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Orchestre National de Jazz: Electrique
ByThe reasons for the critics' enthusiasm is self-evident; not so, the 1970s connection. To begin, Electrique is mostly acoustic. Sure, a distorted vibes solo by Vincent Limouzin on "The Movepart 2" takes a page out of punk-jazz vibraphonist Mike Dillon's book, and Patrice Héral again offers his digital samples and percussive accents, but at the same time, his fondness for old- school human beat box sounds comes across as playfully low-tech.
The taut, crisp funk beat that predominates is more Tutu-era (Warner Bros.,1986) than Bitches Brew-era (Columbia, 1969)

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
A second component in evidence throughout is that rich palette of tonal and harmonic effects that goes back to Debussy via the twelve-tone school, and which the larger French jazz ensembles seem able to supply in unlimited quantities these days. Indeed, the complex harmonies, in conjunction with the 1980s funk, mean that the correct Miles Davis parallel is not Tutu, but rather Aura, his 1984 Columbia collaboration with trumpeter

Palle Mikkelborg
trumpetb.1941
Mostly, what you'll hear are the elements that made Close to Heaven so strong, and in the service of jazzier material: tightly-arranged group playing, virtuosic and resolutely mainstream soloing (trumpeter Jean Gobinet is even more the star of this record than he was of the Zep tribute, but everyone acquits themselves ably), the vibrato of the double-vibes front linenot to mention a dry wit. ">
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Title: ?lectrique | Year Released: 2007 | Record Label: Not On Label
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