» » Jan Garbarek Quartet - Afric Pepperbird
Jan Garbarek Quartet - Afric Pepperbirdh1
Jazz
Performer: Jan Garbarek Quartet
Title: Afric Pepperbird
Style: Free Jazz, Contemporary Jazz
Year 1970
Country Germany
Genre: Jazz
Rating: 4.1
Votes: 771
MP3 size: 1159 mb
FLAC size: 1641 mb
WMA size: 1575 mb
Other formats: MPC MMF VQF WMA FLAC DXD WAV

Jan Garbarek Quartet - Afric Pepperbird mp3 album


Jan Garbarek Quartet - Afric Pepperbird mp3 album

Tracklist

Scarabée 6:15
Mah-Jong 1:50
Beast Of Kommodo 12:30
Blow Away Zone 8:35
MYB 1:50
Concentus 0:47
Afric Pepperbird 8:00
Blupp 1:05

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
ECM 1007 Jan Garbarek Quartet Afric Pepperbird ‎(LP, Album) ECM Records ECM 1007 Germany 1970
ECM 1007, SLP 1410 Jan Garbarek Quartet Afric Pepperbird ‎(LP, Album) ECM Records, Sonet ECM 1007, SLP 1410 Norway 1970
ECM 1007 Jan Garbarek Quartet Afric Pepperbird ‎(LP, Album, RP) ECM Records ECM 1007 Germany 1976
JPCD9810418 Jan Garbarek Quartet Afric Pepperbird ‎(CD, Album, Unofficial) Grammy JPCD9810418 Russia 1998
ECM 1007, 843 475-2 Jan Garbarek Quartet Afric Pepperbird ‎(CD, Album, RE) ECM Records, ECM Records ECM 1007, 843 475-2 Germany Unknown
ECM 1007, 843 475-2 Jan Garbarek Quartet Afric Pepperbird ‎(CD, Album, RE) ECM Records, ECM Records ECM 1007, 843 475-2 Germany Unknown
ECM 1007, 843 475-2 Jan Garbarek Quartet Afric Pepperbird ‎(CD, Album, RE, RP) ECM Records, ECM Records ECM 1007, 843 475-2 Germany Unknown
ECM 1007, 843 475-2 Jan Garbarek Quartet Afric Pepperbird ‎(CD, Album, RE, RP) ECM Records, ECM Records ECM 1007, 843 475-2 Germany Unknown


Kea
KILLER "Afric pepperbird" track. Dark and deep groove. Wonderful bass, drums and guitar on it.Check also the "Beast of Kommodo", a great Spiritual tune with a touch of experimental.
Qucid
Should have been called Arild Andersen Quartet, it is his bass playing that shines foremost.
Hatе&love
Review by Brian OlewnickLong ago, before he achieved relative stardom with his Nordic, somewhat new-agey recreations of medieval music, Jan Garbarek produced a handful of spectacular, robust albums for ECM where the influence of free jazz, particularly Albert Ayler, was paramount. Afric Pepperbird was his first recording for the then fledgling label and it features his quartet at the height of their powers, embellishing his muscular and imaginative compositions with outstanding, individualistic playing. From the eerie keening of the opening "Scarabee," framed by Jon Christensen's pinpoint delicate drums, to the hard-driving "Beast of Kommodo" with the leaders wailing bass sax to Rypdal's manic explorations on Blow Away Zone, this is one stellar effort. Add to that three drop-dead gorgeous miniatures by the great and undersung bassist Arild Andersen and the title track, one of the most deliriously infectious melodies you'll ever hear. Together with Sart, Tryptikon, and Witchi-Tai-To (as well as a prior recording on Flying Dutchman), this album represents the strongest, most aggressive portion of Garbarek's career, before he succumbed to what became known as the ECM aesthetic. Very highly recommended.