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Interstellar Space Revisited
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Interstellar Space Revisited | Audio CD

by Gregg & Nels Cline Bendian

List Price: $15.95  
Available:  Usually ships in 24 hours

Binding:  Audio CD
Format:  Live
Studio:  ATAVISTIC
Release Date:  March 31, 2009
Sales Rank:  135,050th


TRACK LISTING


Disc: 1
  • Track 1: Mars
  • Track 2: Leo
  • Track 3: Venus
  • Track 4: Jupiter
  • Track 5: Saturn
  • Track 6: Lonnie's Lament


EDITORIAL REVIEWS


Amazon.com
Using the legendary free-jazz summit by John Coltrane and Rashied Ali as an authentic sonic blueprint, guitarist Nels Cline and drummer Gregg Bendian trace the impetuous improvisation of Interstellar Space with startling skill and unbridled enthusiasm. While Cline's wildly expressive guitar playing approximates 'Trane's infamous "sheets-of-sound" saxophone stylings, it's actually Bendian's hyperkinetic drum excursions that propel this session into the outer regions of the jazz stratosphere. Thoughtfully embracing Coltrane's wide-open compositions like "Mars," "Leo," "Venus," and "Jupiter," Cline and Bendian explore the many creative options of their drum-guitar dyad. Recorded live and alternating between eminently peaceful passages and physically raucous interactions, the union of Cline and Bendian has resulted in a worthwhile sequel to the immortal duets of Messrs. Coltrane and Ali. --Mitch Myers


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 5.0 based on 8 reviews)

Pure, Inspired GENUIS. GENUIS I SAY!!! by John Grunwell (Washington, D.C.) 5 Stars
November 30, 2004
As strange as it may seem, I've been searching for this sound for I don't know how long. It's as though it existed in my unconscious mind, or perhaps in the limited area in the Akashic Records to which I have any access. Perhaps there exists a Jungian archetype that I've been unwittingly attuned to. To finally hear it realized in the real world is nothing short of revelatory. I first heard what folks call "free jazz" through local musicians, and I was intrigued. Subsequent performance experiences turned me on to the full power of this expressive music, music that strives to transcend any and all limitations. Nels Cline (and by extension, I imagine, Mr. Coltrane as well) succeeds. As an amateur musician myself, one with a fairly developed ear and moderate, innate sense of musicality, it's obvious that the more you understand music itself, and the more your mind is open to all forms of musical experience, the better equipped you are to "hear" this properly. I would argue that a disco purist may not like it, but anyone who enjoys progressive rock, metal, electronica or passion in general can get into it. If you don't like skronky music, you won't like this recording. However, for fans of skronk, this is a monumental work. My familiarity with the specific Coltrane recording on which it is based in very limited, so I can't speak to comparisons or contrasts. I don't know much about Nels Cline, but he's obviously an ingenious musician. He possesses the fluid technique of Joe Satriani or Steve Vai, but this music is light years beyond the clichéd rock of those two fellows. I don't know if he ever listened to much heavy metal, but the influence sounds like it's there. I'm also amazed at the level of novelty found on this recording. You know, regardless of the players, six or seven pieces comprised of nothing but shifting, tricky, cathartic percussion and overdriven guitar duets could get repetitive after some time, but this doesn't. Perhaps that's because the source materials comes from one of the 20th century's great musical genuises. Check out Jim Black's first "AlasNoAxis" recording if this item appeals to you. It's similar in the sense that it's like free jazz with metal/rock overtones.

One of the best CDs I've ever owned by Brenden Steltz (Rochester, NY) 5 Stars
July 28, 2002
This is simply an amazing recording. I'm not even going to try to describe it or justify my opinion. But I listen to a lot of music from a lot of different genres, and this is one of the CDs I've come back to more than any other. It's mind-bogglingly good. Some days I just can't even believe how good it is. It's so good.

woooooooow! by Stephen (Virginia Beach, VA USA) 5 Stars
February 01, 2001
Don't look for stock riffs and runs here! Most jazz guitarists sound alike with a Wes Montgomery or Jim Hall thing going on. Its refreshing to hear a guitarist who obviously has the chops cultivate "sounds" from the Guitar (Frisell, Jeb Bishop, Brandon Ross are a few others I can think of). Cline doesn't just appoximate Coltrane's tenor sound. He uses it as a jumping off point - his playing is about the Guitar.Bendian also smokes here. The whole suite is awesome, not a weak moment. I found their version of Lonnie's Lament with Bendian on vibes to be just as strong, if not as "free" as the Interstellar Space tunes. Just Get It!

truly ecstatic improv 5 Stars
May 26, 2000
Listen to this side by side with the Coltrane/Ali duets for an added treat. Bendian is breathtakingly fluid on the drums. This is music you must feel, not just hear.

Trane would be more than pleased by happydogpotatohead (New Orleans, LA USA) 5 Stars
April 03, 2000
It's important to recognize that Coltrane was a spiritual player, and many people who approach his music nonspiritually (especially the later works) completely miss this point. Nels Cline and Greg Bendian do not. This is not an empty shredfest but almost a rechanneling of Trane for a new century, done by two players who absolutely know what they're doing and absolutely hit the mark. This CD basically made me believe the electric guitar could be a valid instrument again.

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