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Jason Ajemian: Folklords
By
Muhal Richard Abrams
piano1930 - 2017
The first in a series of planned homages to acknowledged masters, the arrival of Folklords coincides with

Sun Ra
piano1914 - 1993

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982
In addition to his protean bass work, Ajemian occasionally recites stream of consciousness poetry with a naked emotionalism that belies its stylized affect. Politicized but abstract, the leader's melodramatic verses call out everyone from Michael Bolton to Lady Gaga, but when Stewart-Robertson simultaneously narrates pre-written text with scholarly deportment, their clever wordplay blossoms into a spellbinding collage, fortified by coruscating layers of electronic feedback and the roiling interplay of deconstructed tribal rhythms.
Consisting of five lengthy selections, the set unfolds seamlessly, like a suite whose whole is greater than the sum of its parts. Cubist alto fragments, kaleidoscopic fretwork, pliant basslines and nervy drumming coalesce into a phantasmagoric opus that gracefully shifts between bluesy serenity and blissed-out catharsis. With its broad sonic reach, Folklords juxtaposes the fervency of punk and no wave with the cosmic spirituality of the New Thing, yielding a riotous fever dream of things to come from those now gone. ">
Track Listing
Ask Mr. Blount Now suite (Ask Me Now/Ask Mr. Blount Now/Satellites Are Spinning); Orange Is The Color Of The Sun, Then Blue Sky suite (Prelude To The Sun/Orange Was The Color Of Her Dress, Then Blue Silk/Fables Of Faubus/Portrait); Material Girls; Punk The Blues; Freedom Is A Trail Of Tears.
Personnel
Jason Ajemian
bass, acousticJason Ajemian: bass, voice, electronics; Kid Bliss aka That Young Astronaut: alto saxophone, vibrolux; Owen Stewart-Robertson: guitar, electronics, voice; Jason Nazary: drums; Frank Corpus: congas (3).
Album information
Title: Folklords | Year Released: 2014 | Record Label: Delmark Records
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