February brings exciting news for Canyon
Records and three great new
recordings.
Dancing
into
Silence was named Echoes CD of the Month. Echoes is
a nationally syndicated radio program hosted by John
Diliberto who wrote
about Dancing
into
Silence.
R.
Carlos
Nakai, William
Eaton and Will
Clipman have made some of the
most moving and provocative music of the last 20 years. Their
1995 album Feather,
Stone
&
Light is on my all-time top ten list
for Echoes. This ensemble makes a music that defies easy
categories, that seems deep in tradition, yet free from the limits of
tradition.
A member of the Navajo and Ute tribes, Nakai took the Native
American
flute off the reservation and out of the hands of traditionalists
when
he released his album Canyon
Trilogy in 1989. He added electronic
effects to his flute and then took it global, playing with orchestras
and pianists, Japanese world fusion groups and electronica
artists. Regardless of the setting, it all sounds like R. Carlos
Nakai.
The trio heard on his latest album, Dancing
into
Silence, is where
Nakai seems to do his best work. He's been recording with William
Eaton for over 20 years. Eaton builds and plays hybrid
stringed
instruments that resemble ancient artifacts from the planet Pandora in
Avatar. He's the orchestrator and atmospheric controller on the album,
weaving synth textures, ringing harp strings and twangy guitar riffs
like a space troubadour. The third member is Will
Clipman whose
percussion rig includes pony drums based on Native American designs,
hang drums, African djembes, Irish bodhrans and anything else that will
rattle or bang.
They've recorded several albums together, but Dancing
into
Silence
takes them into a terrain of pure intuitive improvisation.
Although the concept was to leave preconceived songs off the album,
these three artists have so much melody pouring out of them and are so
attuned to each other after years of playing together, that every track
sounds like a through-composed work. Nakai dips his flutes
in and out of the mix, at times floating free, at others pulling the
ensemble behind him in an epic theme. His vocable chants are
calls from the edge of consciousness.
Through deft segues between tracks, Dancing
into
Silence morphs from
ethereal ballets to throbbing percussion trances. The aerated
performances seem to hover above the ground like a desert mirage, but
behind that mirage are three musicians in communion, bathed in a world
of reverb, united by the rhythm of the earth. The album's title
speaks to both the joyful attunement one can hear in the making of this
album, and the attainment of a quieter, more serene space after
listening.
Dancing
into
Silence by R.
Carlos
Nakai, William
Eaton and Will
Clipman
is the Echoes CD of
the Month for
February. I'll be featuring it
extensively on Mondays Echoes February 1 and Saturday and Sunday's
shows February 6 & February 7. You can hear an audio version of
this review with music from Dancing
into
Silence.
-John
Diliberto
Be on the lookout for a free live concert download by R.
Carlos
Nakai, William
Eaton & Will
Clipman sometime in February.
Canyon is also excited to release two exciting Round
Dance
albums and a
great Southern
Pow-Wow
album.
Supergroup Pipestone
brings their high energy, jammin' Round Dance
style to As
the
Rez
Turns which also takes a humorous look at love's
promises and pitfalls. In Unconditional,
the
versatile
singer and
songmaker Wayne
Silas,
Jr. (Tha
Tribe) brings together the great voices
of Joe Syrette, Edmond Tate Nevaqueya, Jeremy Dearly, Nitanis
"Kit"
Landry and Arianne Sheka in songs of love sweet and sour. In
Relentless,
Thunder
Hill returns in a live recording at the University
of Oklahoma that captures the legendary sound of Native Oklahoma.
Sound clips from all songs are available on the album pages.
As always, please contact me at (800) 268-1141 or at
rdoyle@canyonrecords.com
with questions, comments, and criticisms.
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Southern Scratch founder and veteran Waila musician, Ron Joaquin, talks with Robert Doyle about the music that played such a vital role in his family and how the tradition continues with the younger generation of Joaquin's. More...
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Hopi singer and Canyon artist, Clark Tenakhongva, running for the office of Chairman of the Hopi/Tewa people. Show support by visiting his website at www.tenakhongva.com. |
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Did you know that Native Americans are creating a greater presence for themselves within classical music? Artists like Chickasaw composer Jerod Tate and Canyon’s own R. Carlos Nakai are rising to greater prominence in classical music. This month the Canyon Explorer Series inaugurates a new category called Canyon Explorer: Classical to present classical recordings (this new category will be a sister to our Canyon Explorer: World which features ethnic music from around the world). More... |
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