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Eri Yamamoto - Duologue (2008)
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Audio > FLAC
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226.71 MiB (237721183 Bytes)
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music jazz flac
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2013-03-29 08:53 GMT
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mariorg
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Info Hash:
9EFA6FAFE330FA8DA89F2AE15F41436BFDDCA98C




AUM Fidelity: AUM048 
http://www.aumfidelity.com/aum048.html

01 - Thank You           8.27
02 - Conversation        6.29
03 - Subway Song         4.58
04 - Circular Movement   7.10
05 - Violet Sky          8.13
06 - Midtown Blues       4.25
07 - Muse                5.49
08 - You Are Welcome     4.25

All compositions by Eri Yamamoto.

* Eri Yamamoto: piano

+   in duo(logue) with:
* * William Parker: bass (tracks 3 & 7)
. * Federico Ughi: drums (tracks 1 & 8)
. * Hamid Drake: frame drum (tracks 4 & 6)
. * Daniel Carter: alto sax (track 2), tenor sax (track 5)
 
http://www.eriyamamoto.com/

Recorded by Michael Marciano at Systems Two Studio
Brooklyn, NY on January 10, 2008.

Reviews
~~~~~~~

by Jeff Stockton 
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=29808

[...]

For this CD, Yamamoto chose to play two compositions with each of four
partners: saxophonist Daniel Carter, drummers Hamid Drake and Federico Ughi and
bassist William Parker. Each player brings his particular voice to the
performances and Yamamoto composed to each of her collaborator's strengths, so
the disc feels a bit like a sampler, a distillation of four different
albums. From Carter, she coaxes his most lyrical playing, his alto impossibly
wistful and dreamy on "Conversations." Drake plays frame drum on both of his
selections and "Midtown Blues" features Yamamoto's jaunty, brawny physicality
and strong left hand making up for the lack of an anchoring double bass. That
anchor returns courtesy of William Parker and "Muse" radiates with warmth,
regret, beauty and hope, while the opening "Thank You," with Ughi at the kit,
is dramatically propulsive.

Duologue is characterized by lovely songcraft and guileless performances and is
a perfect showcase for Yamamoto's dense, impressionistic cascades and dazzling
romantic swoon. The inside cover photo of the five musicians, lined up arm in
arm, proves they were all together at one time in one spot. What a quintet that
would be.


--


by Lyn Horton 
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=29805

by Steve Greenlee 
http://jazztimes.com/articles/19950-duologue-eri-yamamoto

por José Francisco “Pachi” Tapiz (es) 
http://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=3142