Taeko Kunishima - Space To Be... (2004)

Artist: Taeko Kunishima
Title: Space To Be...
Year Of Release: 2004
Label: 33 Jazz
Genre: Post-Bop, Contemporary Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 52:24
Total Size: 294 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Space To Be...
Year Of Release: 2004
Label: 33 Jazz
Genre: Post-Bop, Contemporary Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 52:24
Total Size: 294 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Sakura - Theme 08:23
2. Bela 06:55
3. A Tale Of Love 04:28
4. Space To Be Filled 04:24
5. Chingusa No Uta (Okinawan Folk Song) 06:25
6. Kokiriko Bushi (Japanese Folk Song) 06:56
7. Itsuki No Komoriuta (Japanese Folk Song) 06:36
8. Solitary 08:17
Space To Be: ‘In this album a plangent Japanese folk song might provide the theme for a straight-ahead or even lightly funky jazz-based workout; a solo-piano passage drawn from the same source might draw either on Impressionism, the spikier pungency, a jazz-bass riff might underlie piano solo laced with Japanese cadences and harmonies.’
Chris Parker : Former reviewer from The Vortex (London)
Don't let the cover art fool you—it looks as though it would be right at home on the front of a drifty New Age set of sounds. But Space to Be... claims its spot in the mainstream jazz category, taking inspiration from a batch of influences: straight-ahead jazz, modern classical and Japanese folk songs.
Pianist Taeko Kunishima began piano studies at a young age in her native Japan, absorbing Mozart and Beethoven and later the modern piano music of Chopin, Debussy, Bartok and Japanese composer Toru Takemitsu.
Kunishima's jazz compositions lean toward lyricism and delicacy, catchy melodies and occasional driving grooves. Her band is comprised of piano, bass, guitar, drums and trombone, an unusual configuration that makes for an interesting sound, including contrasts between the dance-like delicacy of "Sakura" and the driving forward momentum of of "A Space to be Filled." Trombonist Paul Taylor turns the aggression factor up a notch, adding a brassy beef to the proceedings.
Five of the eight tunes are Kunishima-penned; three more are folks songs, Japanese or Okinawan, adding a touch of the exotic to the jazz sound.
Chris Parker : Former reviewer from The Vortex (London)
Don't let the cover art fool you—it looks as though it would be right at home on the front of a drifty New Age set of sounds. But Space to Be... claims its spot in the mainstream jazz category, taking inspiration from a batch of influences: straight-ahead jazz, modern classical and Japanese folk songs.
Pianist Taeko Kunishima began piano studies at a young age in her native Japan, absorbing Mozart and Beethoven and later the modern piano music of Chopin, Debussy, Bartok and Japanese composer Toru Takemitsu.
Kunishima's jazz compositions lean toward lyricism and delicacy, catchy melodies and occasional driving grooves. Her band is comprised of piano, bass, guitar, drums and trombone, an unusual configuration that makes for an interesting sound, including contrasts between the dance-like delicacy of "Sakura" and the driving forward momentum of of "A Space to be Filled." Trombonist Paul Taylor turns the aggression factor up a notch, adding a brassy beef to the proceedings.
Five of the eight tunes are Kunishima-penned; three more are folks songs, Japanese or Okinawan, adding a touch of the exotic to the jazz sound.