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Steve Tibbetts: A Man About A Horse
With Horse, that hidden quality is both the work's best and worst quality. The tonal compositions are striking, and the moodiness is sustained throughout the album, especially on the ten-minute-plus track, "Black Temple," a middle section of an enclosed trilogy within the album (starting with "Red Temple" and concluding with "Burning Temple"), which has a lively yet smooth undercurrent. Yet, for all these amenities, they have a tendency to grow tiresome - unpredictability can become predictable if not employed sparingly. It's the album's use of liveliness, in takes like "Glass Everywhere," fairly edgy work, that resurrects it from its comfort zone of mood and tone while failing to get fully under your skin. More to my liking was the terrific, "Koshala," which has a sturdier, swifter tempo that counterbalances the leisurely mood of percussion and Tibbetts' guitar strings.
While music like this might best be enjoyed on a calm, rainy day, the album's repetitive nature (inherent in this kind of music form, for better or worse) ultimately results in a lack of strong musical differentiation, making it easier to appreciate the subtle craft that goes into the work rather than fully praise on the whole.
Track Listing
Lupra (4:47) Red Temple (6:39) Black Temple (10:06) Burning Temple (3:59) Glass Everywhere (3:58) Lochana (3:40) Chandoha (5:58) Koshala (5:54)
Personnel
Steve Tibbetts
guitarSteve Tibbetts: guitars, percussion Marc Anderson: percussion Marcus Wise: percussion Jim Anton: bass
Album information
Title: A Man About A Horse | Year Released: 2002 | Record Label: ECM Records
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