At the Center explained

At the Center
Type:studio
Artist:Meat Beat Manifesto
Cover:MeatBeatManifestoAtTheCenterCDCover.jpeg
Released:24 May 2005[1]
Genre:Nu jazz, breakbeat, house
Length:56:41
Label:Thirsty Ear THI57159.2
Producer:Jack Dangers
Prev Title:Storm the Studio RMXS
Prev Year:2003
Next Title:Autoimmune
Next Year:2008

At the Center is an album by Meat Beat Manifesto, released in 2005 as part of the "Blue Series" of Thirsty Ear records fusing jazz with electronica.

Jazz elements had been featured in occasional Meat Beat Manifesto songs over the years, but At the Center is the first outright jazz album in the group's catalog, with bandleader Jack Dangers' collaborators being a trio of prominent jazz players. The album is mostly funk- and fusion-oriented, with a few abstract or free-jazz leaning songs. It consists of instrumentals but has some scattered vocal samples, notably on two songs featuring vintage recordings of poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti reading newspaper classified advertisements (the album's notes misidentify Ferlinghetti as Kenneth Rexroth).

At the Center earned mostly positive reviews from critics of both jazz and electronic music. However, Dangers opted to not continue his exploration of jazz on subsequent Meat Beat Manifesto albums.

Credits

Musicians

Steinway grand piano, Fender Rhodes electric piano, clavinet, Hammond B3 organ

Bass, Bass flute, Bass clarinet, "everything else" (i.e., samples, synthesizer, shortwave radio, percussion, etc.).

Technical personnel

Track listing

  1. "Wild" – 5:18
  2. "Flute Thang" – 4:47
  3. "Murita Cycles" – 4:13
  4. "Want Ads One" – 4:27
    • Voice: Lawrence Ferlinghetti[2]
  5. "Blind" – 5:16
  6. "Musica Classica" – 3:34
  7. "Bohemian Grove" – 5:20
  8. "United Nations ETC. ETC." – 3:57
  9. "Want Ads Two" – 4:25
    • Voice: Lawrence Ferlinghetti
  10. "The Water Margin" – 6:34
  11. "Shotgun! (Blast to the Brain)" – 4:59
  12. "Granulation 1" – 3:51

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Meat Beat Manifesto – At the Center . . 12 March 2015 .
  2. [Kenneth Rexroth#The Beat Generation]