Album info

Album-Release:
2011

HRA-Release:
09.05.2012

Label: ACT Music

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Crossover Jazz

Artist: Rudresh Mahanthappa with Adam O'Farrill

Composer: Various

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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Formats & Prices

FormatPriceIn CartBuy
FLAC 44.1 $ 13.20
ALAC 44.1 $ 14.50
  • 1Parakram02:26
  • 2Killer06:16
  • 3Richard's Game02:07
  • 4Playing With Stones08:01
  • 5Rune03:10
  • 6Breakfastlunchanddinner07:29
  • 7Parakram #205:18
  • 8Ahhh08:21
  • 9Meeting of the Skins03:33
  • 10Still-Gas09:00
  • 11For My Lady01:56
  • 12For All The Ladies07:36
  • Total Runtime01:05:13

Info for Samdhi

The Sanskrit word for twilight is 'Samdhi,' which now serves as the aptly-chosen title for saxophonist/composer Rudresh Mahanthappa's latest ensemble, a fluid melding of jazz, electronic and Indian music. Like twilight's delicate balance of day and night, the album harmonizes brilliant illumination and mysterious shadows. Samdhi represents a new direction in combing the complex melodic and rhythmic elements of both Carnatic (South Indian) music and the traditions of jazz within an electro-acoustic format consisting of alto saxophone with electronics, electric guitar, electric bass and drums.

'Stimulating, open-minded, and never pretentious, this is Mahanthappa's most accessible release to date.' (Mark F. Turner, All About Jazz)

Rudresh Mahanthappa, alto saxophone & laptop
David Gilmore, electric guitar
Rich Brown, electric bass
Damion Reid, drums
“Anand” Anantha Krishnan, mridangam & kanjira

Produced by Rudresh Mahanthappa
Recorded October 9, 2008, mixed April 18, 2011 and mastered July 11, 2011 by Mike Marciano at Systems Two, Brooklyn, New York.

Consistently heralded by critics as one of the most original composers in his field, altoist Rudresh Mahanthappa's prolific contributions to contemporary jazz have earned him a Guggenheim Fellowship, commissions to create new work from the likes of the Rockefeller Foundation MAP Fund, Chamber Music America and the American Composers Forum, and a win in the 2011 Downbeat international Critics Poll. His rare ability to synthesize South Indian music concepts with a seemingly boundless range of unexpected influences frequently characterizes him as one of the most important artists in the music today -- a distinction the Jazz Journalists Association recently echoed by naming him Alto Saxophonist of the Year three consecutive times from 2009-2011.

But accolades aside, it's what the New Yorker has called Rudresh's "visceral tone and grab-you-by-the-collar attack" that's driven new, international audiences to each of the seven projects he currently leads or co-leads. His critically acclaimed 2010 release, Apex (Pi), with alto saxophone legend Bunky Green, featuring Jason Moran and Jack DeJohnette, was widely lauded as one of the year's best recordings, as NPR, the Los Angeles Times, the Village Voice, the Boston Globe, JazzTimes and other publications hailed the rhythmic dynamism and exuberant ensemble interaction sparked by the group both on stage and on the record. The material Rudresh recorded in 2008 with Carnatic sax guru Kadri Gopalnath for their Kinsmen, (Pi) project displayed a wholly different concept -- executed with equally breath-taking chops. And since the 2009 release of Apti, the tabla and guitar-studded Indo-Pak Coalition has provided a more playful take on Mahanthappa's symbiosis between the music of his ancestors and the jazz he grew up listening to in Colorado. In 2011, Rudresh set about revamping his own quartet by adding guitarist Dave Fiuczynski to the lineup and composing an entirely new body of work for the band. Other projects currently include trios MSG and Mauger, and the quintet, Dual Identity. Most recently Rudresh has signed a multi-record deal with the major European label ACT Music + Vision. The first release will be of his electro-acoustic quartet Samdhi in Fall 2011.

Though the formats vary widely, Rudresh's purpose shines through them all. In both his composition and his playing, he seeks to explore new musical territory and, in Rudresh's words, "to address what it is to be Indian-American by digesting Indian music on my own terms." By meticulously searching for a new swath of musical possibilities, Rudresh casts a wide net, incorporating inspiration from the gamut of his experience -- from his days as an undergrad at Berklee to his studies in DePaul University's Jazz Composition Masters program to his professional work with artists in North America, Europe, India, and beyond. Rudresh is a Yamaha artist and uses Vandoren reeds exclusively.

Guggenheim fellow and 2011 Downbeat International Critics Poll Alto Saxophonist of the Year, Rudresh Mahanthappa is one of the most innovative composers and performers in jazz today, fusing the musical culture of his Indian ancestry and jazz with myriad other influences to create a groundbreaking artistic vision.

Mahanthappa leads/co-leads several groups including his award winning quartet, the Indo-Pak Coalition with guitarist Rez Abassi (guitar) and Dan Weiss (tabla) and the critically-acclaimed project, Kinsmen, featuring Carnatic saxophone legend, Kadri Golpalnath. His 2010 release, Apex, highlighted the highly influential alto-sax master Bunky Green with Time Out Chicago calling it "a force, blowing with ferocious power, clarity and creativity."

For his debut release on ACT Music & Vision, Samdhi, Mahanthappa unveils a electro-acoustic quintet featuring David Gilmore (guitar), Rich Brown (bass), Damion Reid (drums), and "Anand" Anantha Krishnan (Mirdangam / Kanjira), in "an edgy & soulful synthesis of kinetic jazz, Indian influences, and percolating electronica beats & loops" (Anil Prasad, Innerviews).

Booklet for Samdhi

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