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Sound Hierarchy
1997 studio album by Ivo Perelman From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Sound Hierarchy is an album by the Brazilian jazz saxophonist Ivo Perelman, recorded in 1996 and released on the Music & Arts label. He leads a quartet with pianist Marilyn Crispell, drummer Gerry Hemingway and bassist William Parker.
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Reception
In his review for AllMusic, Alex Henderson states: "Short of Charles Gayle, you won't find any 1990s avant-garde jazz that is more incendiary, ferocious and violent than Sound Hierarchy."[1]
The Penguin Guide to Jazz notes that "Crispell is too strong a personality to settle for the kind of subsidiary role that Perelman needs, and Hemingway's rhythms are too bracingly inventive - they offer Perelman a distraction rather than fed lines."[2]
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Track listing
- All titles are collective works except as indicated
- "Frozen Tears" - 18:54
- "Sound Hierarchy" - 7:29
- "Datchki Dandara" (Ivo Perelman) - 12:20
- "Fragments" - 17:33
Personnel
- Ivo Perelman - tenor sax, mouthpiece on 2
- Marilyn Crispell - piano
- Gerry Hemingway - drums, voice on 2
- William Parker - bass
References
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