Odyssey Box-Set

Odyssey Box-Set

9.4 / 10 (8 votes)
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Publishing Date:
2012
Number of discs:
3
Support:
CD
Audio Format:
Stereo
Barcode:
0602527945668

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Publisher's Synopsis

Terje Rypdal was the electric guitar innovator in the 1970s. This box set in ECM's Old & New Masters Series collects his two-LP Odyssey album - heard on CD in its entirety for the first time, including the much-requested and epically-rocking "Rolling Stone" - and Unfinished Highballs, a recently unearthed 1976 radio recording that documents the Norwegian guitarist's work for his Odyssey quartet and the Swedish Radio Jazz Group.

The complete Odyssey may address a longstanding demand from the great guitarist's many followers, but Unfinished Highballs will surprise even Rypdal's most committed fans. It reveals that not only were many of the markers which would come to define his career already in place, but the intrepid guitarist was already searching for ways to include, rather than exclude, in his approach to composition and performance.

Even that major part of the much-praised, award-winning 1975 Odyssey album that was previously available on CD has been out of the catalogue for some time, so this combination of influential recordings and the significant revelations of Unfinished Highballs makes this new box highly attractive.

"Even when the dynamics are extreme, Rypdal's sophistication is evident. There are long passages on 'Midnite', 'Adagio' and 'Farewell' which might be offcuts from a forgotten Miles Davis date...The harmonics are entirely his own and very elusive, which is why this record, and others of the time, manage to sound fresh even now." - The Penguin Jazz Guide: The History of Jazz in the 1001 Best Albums

Personnel: Terje Rypdal (electric guitar, synthesizer, soprano saxophone), Torbjørn Sunde (trombone), Brynjulf Blix (organ, synthesizer, electric piano), Sveinung Hovensjø (bass guitar), Svein Christiansen (drums), Disc 3 only: Swedish Radio Jazz Group, Georg Riedel and Terje Rypdal (directors)

List of parts:

 

Disc: 1
1. Darkness Falls
2. Midnite
3. Adagio
4. Better Off Without You
 
Disc: 2
1. Over Birkerot
2. Fare Well
3. Ballade
4. Rolling Stone
 
Disc: 3
1. Unfinished Highballs
2. The Golden Eye
3. Scarlet Mistress
4. Dawn
5. Dine And Dance to the Music of the Waves
6. Talking Back 
Reviews and comments

A Map of Days Nota 10

de L. S. | 01/11/2018 01:13

Honestly, I didn’t think, at the end of Library of Souls, that we will get a sequel to Ransom Riggs `peculiar` book series. Not because I did not want one, or because I thought that it did not deserve it, but because, at that moment, it just seemed like the right way to end it. A Map of Days came to prove me wrong and to make me genuinely happy that I was wrong. The first three books – Miss Peregrine’s Peculiar Children, Hollow City and Library of Souls – even though they gave some background into the history of the Peculiardom, focused more on the characters’ development and their mission, drawing only a sketch of what felt to be a rather complicated and truly fascinating alternative world, which could easily be compared with the marvellous wizarding world of J.K. Rowling. In this fourth book we are given very interesting insights into Abe’s past and into the American Peculiardom and the characters seem to be more psychologically sophisticated than before. The way the images intertwine with the plot is better than ever and the addition of coloured photographs – which are even more uncanny that the black and white ones – is particularly smart, given the American landscape. All in all, Ransom Riggs is a blessing for the fantasy genre aficionados and his books are a pretty good antidote for those of us still suffering from the Harry Potter withdrawal syndrome. P.S.: This is the beginning of a beautiful trilogy

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