Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Digital Wildlife

Digital Wildlife
Live album by
Released2002
RecordedMay 2001
VenueGuerilla Euphorics, Oakland, California
GenreAvant-garde jazz, Improvisation
Length49:04
LabelWinter & Winter 910 071
ProducerFred Frith
Maybe Monday chronology
Saturn's Finger
(1999)
Digital Wildlife
(2002)
Unsquare
(2008)

Digital Wildlife is an album by composer and guitarist Fred Frith's group Maybe Monday which was released on the Winter & Winter label.[1]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]

Allmusic gave the album 3½ stars.[2] JazzTimes' Aaron Steinberg observed "Digital Wildlife can sound, at any random point, like chamber-classical, abstract rock or folk. Frith also takes the title of the recording quite seriously: he seems to have taken tapes from the group's live-time improvisations and mixed them into a multilayered, abruptly shifting, densely overlapping collage of machine music. Acoustic and electronic elements have been cut, rearranged and pasted into a dreamy floating space, where any voice could at any time sound thoroughly foregrounded, distant, looped or distorted beyond recognition... Digital Wildlife has ambience to spare, though to most it will sound like a racket. Give this one some time. Frith has carefully crafted his own lexicon of sound, and once you've tuned in to what he's doing this beautiful recording pays dividends".[3]

Track listing

All compositions by Fred Frith, Joan Jeanrenaud, Miya Masaoka and Larry Ochs

  1. "Digital Wildlife" – 12:11
  2. "Image In and Atom" – 9:55
  3. "The Prisoners' Dilemma" – 14:30
  4. "Touch / Risk" – 7:23
  5. "Close to Home" – 4:58

Personnel

References

  1. ^ Ramond, Michel; Roussel, Patrice; Vuilleumier, Stephane. "Discography of Fred Frith". New York Downtown Scene and Other Miscellaneous Discographies. Archived from the original on June 19, 2019. Retrieved May 29, 2016.
  2. ^ a b "Fred Frith / Maybe Monday: Digital Wildlife". AllMusic. Retrieved June 7, 2020.
  3. ^ Steinberg, A., JazzTimes Review, July/August 2002