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    To Buy Gilad's Music and Books

    Songs Of The Metropolis – Album Launch Tour

    Gilad Atzmon & The Orient House Ensemble

    Gilad's music facebook page

    Amazon.co.uk
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    Maverick, award-winning saxophonist Gilad Atzmon and the Orient House Ensemble are back on the road with their latest album Songs Of The Metropolis. For the last 12 years the quartet have been touring all over the world, stunning audiences with their firebrand performances packed with drama, pathos, luscious harmonies and wit. Atzmon's latest compositions are a sweeping homage to our great cities, from Moscow to Buenos Aires and beyond. Each tune is at once reminiscent and hopeful; in a time of great uncertainty and turbulence Atzmon and the Orient House Ensemble deliver melodies that provide an anchor to wherever it is that we call home.

     

     

    2013 Best Album - Jazz Journal Critics' Poll

    ‘A formidable improvisational array...a jazz giant steadily drawing himself up to his full height...’ The Guardian.

     ‘The best musician living in the world today’ Robert Wyatt


    "The Band has created perhaps their most enduring ensemble work yet" Andy Robson Jazzwise ****


    "Whether he’s blowing up a storm of notes or gently caressing a ballad, there’s a luminous vitality at the heart of Atzmon’s playing that’s irresistible to the ear" Record Collector ****


     "vibrant and beautiful" Bruce Lindsay All About Jazz

    A hard-hitting but wide-ranging set from an admirably tight and robust band led by one of the most charismatic and focused reedsmen on the planet. Chris Parker LondonJazz


    'Atzmon has produced his most mature, and in many ways his most diverse, work to date' Ian Mann Jazzmann *****

     'Tensions, surprises, shocks and ambiguities' John Fordham, The Guardian

    Atzmon and the excellent pianist Frank Harrison do to the old parsley-sage tune what John Coltrane and McCoy Tyner did to My Favourite Things Irish Time ****


    While it is raining (Leonard) Bernstein is waving to a taxi. Mignus who sits on the back seat opens the door for him, he invites Bernstein to come in – This is the musical image of this group.  Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung

    Conjuring an atmosphere of evocative cinematic suggestion BBC Music Review

    Peon to a recent past, when urban spaces belonged to the people who lived in them, and cities had distinct emotional characters Financial Times ****


     Atzmon drafts a panorama of multi-layered sound collages and sound particles...   he is   glamorous. His tone, whether on clarinet or alto and soprano saxophone, dominates the action. It is always penetrating, expressive, and full with passion Badische Zeitung


    'Fearless bebop player steeped in the work of Coltrane and Parker' Tony Benjamin This Is Bristol

    "Brilliant cosmopolitan tunesmithing from Gilad Atzmon" Lucid Culture


    'Conceptualist, composer and soloist' Jazz Journal

    'A souvenir-collecting world traveller' Jack Massarik, The Evening Standard ****


    "If you love jazz you will love this release of a superlative quality. If you love the music of the world in its individual uniqueness and diversity, and not the pasteurized kitsch of “multiculturalism,” you will love this even more and you will resonate to Atzmon’s worldview as a philosopher of culture" Ariadna Theokopoulos http://www.boldfacenews.com

     

    "rhythmically-sophisticated 'Tel Aviv' demonstrates that Anmon's soprano sound is also one of the most satisfying since Bechet." `BBC Music Magazine April 2013 ****


    "Atzmon opts for an altogether more impressionistic approach" R2 Magazine ****


    "virtuoso, lyrical and straightahead all at once" Mike Butler, Dyverse music


     

    Gilad Atzmon - clarinet, sax, Yaron Stavi - bass, Eddie Hick - drums, Frank Harrison - piano.

     

     

    Songs of the Metropolis

    Paris

    Tel Aviv

    Buenos Aires

    Vienna

    Manhattan

    Scarborough

    Moscow

    Somewhere in Italy

    Berlin

     

    Once upon a time and actually not that long ago, our cities conveyed some meanings, they were a unique reflection of ourselves: they were home to our thoughts, ideas and yearnings.

    When we were young, our cities belonged to us: their colours were our shades, their smells our scents; but more than anything else, their sounds were our songs. Each city had a melody, a resonance, a bell, an instrument, a voice.  

    This album is a pursuit of the sound of the city. It is an attempt to find that magic instant where melodic texture evokes familiar feelings, when a harmonic shift brings you home, when a crescendo conjures memories of a kiss, when a glissando flies the American to Paris.

    Now, our planet weeps. Beauty is perhaps the last true form of spiritual resistance. The song is there to counter detachment and alienation. Let us start with the song of the metropolis, the songs of our cities.

    Enjoy your listening

    Gilad Atzmon


    Paris, in the name of love

    Tel Aviv, the birth of the tragedy

    Buenos Aires, for the pathos 

    Vienna, for the charm of sweetness

    Manhattan, in loving memory of America

    Scarborough, as opposed to London

    Moscow, in honour of greatness

    Berlin, as a farewell to productivity

    Somewhere in Italy but not too far from home

     

     

    Friday
    Mar152013

    Atzmon: Give Jazz a Chance

    By Ariadna Theokopoulos

    http://www.boldfacenews.com

    Stick with Atzmon: He’ll Take You Places!

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    Atzmon’s newest release, Songs of the Metropolis, is a must in any jazz lover’s collection. “Multireedsman” but primarily a superb saxophone player, Atzmon has produced a bouquet of homages to some of the greatest cities of the world, their music and their culture.
    Stick with Atzmon, he’ll take you places! Places like Paris, Tell Aviv, Buenos Aires, Vienna, Manhattan, Moscow, “Somewhere in Italy,” Berlin and yes, Scarborough too.

    Atzmon’s “Paris” is sweet and flavorful as a madeleine, without being maudlin. It is the love story between a tender yet confident sax and a lovingly attentive and crystalline piano (Frank Harrison). It is a madeleine that makes the search for “lost time” a worthwhile endeavor. The sax finale has the long finish of the best, properly aged French wine.
    “Tel Aviv”’s staccato with brief, subtle allusions to oriental tones pulls off the remarkable evocation of declarative purpose and oneiric longing, to which the percussion accompaniment (Eddie Hicks) adds a sabra robustness.


    “Buenos Aires” is a haunting piece, like a somber milonga danced late at night somewhere in La Boca while the waiters are already putting he chairs up on the tables. The sad, tuneful refrain makes you want to add lyrics to it. “Porqué me haces eso? Porqué a mi?” would fit.


    “Vienna” is dainty and refined, intricate and pretty like a lace ball gown twirled in an elegant waltz. Great piano and percussion weaving, through which the sax erupts with gentle precision.
    “Manhattan” moves in a way that reminds you why the phrase “a New York minute” was invented. The saxophone brackets the rhythm changes and describes the mood” confident, ebullient and climbing steadily with no pause for doubts.


    “Moscow” is ample and deep, quiet and massive, pensive and slow “as the Don flows” and a beautifully melodious tribute.


    “Somewhere in Italy” starts with a whisper: the sax describes the wind through the tall and graceful cypresses and pine trees drawn on an impossibly blue sky, a landscape adorned by beautifully ruined aqueducts. The sax also asks questions and answers them tenderly while the piano echoes them.
    “Berlin” is perhaps a roaring 20s beer garden or a nightclub in the early 30s or both, where you drank “Bruderschaft” and where, “all together, ladies and gentlemen,” you swayed and sang, happy to be there, still happy to be German.

    If you love jazz you will love this release of a superlative quality. If you love the music of the world in its individual uniqueness and diversity, and not the pasteurized kitsch of “multiculturalism,” you will love this even more and you will resonate to Atzmon’s worldview as a philosopher of culture, which he summarizes in the interview his wife skillfully coaxed out of him in this beautiful short film.

    Highly recommended.

    Amazon.co.uk
    Amazon.com

    Friday
    Mar152013

    BBC Music Magazine's Album Review (4 Srars)

    http://www.classical-music.com/

    With this collection of lithe, witty compositions, Atzmon pays tribute to some great world cities, including 'Berlin', 'New York', his birthplace 'Tel Aviv' and, er, 'Scarborough',
    which provides the pre text for an epic, mood-shif(ing re-tread of 'Scarborough Fair', Although the Orient House Ensemble is on superb form, some of Atzmon's  fans may
    feel initial disappointment at the restrained surface of some tracks. Several albums and numerous gigs have accustomed us to fiery, edgy, often confrontational work, but he has indicated that this angry turbulence had in fact become a comfort zone, so he felt the need to move into new territory. 'Paris' provides a slightly schmaltzy opening, but Atzmon's sumptuous chalumeau clarinet tone is a delight. A nod to Sidney Bechet via Acker Bilk, perhaps, and the funky, rhythmically-sophisticated 'Tel Aviv' demonstrates that Anmon's soprano sound is also one of the most satisfying since Bechet.
    Barry Witherden BBC Music Magazine April 2013
    PERFORMANCE 4 STARS
    RECORDING 4 STARS

    Amazon.co.uk
    Amazon.com

    Friday
    Mar152013

    R2 Magazine Album Review (4 Stars)

    http://www.rock-n-reel.co.uk/

    “An interesting collection of locations inspires this album of musical evocations. Gilad Atzmon is in a reflective mood as he melodically recreates not only Paris and other cities, like Buenos Aires, Moscow, Tel Aviv and Berlin, but also such towns as Scarborough and, possibly, a more rural 'Somewhere In Italy'; certainly the work seems more pastoral than the others and even has Eric Dolphy-like bird song from the sax.

    For this recording, Alzmon plays alto and soprano saxophones and, sometimes, clarinet and accordion. Frank Harrison offers extremely sympathetic support on piano and a variety of keyboards, Yaron Stavi the robust double bass and Eddie Hick percussively drums his way around each urban landscape. Rather than trying to instrumentally re-create actual street sounds, as Charles Mingus did in his famous New York Sketchbook, Atzmon opts for an altogether more impressionistic approach. There is a Christopher Isherwood, Cabaret-like feel to 'Berlin' complete with vocal chorus by Atzmon, Stavi and Hicks, while 'Buenos Aires' is a powerful, slow and atmospheric piece containing some of the album's finest playing.”

    John Crosby R2 magazine 4 STARS

    Amazon.co.uk
    Amazon.com

    Wednesday
    Feb272013

    Record Collector's review - Songs Of the Metropolis (4 stars)

    Also top-drawer is Songs Of The Metropolis (****World Village) by GILAD ATZMON & THE

    ORIENT HOUSE ENSEMBLE.

    Together with his superbly intuitive band, the well-travelled, hard-gigging Atzmon – an Israeli-born multireedsman who seamlessly marries bop with Middle Eastern music – has etched nine vividly evocative portraits of cities and towns, ranging from Manhattan and Buenos Aires to… Scarborough. Whether he’s blowing up a storm of notes or gently caressing a ballad, there’s a luminous vitality at the heart of Atzmon’s playing that’s irresistible to the ear.


     

    Saturday
    Feb232013

    Evening Standard's Album Review (4 Stars)

     

    http://www.standard.co.uk/l

    GILAD ATZMON & THE ORIENT HOUSE ENSEMBLE
    Songs  of the Metropolis
    (World Village)
    ****
    The fiery Israeli who hit London with a jazz-and-politics double whammy in  2000 has mellowed into a souvenir-collecting world traveller. Paris, Vienna, Berlin, Moscow and Manhattan are among his new titles here, each appropriately seasoned with local flavourings which add accordion, soprano sax and clarinet to the leader’s meaty alto saxophone. Buenos Aires, Tel Aviv, Scarborough Fair and even Somewhere in Italy also make the cut, but surprisingly not Cricklewood Broadway. Faithful Frank Harrison adds lyrical flourishes from the piano and the whole dish is  heated by Yaron Stavi’s mellow bass and the sizzling drums of rookie Orienteer Eddie Hick. Their album-launch UK tour calls at the Pizza Express Jazz Club in Dean Street tonight and tomorrow.
    JACK MASSARIK

    The wandering who- Gilad Atzmon

    GiladAtzmon on Google+