search

The Prodigal Son

54,99 zł
Brutto
Ilość

 

Polityka prywatności

 

Zasady dostawy

 

Zasady reklamacji

Blues & Rock/Rythm & Blues
premiera polska:
2018-05-18,
Wydawnicto Audiofilskie

kontynent: Ameryka Północna
kraj: USA
opakowanie: digipackowe etui
opis:

biesczadblues.pl:
“The Prodigal Son” to solowy album Ry Coodera od sześciu lat!. Album wzbudził podekscytowanie zarówno fanów, jak i krytyków. Ry Cooder, jako muzyk, producent, autor piosenek i mędrzec, mieszkający w Santa Monica w Kalifornii badał muzykę i kulturę z całego miasta, kraju i całego świata. Jest nie tylko jednym z najwybitniejszych amerykańskich gitarzystów swoich czasów, wirtuozem, który wykorzystuje swoje umiejętności techniczne do tworzenia muzyki z niezwykłą duszą, ale także ma serce na właściwym miejscu.

Najnowszy album “The Prodigal Son”, to cała Ameryka, duchowe, pełne nadziei głosy, krzyki i prowokacje, wyrażone poprzez piosenki takich wykonawców, jak Pilgrim Travelers, The Stanley Brothers, Blind Willie Johnson i samego Coodera. Tworząc niezłomne spojrzenie na aktualny stan współczesnej Ameryki. Łączę wymiar polityczny i ekonomiczny z wewnętrznym życiem ludzi, ponieważ ludzie są dzisiaj zagrożeni i uciskani ze wszystkich stron w naszym świecie – stwierdził. To czarno-biała muzyka, nasza historia ducha, brzmiąca zupełnie świeżo i współcześnie, otoczona wyrazistym wokalem Coodera i wdzięczną, elegancką grą na gitarze. Wspomagał go syn, perkusista i główny współpracownik, Joachim Cooder.

Płyta jest zręcznym komentarzem do naszego schorowanego stanu moralnego. To muzyka na te czasy, nieustraszone nurkowanie w duszy kraju i człowieka, Ry Cooder.

Editor's Info:
For nearly 50 years, the immense scope and influence of Ry Cooder‘s music has perhaps been felt as much, or more than heard. As musician, producer, songwriter and sage, the Santa Monica, California native has explored music and culture from across the city, the state, the country and around the world.

His latest album, The Prodigal Son, is all America, our spiritual, hopeful voices, our raw cries and our sly provocations, voiced through the songs of the Pilgrim Travelers, The Stanley Brothers, Blind Willie Johnson, and Ry Cooder himself. This is black and white gospel church music, our own history of the spirit, sounding completely fresh and contemporary, framed by Cooder’s expressive vocals and graceful, elegant guitar work. Aided by his son, drummer and chief collaborator, Joachim Cooder, The Prodigal Son is a deft commentary on our ailing moral state. This is music for these times, a fearless dive into the country’s soul and the man, Ry Cooder.

Rolling Stone:
Ry Cooder detailed his new album The Prodigal Son, his first LP in six years. It features a mix of Cooder originals and interpretations of songs by Blind Willie Johnson, Blind Roosevelt Graves, the Stanley Brothers and other traditional recordings. According to Cooder, the album's 11 tracks, set for release May 11th, offer "a deft commentary on our ailing moral state."
"I do connect the political/economic dimensions with the inner life of people, since people are at risk and oppressed on all sides in our world today,” Cooder said in a statement. "There's some kind of reverence mood that takes hold when you play and sing these songs. 'Reverence' is a word I heard my granddaughter’s nursery school teacher use, a Kashmiri woman. She said, 'We don't want to teach religion, but instill reverence.' I thought that was a good word for the feeling of this music."
Cooder, one of Rolling Stone's 100 Greatest Guitarists, also trumpeted the impending arrival of his new album with the rollicking lead track "Shrinking Man," an original Cooder penned for the LP.
By Daniel Kreps


Uncut Magazine:
Ry Cooder is not a religious man – on the contrary, he casts a cold eye on its organised form – but he has ?just made an album stuffed with gospel music and hymns, all from the best part ?of a century ago. What gives? As the greatest curator and interpreter of Americana in all its diversity, Cooder has always loved this music, go back to his very first album (there are well over 30) and you’ll find devotional songs by Alfred Reed and Blind Willie Johnson, who both figure on The Prodigal Son. He’s never done God, but he’s always played God’s music. Cooder calls it ‘reverence’.

The eight ‘reverend’ cuts here – there is also a trio of originals – take assorted forms, from the dreamy visions of the after-life on Carter Stanley’s “Harbor Of Love” to the rip-snorting title track, where Cooder is joined by a trio of gospel vocalists. Every cut gets a different setting, for which Cooder credits his son, drummer and visioner Joachim. The pair have become quite a team, recording this album in a matter of days on what Cooder describes as a “one-take live vocals” approach.

The exuberance shines through, one reason The Prodigal Son often feels like something from Cooder’s 1970s canon, another being that while reverence provides a theme, Cooder is no longer boxed in to a concept album like I, Flathead or Pull Up Some Dust And Sit Down.

The parade of fretboard styles Cooder brings to the album is masterly. Take “Shrinking Man”, the album’s real starter once Cooder and his singers have ambled down “Straight Street” to a low-key banjo accompaniment. It’s a rollicking blues chopped out on a spiky electric guitar, with a solo that comes across as a tribute to Chuck Berry.

Something entirely different drives “Gentrification”, the only number that gives voice to Cooder’s political anger, albeit with humour. Cooder punctuates its catchy rhythmic tic with slabs of West African soukous guitar, bright and boisterous. By contrast, Blind Willie’s “Everybody Out To Treat A Stranger Right” comes with a murky slide part that honours its composer’s abilities, while “The Prodigal Son” boasts a barking fuzz-tone solo.

If the album has a centrepiece – and its moods keep shifting – then it’s another Johnson number, “Nobody’s Fault But Mine”, which Cooder slows down to a melancholy contemplation of human error, studded with his trademark slide, sparse and eerie. Effective, if over-extended.

There are other versions of holy life on offer. Alfred Reed’s “You Must Unload” preaches the way of the straight and narrow: who knows who Reed had in mind when he admonished “money-loving Christians who refuse to pay their share”, but Cooder must surely have in mind Bible-toting Republicans when he deplores their hypocrisy with the warning, “You’ll never get to heaven in your jewel-encrusted high-heel shoes.” Reed’s hymn is given due decorum, with a stately violin part from Aubrey Haynie.

“I’ll Be Rested When The Roll Is Called” is a spiritual with a triumphal ring written by Blind Roosevelt Graves, another voice from the 1920s and ’30s, and is whooped along by the trio of backing voices to Cooder’s sprightly mandolin playing. Closer “In His Care” is similar in mood, ?a celebration of heavenly blessings, from another pre-Second World War African-American composer, William L Dawson. Cooder plays things both side of the wire here, the sentiments may be righteous, but the clanging riff that Ry and Joachim lay down is from the sinners’ side of the tracks, with all the visceral power of Howling Wolf.

Bluegrass, of course, has its own history of Christian metaphysics. “Harbor Of Love” imagines death as a glorious reunion with God, the austere tone of the original softened by Cooder’s softly shimmering guitar. “Jesus And Woody” perhaps takes us closer to Cooder’s own beliefs, an intensely personal tribute to one of his heroes, delivered solo, sometimes dropping to not much more than a murmur, one feels like an eavesdropper. Offering homage to ?Guthrie the “dreamer” for his songs and his fight against fascism, Cooder hits a forlorn note for our current time, reflecting that, “They’re starting up their engine ?of hate.”

One might expect more in the way of bile and anger from Ry Cooder, but an album that meditates long on mortality is perhaps his response to the darkening of the political landscape. He describes the music as “a conduit for feelings and experiences from other times”, but also as “a sense of force beyond the visible”, religion of a kind, then.
by Neil Spencer

muzycy:
Ry Cooder: Vocals, Guitar, Banjo, Mandolin, Bass, Keyboards
Robert Francis: Bass
Joachim Cooder: Drums, Percussion
Aubrey Haynie: Violin
Arnold McCuller, Bobby King, Terry Evans: Vocals

utwory:
1. Straight Street (James W. Alexander / Jesse Whitaker)
2. Shrinking Man (Ry Cooder)
3. Gentrification (Ry Cooder / Joachim Cooder)
4. Everybody Ought To Treat A Stranger Right (Traditional, Blind Willie Johnson, Arr. by Ry Cooder)
5. The Prodigal Son (Traditional: Arranged by Ry Cooder /Joachim Cooder)
6. Nobody’s Fault But Mine (Blind Willie Johnson / Arranged Ry Cooder / Joachim Cooder)
7. You Must Unload (Alfred Reed)
8. I’ll Be Rested When The Roll Is Called (Blind Roosevelt Graves)
9. Harbor Of Love (Carter Stanley)
10. Jesus And Woody (Ry Cooder)
11. In His Care (William L. Dawson)

wydano: 2018-05-11
more info: www.fantasyrecordings.com
more info2: www.rycooder.com

7204823

Opis

Wydawca
Fantasy Recordings
Artysta
Ry Cooder
Nazwa
The Prodigal Son
Instrument
guitar
Zawiera
CD
chat Komentarze (0)
Na razie nie dodano żadnej recenzji.