June 02, 2011

Vijay Iyer Trio 'Tirtha' live at Jazzclub Unterfahrt München 2011


Photo © Alan Nahigian 
 
Vijay Iyer - Piano
Prasanna - Guitar
Nitin Mitta - Tabla
recorded live at Jazzclub Unterfahrt München, April 13, 2011

1. Far From Over (Iyer)
2. Tirtha (Iyer)
3. Abundance (Iyer)
4. Tribal Wisdom (Prasanna)
5. Gauntlet (Iyer)
6. Introduction
7. Duality (Iyer)
8. Falsehood (Prasanna)
9. Polytheism (Prasanna)
10. Remembrance (Iyer)
11. Entropy and Time (Prasanna)
12. Jog (Mitta)

The Sanskrit word tīrtha (THEER-tha) literally means a ford, or a shallow place in a river that can be easily crossed over. Within a spiritual context, tirtha denotes a holy place near a body of water - somewhere where everyday struggles fall away, and where one passes easily into a deeper and more profound state of being. Aptly, Tirtha is now also the name of a phenomenal trio featuring three powerhouse musicians who at once honor and traverse the streams of tradition. It is also the name of their exciting new album on ACT.
Individually, Indian-American pianist-composer Vijay Iyer, Chennai (formerly Madras)-born guitarist-composer Prasanna, and Hyderabad native and tabla player Nitin Mitta are already highly accomplished artists who shift easily among multiple musical languages. Together, they have achieved a fully realized, deeply thoughtful, and truly innovative collaboration. Combining the elemental directness of rock, the chamber-like intimacy of raga, and bebop’s hard, angular drive, Tirtha achieves a profound interplay of melody and rhythm that characterizes the best jazz.
In his album notes, the award-winning Iyer describes the group’s genesis: “Tirtha (the band) formed in response to an invitation. In 2007 I was asked to put together a concert celebrating 60 years of Indian independence. Normally I’ve steered clear of fusion experiments that attempt to mix styles - to “create something,” as John Coltrane famously admonished, “more with labels, you see, than true evolution.” For this event I hoped to avoid those pitfalls, and offer something personal.
“I invited along Prasanna and Nitin Mitta, two outstanding musicians from India who have settled in the States. None of us had collaborated previously, but at our first rehearsal we felt a jolt of recognition. There was no question of “fusion,” no compromise, no attempt to sound more or less “Indian”; just a fluid musical conversation among three individuals, an atmosphere of camaraderie, a sense of beginning.”


7 comments:

bogard said...

http://www.megaupload.com/?d=KFBZ6PH0

Somnium said...

Awesome post! Thanks Bogard!

Roland561 said...

Thank You for this very dynamic group.

Gregory Peccary, N.G.W.S. said...

Thank you, Mr Bogard!

Lavendertilly said...

another great looking share, but with another technical problem though, it seems to hang at 23% download - for me at least. Could you re-post it please? Thanks.

Lavendertilly said...

Bogard, can I just check if you know whether anyone has managed to download this from megaupload as I can't get beyond 24% in either IE or Firefox? It looks really interesting especially having watched a few of their YouTube clips. Thanks again for all your shares, really appreciated.

bogard said...

Until now 580 guys were able to download, so, I´m sorry, I´ve no idea what´s wrong...