recorded:July 5 & 6, 1997
Studio:The Outpost, Stoughton, MA
Genre:Jazz
Length:73:59
Label:AUM Fidelity
Producer:Joe Morris, Steven Joerg
Chronology:Joe Morris
Prev Title:Invisible Weave
Prev Year:1997
Next Title:Racket Club
Next Year:1998

Antennae is an album by the American jazz guitarist Joe Morris, recorded in 1997 and released on the AUM Fidelity label. It features a trio with Jerome Deupree, who was the original drummer in the rock band Morphine and played with Morris on some of his early Riti albums, and bassist Nate McBride. The pieces on Antennae took their inspiration from a collection of visual graphic aids created by Lowell Davidson, a pianist with whom Morris worked fairly extensively before his death in 1990.[1]

Regarding the track titled "Stare Into a Lightbulb for Three Years," Morris stated that, given Davidson's background as a biochemist, "I figured he was always trying to reconstitute the biochemistry of his brain. The story of him staring into a lightbulb for three years is something he actually did. This chrome painted lightbulb, with little dots on a piece of aluminum foil, he stared into it so that the shapes, as he said, would burn into his synapses."[2]

Reception

The Penguin Guide to Jazz states: "The tracks on Antennae are among the most intense Morris has produced. He seems more inclined to dwell on notes and to explore the light and shade that gather between attack and delay."[3] The DownBeat review by John Corbett thought that "Antennae is a rich trio outing from Morris, who continues to stretch jazz guitar into strange, beautiful new shapes."[4]

Track listing

All compositions by Joe Morris

  1. "Synapse" – 8:17
  2. "Antennae" – 13:21
  3. "Silent Treatment" – 7:35
  4. "Stare Into a Lightbulb for Three Years" – 13:30
  5. "Human Pyramid" – 9:22
  6. "Elevator" – 15:09
  7. "Virtual Whatever" – 6:45

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. http://www.aumfidelity.com/aum004.html Antennae
  2. Book: Weiss, Jason . Always in Trouble: An Oral History of ESP-Disk, the Most Outrageous Record Label in America . Wesleyan University Press . 2012 . 215 .
  3. Book: Cook, Richard. Richard Cook (journalist). Brian Morton . Brian Morton (Scottish writer) . The Penguin Guide to Jazz on CD. 6th. The Penguin Guide to Jazz. 2002. Penguin. London. 0140515216. 1070.
  4. Corbett, John. Antennae review. DownBeat March 98: page 46. Print.