From Silence to Sorcery

From Silence to Sorcery
Studio album by John Zorn
Released June, 2007
Genre Avant-Garde
Contemporary classical
Length 36:09
Label Tzadik TZ 8035
Producer John Zorn
John Zorn chronology
Asmodeus: Book of Angels Volume 7
(2007)
From Silence to Sorcery
(2007)
Filmworks XIX: The Rain Horse
(2008)

'From Silence to Sorcery' is an album of contemporary classical music by John Zorn which features three instrumental works touching upon themes of magic and mysticism. "Goetia" is a set of variations for solo violin written in 2002. "Gris-Gris" (2000) is a work for thirteen tuned drums performed by William Winant inspired by the music of Korean Shamanism, Haitian Voodoo and a scene from Howard Hawks’ classic film To Have and Have Not. Scored for clavichord, three muted strings and percussion, 'Shibboleth" (1997) is a tribute to the Jewish poet Paul Celan.[1]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]

The Allmusic review by Stephen Eddins awarded the album 4½ stars stating "it's notable for the variety of its sonorities, for its disciplined economy, and for the integrity of the evocative sound world he creates".[2]

Writing for All About Jazz, Troy Collins commented "A remarkably restrained effort in contrast with his usual output, Zorn again proves his creative viability as a post-modern renaissance man with a sublime collection of chamber music".[3]

Track listing

All compositions by John Zorn

  1. "Goetia I" - 0:57
  2. "Goetia II" - 2:46
  3. "Goetia III" - 1:07
  4. "Goetia IV" - 1:42
  5. "Goetia V" - 1:12
  6. "Goetia VI" - 1:54
  7. "Goetia VII" - 2:53
  8. "Goetia VIII" - 1:20
  9. "Gris-Gris" - 9:41
  10. "Shibboleth: I Abglanzbeladen/II Im Leeren (In Empty Space)/III Mandelnde (Almond-like)/IV Hinterlassne (Left Back)/V Etwas Wie Nacht (Something Like Night)/VI Aus Verlorem (From Things Lost)" - 12:37

Personnel

References

  1. Tzadik catalogue
  2. 1 2 Eddins, S. Allmusic Review accessed October 23, 2013
  3. Collins, T. All Abour Jazz Review, July 6, 2007.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/23/2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.