Nosferatu (John Zorn album) explained

Nosferatu
Type:studio
Artist:John Zorn
Cover:Nosferatu (John Zorn album).jpg
Released:April 20, 2012
Recorded:June 2011
Genre:Avant-garde experimental music
Length:61:14
Label:Tzadik TZ 7397
Producer:John Zorn
Chronology:John Zorn
Prev Year:2012
Next Year:2012

Nosferatu is the sixteenth studio album by John Zorn released on the Tzadik label in April 2012 on the 100th Anniversary of Bram Stoker's death.[1] Zorn wrote the score as a commission for a Polish theatre group's adaption of Stoker's novel Dracula.

Reception

Allmusic said "With the ever-changing nature of its music and the relatively short cues, Nosferatu feels much shorter than it is; it's a deeply focused work that holds together easily. While its very subject matter dictates sinister overtones, the music found here, with few exceptions, is quite pleasurable and accessible listening; when taken together, its cues suggest a new kind of American Gothic".[2] All About Jazz stated "Zorn's Nosferatu is a generally haunting album, but the composer punctuates the doom and gloom with moments of grandeur, aggression and even outright jazziness... Nosferatu doesn't present any surprises or musical innovation. Nevertheless, the ambient album flows well, and is a solid addition to Zorn's catalog of musical scores with a couple examples of great sax playing".[3]

Track listing

All compositions by John Zorn

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: John Zorn : Nosferatu . Tzadik.com . 30 April 2012.
  2. Jurek, T. Allmusic Review, accessed November 8, 2013
  3. Carroll, T., All About Jazz Review, All About Jazz, May 14, 2012