Echo (Dave Burrell album)

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Echo
Echo cover
Studio album by Dave Burrell
Released August 13, 1969
Genre Post-bop
Free jazz
Avant-garde jazz
Label BYG (1969)
Get Back (2001)
Sunspots (2004)
Producer Claude Delcloo
Jean Luc Young
Jean Georgakarakos
Professional reviews
Dave Burrell chronology
La Vie de Bohème
(1969)
Echo
(1969)
Dave Burrell Plays Ellington & Monk
(1978)

Echo is a studio album released by jazz pianist Dave Burrell. It was first released as an LP album on August 13, 1969 by BYG Actuel. It was re-released twice, first again on LP by Get Back Records in 2001 before finding its way to compact disc in 2004 via Sunspots Records.

Burrell had been part of an all-star group lead by Archie Shepp that played during the 1969 Pan-African Festival in Algiers. While there, French journalists from Paris were on hand and mentioned to Burrell the possibility recording in the city. Deciding on such a venture, Burrel remarked that he "remembered the sound of the ambulances and the police cars in Algiers and that unstable interval of an augmented fourth and thought that was the interval that I wanted to put into 'Echo'." The recording was Burrell's way of honouring the group, since all were involved in the album.[1]

It has been said that the album as a whole "is [a] monster of an LP" and "a curiously schizophrenic set."[2][3]

Contents

[edit] Track listing

  1. "Echo" — 20:01
  2. "Peace" — 22:04

[edit] Personnel

Band:

Production:

  • Jacques Bisceglia — coordination
  • Claude Delcloo — executive producer
  • Claude Jauvert — engineer
  • Philippe Gras — photography
  • Jean Luc Young, Jean Georgakarakos — producers

[edit] Reception

All Music Guide marvels at the talented ensemble whose members are each "simply blowing or pounding his respective brains out" in the first track that "becomes pleasantly numbing after a while." They even say that "if Echo isn't the noisiest jazz song in the world, it's damned close."[2] The Penguin Guide to Jazz remarks that "Echo" is "a swirling, all-in blast that palls very quickly."[3] Both sources mention that the second track is more structured and is welcomed after the first song's barrage. Still, The Penguin Guide says that "this is a historical document, hard to listen to now."[3] In response, Burrell has mentioned in interviews that "The French did not know how to record the music, nor did anybody else. The dials were going wild and nobody really knew how to mix it back then."[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Fred Jung (November 10, 2004). A Fireside Chat with Dave Burrell. Retrieved on 2006-12-28.
  2. ^ a b Brandon Burke. Echo. Retrieved on 2006-12-28.
  3. ^ a b c The Penguin Guide to Jazz by Richard Cook, Brian Morton, et al. pg 189.

[edit] External links