So mesmerizing, ecstatic, spiritual, dissonant, so disciplined and yet so full of improvisation. I can imagine Ms. Dawid and her ensemble leading a festival of thousands dancing and chanting this tune. Amazing!
There is a magic to the poly rhyme and tones happening in this peace , it takes a delicate ear and open heart to feel the nuance and simplicity to the work. While it challenges the notions of colonial music composition, it reflects the diegetic nature of beingness, each member holds a space, and pivot around their fellow musician. the work is profound, honest, raw and healing thank you thank you thank you
@@beamhigh220 Listen to it again today, it sucks the guy in the blue hat is the worst. She has a decent voice but she should to one thing at a time. Bonus the dude spooning the coffee cup with fuzz machine. It's like a caricature of what spiritual/free jazz would look like.
Opinion: Chaos. Madness. Intentionally pushing limits of acceptability of universal standards of beauty/music. Why? Because it's possible? This is an assault and a monstrosity to the ears and mind.
@ko, she is compared to Sun Ra big shoes to fill. Three persons singing/yelling in a mic and called it free jazz is a bit of a shortcut. The drums and bass are good but drowned by the "chanting"that bringing literally nothing. Crazy that I am here because my record shop employee highly recommended this to me. Lucky, I didn't buy the record. I love jazz and music in general but this is just a rip off of what was made in the 70's by much more talented people (Shepp, Coleman,Cherry, Mingus, Ra...). This isn't the future this is old news.
@@kevinmcveigh3612 I agree to a point. Although a flower is universally seen as beautiful, as is a snowcapped mountain. Within music, the appreciation for beauty is usually more defined by culture, but still within each culture a distinguishing trait (along with any art) is that it cannot produced by just anyone. Not anyone can rap well or write a movie soundtrack well, etc. I feel most people could pull something like this off if they tried. To me this is like a musical parallel to Marcel Duchamp's "Fountain" which was just a urinal that he called an art piece. I personally do not view that as art just because one calls it that.
So mesmerizing, ecstatic, spiritual, dissonant, so disciplined and yet so full of improvisation. I can imagine Ms. Dawid and her ensemble leading a festival of thousands dancing and chanting this tune. Amazing!
I'm earnestly curious: What makes it "spiritual"?
@@critical-thought-4all561 : I call it spiritual because the collective singing sounds like something ancient and needful and searching.
@@dwyerjones4542 - thanks for responding with your explanation. I appreciate it.
God, this is fantastic. true, healing, human, deep and creative. more. and more
Sun Ra has returned and SHE is even BETTER than EVER. THIS is the MUSICAL medicine we need today.
Just came across this. The first thought I had at 0:10 is that Sun Ra must be proud!
No.
🔥🔥🔥🔥
There is a magic to the poly rhyme and tones happening in this peace , it takes a delicate ear and open heart to feel the nuance and simplicity to the work. While it challenges the notions of colonial music composition, it reflects the diegetic nature of beingness, each member holds a space, and pivot around their fellow musician. the work is profound, honest, raw and healing thank you thank you thank you
Yo. This is amazing.
1:56 You know it's going to get real once the Clarinet is pulled.
omg i'm in love with her
Heart Ensemble of Chicago. Love
wow what an amazing performance
Really Cool Love this
this is real music, THIS IS A PERFECT REFLECTION OF THE HUMAN SOUL!
I would love to see her work with Kendrick. Both of them capture the black experience so viscerally.
Wow, Ive been mindbombed!!
Caralho! Arrepiei! Que performance mais linda!
amazing
love it!!
❤❤❤❤🤩🔥🤩✨✨✨✨✨
это космос 🔥
BIG PEACE 2 DA GODZ
🦋 mother godness
What is this
This is the REAL stuff...if not...it's a Damn good counterfeit...and I DON'T get the "counterfeit" vibe from this...AT ALL
sun ra reborn
What church should be
Sorry. I am not going to pretend this sounds good, is deep or moving -- and I'm a Sun Ra fan!
Could not agree more. So contrived, which is something Sun Ra was not.
@@beamhigh220 Listen to it again today, it sucks the guy in the blue hat is the worst. She has a decent voice but she should to one thing at a time. Bonus the dude spooning the coffee cup with fuzz machine.
It's like a caricature of what spiritual/free jazz would look like.
This is what I imagine hell sounds like
Opinion: Chaos. Madness. Intentionally pushing limits of acceptability of universal standards of beauty/music. Why? Because it's possible? This is an assault and a monstrosity to the ears and mind.
Why Push Limits? to make more room. Not because it is possible, but to make it possible.
@ko, she is compared to Sun Ra big shoes to fill. Three persons singing/yelling in a mic and called it free jazz is a bit of a shortcut. The drums and bass are good but drowned by the "chanting"that bringing literally nothing. Crazy that I am here because my record shop employee highly recommended this to me.
Lucky, I didn't buy the record. I love jazz and music in general but this is just a rip off of what was made in the 70's by much more talented people (Shepp, Coleman,Cherry, Mingus, Ra...).
This isn't the future this is old news.
Thank you.
Standards of beauty and music are not universal.
@@kevinmcveigh3612 I agree to a point. Although a flower is universally seen as beautiful, as is a snowcapped mountain. Within music, the appreciation for beauty is usually more defined by culture, but still within each culture a distinguishing trait (along with any art) is that it cannot produced by just anyone. Not anyone can rap well or write a movie soundtrack well, etc. I feel most people could pull something like this off if they tried. To me this is like a musical parallel to Marcel Duchamp's "Fountain" which was just a urinal that he called an art piece. I personally do not view that as art just because one calls it that.