Wednesday, 21 December 2011

Graham Haynes • Tones For The 21st Century


Cornetist/composer Graham Haynes is discreetly becoming one of the most original voices in the last decade of jazz's first century.
Forging energetic, musically challenging, emphatically involving, genre-bashing recordings that seem to ellipse far above the heap of corporate-driven placebos, Haynes' distinctive flair for tuneful melodies, infectious rhythms, and sharply inventive musical concepts has afforded him a handful of stirringly original recordings that will undoubtedly be revealed as some of the best jazz discs of the '90s. Tones For The 21st Century issues Haynes' most personal, florid, and abstract statement. Both ambitious and alarmingly quiet, Tones For The 21st Century is the B-side to his 1996 sonically devastating Transition. Oblique, hallucinogenic, murky, yet surprisingly peaceful and at times utterly beautiful, this latest venture finds Haynes floating through the anti-gravity soundscapes of ambient music. Sparsely complemented by wordists Tracie Morris and DJ Spacecraft, African harpist Steve Neil and techno programmer Joseph Briggs, Haynes has masterfully crafted six compelling sketches that seduce the listener not with funky basslines, thrustful rhythm, or knotty solos but through the mystical powers of simple legato melodies.
From a cursory listen, there seems to be an over-abundance of mindless keyboard samples and loops and not enough jazz lingo. But the hauntingly beautiful melodies Haynes whispers through the swirling kaleidoscope of soft keyboard washes and lurking chords on "Millennia" are some of his most gorgeous playing on record.
The transportive "Nameless River" also illuminates Haynes' gentler side as his drifts blissfully across the soothing rhythms of African harp and the hypnotic droning of a didgeridu. The spoken words of Tracie Morris on "Out of Phaze/Spirit World" and DJ Spacecraft on "Millennia" may prove to be self-indulgent and distracting to jazz snobs and cynics. But simply stated, Haynes' offering of Tones For The 21st Century has provided the ambient music's In A Silent Way in the most carefree way.
By John Murph


1. Millennia
2. Nameless River   
3. Out Of Phaze / Spirit World
4. Sadguru
5. Simplicity
6. Solo

Graham Haynes • Cornet, Flugelhorn, Keyboards, Tibetan Trumpet
Steve Neil • African Harp (2)
DJ Spazecraft • Spoken Word (1) Didgeridoo (2)
Tracie Morris • Spoken Word (3)

Engineer, Programmed and Mixed by Joseph Briggs
Produced by Graham Haynes

Label: Antilles – 314 537 692-2
Format: 320
Country: US
Released: 1997
Genre: Electronic, Jazz
Style: Abstract, Future Jazz, Ambient

6 comments:

  1. Another Haynes album?!! I had no idea there were so many - and I never would have heard a single one if it weren't for your generosity. THANKS so much, Stylo!

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  2. wow, im loving your blog man, so many juicy tidbits from different artists.
    you should also check out "Organik Mechanix" if you havent, it was released on ION Records (I can give you more info on the entire process of the album if you like when you find it).
    Anyhows, OM was Graham, Me, & Acoustik (aka MegMan of Rahtid Sound) with special guest collaborator Sonik Professa from Sydney. it was too "out" & was shelved for about a year. anyhows, the story is for the review when it happens! peace Aaron http://sohnup.com

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  3. Hi Aaron
    Thanks for stopping by "Organik Mechanix" was schedule to be posted today. Couldn't find a review apart from your inspiration for the track "Icon O'Clastik" more info on the entire process would be more than welocme.

    Regards
    Stylo

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  4. Yotte, one more to go (well posted already)

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  5. Thank you very much

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  6. This is a great album,i had it briefly and lost it during a move,he did some nice stuff round this time with laswell,especially the second Arcana album with the late great tony williams.thanks for the post

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