Life in the Sugar Candle Mines

Life in the Sugar Candle Mines is the debut album by Black Host, a free jazz quintet led by drummer Gerald Cleaver, who is joined by alto saxophonist Darius Jones, guitarist Brandon Seabrook, pianist Cooper-Moore and bassist Pascal Niggenkemper. It was released in 2013 on the Northern Spy label.[1]

Life in the Sugar Candle Mines
Studio album by
Black Host
Released2013
Recorded2012
StudioTrout Recording, Brooklyn
GenreJazz
Length77:38
LabelNorthern Spy
Gerald Cleaver chronology
Out of This World's Distortions
(2011)
Life in the Sugar Candle Mines
(2013)
Love and Ghosts
(2014)

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Down Beat[2]

The Down Beat review by Areif Sless-Kitain notes that "the drummer’s credit for 'sound design' hints at his ringleader role, yet Cleaver functions more as a conduit than a featured player."[2]

In his review for JazzTimes Steve Greenlee states "Anyone who still thinks free jazz is unpleasant random noises needs to hear Life in the Sugar Candle Mines, 78 minutes of loosely structured but highly conceived music by some of the best in the avant-garde game."[3]

Track listing

All compositions by Gerald Cleaver except as indicated
  1. "Hover" – 16:10
  2. "Ayler Children" – 11:23
  3. "Citizen Rose" – 8:04
  4. "Test-Sunday" – 6:35
  5. "Amsterdam / Frames" (Jones/Seabrook/Ashton/Niggenkemper/Cleaver) – 6:01
  6. "Gromek" – 12:58
  7. "Wrestling" (Béla Bartók) – 5:59
  8. "May Be Home" – 10:28

Personnel

gollark: Dogs aren't actually people.
gollark: Humans are quite poorly "designed" in many ways.
gollark: Hmm, fair, that would at least provide sizing information.
gollark: I don't think we have good data from then.
gollark: Apparently people are taller now on average than a few hundred years ago due to better nutrition or something.

References

  1. Life in the Sugar Candle Mines at Northern Spy
  2. Sless-Kitain, Areif. Life in the Sugar Candle Mines review. Down Beat August 13: page 81. Print.
  3. Greenlee, Steve. Life in the Sugar Candle Mines review at JazzTimes
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