Alex Paxton - Music for Bosch People (2021) Hi-Res
Artist: Alex Paxton
Title: Music for Bosch People
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: NMC Recordings
Genre: Classical, Jazz
Quality: FLAC 16/24 Bit (44,1 KHz / tracks+booklet)
Total Time: 43:47 min
Total Size: 268 / 487 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Music for Bosch People
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: NMC Recordings
Genre: Classical, Jazz
Quality: FLAC 16/24 Bit (44,1 KHz / tracks+booklet)
Total Time: 43:47 min
Total Size: 268 / 487 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Music for Bosch People
02. Londonglum
03. Prayer with Night Pictures
04. Prayer with Strings and Joan Rivers
05. Prayer in the Darkness
06. Prayer Like I Know
07. Prayer Like Hot Pink
Award-winning composer, improvising-trombonist and bandleader Alex Paxton describes Music for Bosch People like this:
'It’s like minimal but loads more notes like video-games but with more song like jazz but much more gay like old music but more current like yummy sweet but more stick like paint but more scratch like tapestry but filthily like prayer but more loud like loud groove and more rude like fingers and faces too but somehow more smelly like smelly things cooking with more chew and change like louder prayers that groove with like stinking-hot-pink in poo-brown but even more desperate-like than that like drums and Dream Musics…'
His work draws upon a range of classical, experimental, electronic and folk music traditions to create a unique and explosive voice. The ‘Bosch’ in the title refers to the 16th-century Dutch painter Hieronymus Bosch, whose horrifically fantastical images inspire Paxton to make highly-charged genre-hopping music that is joyful and exciting but with violent aspects mixed in as well.
'Manic, brilliant, beauty' Listenpony
Paxton uses the phrase ‘infinite MIDI synths’ to describe the way he composes. Tracks 3–7 began life as layers of recorded improvisations on a simple little stylophone and a small cheap MIDI synth, which were then written over with notation and orchestrated for a live band of drums, sax, guitar and trombone, electronics and tape elements. The title track is the densest, most complex piece he’s ever written and was composed especially for this recording. LONDONGLUM is a manic solo for vocalising trombonist that showcases Paxton’s compelling musical language.
Paxton was elected to the 9th International Composition Seminar with Ensemble Modern, has won the Royal Philharmonic Society Composition Prize, Dankworth Jazz Prize, Leverhulme Art Scholar Prize, Harriet Cohen Music Award, appointed as London
Symphony Orchestra Panufnik Composer and has been commissioned by legendary multi-instrumentalist John Zorn.
'It’s like minimal but loads more notes like video-games but with more song like jazz but much more gay like old music but more current like yummy sweet but more stick like paint but more scratch like tapestry but filthily like prayer but more loud like loud groove and more rude like fingers and faces too but somehow more smelly like smelly things cooking with more chew and change like louder prayers that groove with like stinking-hot-pink in poo-brown but even more desperate-like than that like drums and Dream Musics…'
His work draws upon a range of classical, experimental, electronic and folk music traditions to create a unique and explosive voice. The ‘Bosch’ in the title refers to the 16th-century Dutch painter Hieronymus Bosch, whose horrifically fantastical images inspire Paxton to make highly-charged genre-hopping music that is joyful and exciting but with violent aspects mixed in as well.
'Manic, brilliant, beauty' Listenpony
Paxton uses the phrase ‘infinite MIDI synths’ to describe the way he composes. Tracks 3–7 began life as layers of recorded improvisations on a simple little stylophone and a small cheap MIDI synth, which were then written over with notation and orchestrated for a live band of drums, sax, guitar and trombone, electronics and tape elements. The title track is the densest, most complex piece he’s ever written and was composed especially for this recording. LONDONGLUM is a manic solo for vocalising trombonist that showcases Paxton’s compelling musical language.
Paxton was elected to the 9th International Composition Seminar with Ensemble Modern, has won the Royal Philharmonic Society Composition Prize, Dankworth Jazz Prize, Leverhulme Art Scholar Prize, Harriet Cohen Music Award, appointed as London
Symphony Orchestra Panufnik Composer and has been commissioned by legendary multi-instrumentalist John Zorn.