Invocations/The Moth and the Flame | ||||
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Studio album by Keith Jarrett | ||||
Released | 1981 | |||
Recorded | November, 1979 and November, 1980 | |||
Genre | Improvised music | |||
Length | 81:06 | |||
Label | ECM | |||
Producer | Manfred Eicher | |||
Keith Jarrett chronology | ||||
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Invocations/The Moth and the Flame is a double album of improvised music written by and performed by Keith Jarrett on soprano saxophone and pipe organ ("Invocations") and piano ("The Moth and the Flame") which was released on the ECM label in 1981.[1]
Contents |
The Allmusic review by Richard S. Ginell awarded the album 3 stars noting "If this schizophrenic double-CD set didn't throw Keith Jarrett's most devoted fans for a loop, nothing ever will. Here we have two radically disparate works involving different timbres, attacks and mindsets, both within themselves and with each other. On "Invocations," a seven-movement suite, Jarrett returns to the massive pipe organ in Ottobeuren, Germany for a series of sometimes wildly contrasting episodes... "The Moth and the Flame" finds Jarrett back in a studio with a grand piano, improvising musical still-lifes, rambling aimlessly, or doing his rollicking E-flat ostinato thing familiar from the solo concerts. About all that these two pieces share, with the exception of the E-flat movement from "Moth," is an aversion to a jazz pulse, so although there are plenty of rewarding passages here, casual Jarrett browsers are hereby warned".[2]
Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [2] |
Disc One:
Disc Two: