Rotem Sivan Trio - Antidote (2017)
Artist: Rotem Sivan Trio
Title: Antidote
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Aima Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: flac lossless
Total Time: 00:37:58
Total Size: 213 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Antidote
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Aima Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: flac lossless
Total Time: 00:37:58
Total Size: 213 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Shahar
02. Antidote
03. Over the Rainbow (feat. Gracie Terzian)
04. Reconstruction
05. Aloof
06. Sun Song
07. Rustic Heart
08. Make You Feel My Love
09. Knives
10. For Emotional Use Only
11. Outro / Brochim Ha Nimtzaim
Heartbreak knows no true cure, but music can act as something of an antidote or coping mechanism to assist in dealing with it and suffering through it. That's what guitarist-composer Rotem Sivan discovered after a long-term relationship came to a swift and unexpected end. He turned to music to help him grapple with his demons and confront his new reality, emerging from the experience a year later with a newfound sense of emotional well-being and this powerful album.
The creation of Antidote allowed Sivan to purify his soul while also giving him the opportunity to expand the range of the trio that appeared on his previous album A New Dance (Fresh Sound New Talent, 2015). In bassist Haggai Cohen Milo, Sivan has found a stabilizing force capable of erecting and knocking down harmonic barriers. He anchors this ensemble while also providing lift. And with drummer Colin Stranahan's broken beat flows, steady grooves, and dynamic shifts adding to the mix, Sivan has a fully-integrated trio that presents as so much more.
With these nine originals and two covers, those three men send us on an odyssey that spans Sivan's universe of knowledge and understanding. There's never a dull moment in the journey, regardless of tempo or temperament, and the experience of hearing this music is both a lesson in passion and compassion. There are opportunities to see this trio open its stride the propulsive "Shahar," the hip and driving "Reconstruction," the fractured and frolicsome "Sun Song" but those energetic outlets aren't the only scenarios that open the eyes and ears. Hearing Sivan grieve all by his lonesome on "Rustic Heart" and "Knives," observing the evolution of the haunting title track as it moves from uncertainty toward an absolute, and being a fly on the wall as the trio allows the pressure to build across the opening minutes of "For Emotional Use Only" is just as satisfying as seeing this group firing on all cylinders.