Mount Analogue (album) explained

Mount Analogue
Type:studio
Artist:John Zorn
Cover:Mount Analogue (album).jpg
Released:31 January 2012
Recorded:June 2011
East Side Sound, NY
Genre:Avant-garde, experimental music
Length:38:21
Label:Tzadik TZ 7394
Producer:John Zorn
Prev Title:A Dreamers Christmas
Prev Year:2011
Next Title:The Gnostic Preludes
Next Year:2012

Mount Analogue is the fifteenth studio album by John Zorn released in January 2012 on the Tzadik label.[1]

Reception

Allmusic said "From Jewish and other Middle Eastern folk musics to soundtrack atmospherics, exotica-tinged jazz, Latin rhythms, and contemporary classical inquiries into minimalism, tone, space, color, and counterpoint, all are on display in this wonderfully musical, meditative, hypnotic, and "mystical" work. The accessibility factor in Mount Analogue is high; what begins as a musical question eventually resolves, usually through a circular method that is deeply satisfying".[2] Martin Schray commented "The musicians easily move between angular new classical music, restrained mumbling and panting, 1950s film noir soundtracks, Jewish or Middle Eastern folk, the typical John Zorn exotica, jazz, lonely piano tunes, or minimalist approaches. Every note is exactly at the right place, there is not one bell tone too much, which creates a lush atmosphere on the one hand but the spooky and creepy elements refer to a dark world also inherent in this music".[3]

Personnel

References

  1. Web site: John Zorn : Mount Analogue . Tzadik.com . 29 April 2012.
  2. Jurek, T. Allmusic Review, accessed 8 November 2013
  3. Schray, M. The Free Jazz Collective Review, Free Jazz Collective, 5 March 2013