Masada: Zayin

Masada: Zayin, also known as Masada 7, is a 1996 album by American composer and saxophonist John Zorn and released on the Japanese DIW label.[1] It is the seventh album of Masada recordings.

Masada: Zayin
Studio album by
Released1996
RecordedApril 16, 1996
GenreJazz
Length60:43
LabelDIW
ProducerJohn Zorn and Kazunori Sugiyama
Masada chronology
Masada: Vav
(1995)
Masada: Zayin
(1996)
Masada: Het
(1997)
John Zorn chronology
In Memory of Nikki Arane
(1996)
Masada: Zayin
(1996)
Filmworks V: Tears of Ecstasy
(1996)

Reception

The Allmusic review by Don Snowden awarded the album 3 stars stating "Masada's seventh volume sounds almost like an odds-and-sods collection. It's a more fragmentary and disparate disc that doesn't have much musical middle ground -- the extremes between the group's atonal free improv bursts and its more melodic or atmospheric pieces are very pronounced... The music flies all over the map and it sounds like Masada is just wrapping up loose ends or spewing out material based on Zorn's concepts that could have stayed out in the woodshed. Although it's good to hear the group taking some different roads, this is a minor entry in its catalog".[2]

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]

Track listing

All compositions by John Zorn.
  1. "Shevet" – 7:58
  2. "Hath-Arob" – 3:24
  3. "Mahshav" – 6:16
  4. "Shamor" – 5:09
  5. "Bacharach" – 1:24
  6. "Otiot" – 3:27
  7. "Nevuah" – 8:22
  8. "Kedem" – 9:55
  9. "Zemer" – 2:14
  10. "Evel" – 5:35
  11. "Tekufah" – 6:59
  • Recorded at the Power Station, New York City on April 16, 1996

Personnel

gollark: I'll check, hold on.
gollark: I was saying to EveryOS that having a bot on their phone would be problematic.
gollark: Well, enjoy your overpriced alumiuium slabs, I guess.
gollark: And I was saying that running the bot off a phone would cause problems.
gollark: I don't think Android actually has one, unless you count some sort of horrible-for-privacy Google thing they might have.

References

  1. Masada World: Zayin, accessed January 6, 2020
  2. Snowden, D. Allmusic Review accessed July 26, 2011
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.