Shrek (album) explained

Shrek
Type:studio
Artist:Marc Ribot
Cover:Shrek (album).jpg
Released:1994
Recorded:1994
Studio:Low Blood Studios, Ludlow Street, New York City
Genre:Avant-garde jazz
Length:58:53
Label:Avant
Producer:Marc Anthony Thompson, Marc Ribot
Prev Title:Subsonic 1: Sounds of a Distant Episode
Prev Year:1994
Next Title:Don't Blame Me
Next Year:1995

Shrek is a 1994 album by Marc Ribot recorded and released by the Japanese Avant label in 1994.[1] [2]

Recording

The album was recorded in New York City at Low Blood Studios. Ribot stated "I made Shrek, which was finally a hit. It was the most purely compositional record I had made. It’s quasi-unlistenable. ... I never knew how many Shrek fans there were till I did Cubanos. They’re coming out of the woodwork."[3]

Reception

AllMusic awarded the album 3 stars with reviewer Sean Cooper stating, "The group's debut shifts restlessly among animated jazz, rock, punk, and warped blues themes, filling the inevitable cracks with instrumental textures, minimal vignettes, and formless noise, similar in some respects to John Zorn's Naked City (though with considerably more focus...hell, with focus period!). The group is joined on three tracks by sampler collage artist David Shea. ".[4]

In JazzTimes Tom Terrell said "Shrek is firmly in the avant garde camp. Over ten tracks, Ribot and Shrek the band cause wreck, eschewing identifiably standard song structures for a blurry continuum of multi-layered sounds, skewed rhythms and extraterrestrial transmissions. An intense exercise in wild gravity, Shrek careens madly from the pointillistic Frippertronics of 'Forth World' to the grim claustrophobia of 'Romance.' Well worth the listen-just don't look for a melody".[5]

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. http://marcribot.com/discography1 Marc Ribot website: discography
  2. Roussel P. Discography of Marc Ribot, archive accessed November 25, 2019
  3. Krasnow, D. Marc Ribot Interview, Bomb, accessed November 25, 2019
  4. Cooper, S. Allmusic Review accessed, 2011
  5. Terrelll, T. JazzTimes Reviewaccessed November 25, 2019