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Jonathan Mayer - Out Of Genre

 
Jonathan Mayer - Out Of Genre -Flute-World Music
ID: FHR09 (EAN: 5060216340043)  | 1 CD | DDD
Released in: 2011
LABEL:
FIRST HAND RECORDS
Collection:
World Music
Subcollection:
Flute
Composers:
BACH, Johann Sebastian | MAYER, Jonathan | WYSRAETE, Bernard
Interprets:
MAYER, Jonathan | PIROHIT, Mitel | WHEELER, Kenny (trumpet / ) | WYSRAETE, Bernard
Other info:

Out of Genre, the solo debut album from distinguished sitarist Jonathan Mayer, spans world, jazz and classical genres. Featuring jazz trumpet legend Kenny Wheeler, the program includes the premiere recording of sitar transcriptions of works by J.S. Bach. Son of the late composer and co-founder of Indo-Jazz Fusions John Mayer, Jonathan studied sitar with Clem Alford (the first ever European sitar player), Pandit Subroto Roy Chowdhury of Senia Gharana and Wajahat Khan (direct descendent of Mia Tansen the great musician, one of the nine jewels in Moghul court of Emperor Akbar). He also studied composition with his father and later with Andrew Downes at the Birmingham Conservatoire. Out of Genre also features the first ever recording of the newly invented pygmy sitar.
Tracklist
 
BACH, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750) 
1. Sonata No.1 in G Minor, BWV 1001 1. Adagio5:14 
MAYER, Jonathan (b. 1976) 
2. Rag Jiddhu6:38 
3. String Of Pearls9:31 
MAYER, Jonathan (b. 1976), WYSRAETE, Bernard (b. 1942) 
4. Joning9:55 
BACH, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750) 
5. Gavotte & Rondeau BWV 1006.5:19 
WYSRAETE, Bernard (b. 1942) 
6. Abida8:45 
MAYER, Jonathan (b. 1976) 
7. Whole Again9:13 
BACH, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750) 
8. Prelude in C minor BWV 847.3:03 
MAYER, Jonathan (b. 1976) 
9. Capo-Lo5:33 
10. When It Rains5:29 

Review:
 

Audiophile Audition - May 14th 2011 *****

Diversity is the touchstone of much music today; even the sitar itself evolved from the Persian tambur and the South Indian veena. Though steeped in tradition going back centuries, the sitar itself is only about 100 years old. The Bollywood music influence has opened new areas of the mix of Western and Indian music. Jonathan Mayer is the son of the late John Mayer, who created the Indo-Jazz Fusion albums, so you can see he doesn’t come by the Westernized sitar thing by accident. True, there have been some Western musicians who really didn’t get it with the sitar (especially in the 1960s), just as there are still some who don’t really get it with Brazilian music. But Mayer clearly knows what he is doing with the difficult instrument, and includes in his innovative work a vast variety of sources in addition to his own compositions.

There are three Bach selections on Out of Genre, which reminded me of Bela Fleck’s banjo explorations of that composer. And the list of instruments on the CD for Mayer is just as diverse as the music: in addition to plain sitar, there is pygmy sitar (uses the body of a bouzouki), electric sitar, tanpura, guitar-zither, piano, Fender Rhodes and other keyboards. There’s plenty of exotic work here with various non-Western scales and rhythmic structures, but it all works quite well with a strong jazz esthetic and doesn’t seem a gimmick. And how many CD can boast liner notes by Dr. Kuljit Bhamra?
Reviewed by: John Sunier


Songlines - June 2011 ***

JS Bach goes Indian jazz Bach on the sitar? Not quite what you might be expecting from this album from Jonathan Mayer. But I was won over by the three pieces here, especially 'Sonata no 1 in G Minor', although I suspect there were ferocious technical difficulties to overcome. Also well judged were the experimentations with different scale forms, such as the Persian octatonic 'String of Pearls' and the wholetone scale on track seven, 'whole', which although they move away from the traditional modal conceptions of Indian music still seem ideally suited to the instrument in Mayer's hands. The pieces in which he collaborates with other musicians are less exciting, especially 'When It Rains' [sic] featuring the jazz trumpeter Kenny Wheeler. The latter seems very much out of his element, lacking the fluent technique necessary to keep up with Mayer's clear facility on his instrument. This was less obvious with 'String of Pearls' [sic], which features the French flautist Bernard Wystraete, and his bass flute has a timbre that is akin to the North India bansuri (bamboo flute), making the paring less jarring. All in all, however, this is an unusual and intriguing album that pushes at the limits of what we expect from the sitar.
Reviewed by: Maria Lord


 

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