‘Crossover’ met Levy DeAndrade at his jazz fusion zenith
Levy DeAndrade may take a theoretically cerebral approach to his jazz compositions, but his rhythms speak to the pulses of both savants and jazz fusion laymen alike. The live recording of his seminal single, Crossover, exhibits the tour-de-sonic-synthesising-force’s distinctive demand to give yourself over to his sound fully. Along with the decline of the album format, all music is under threat of being reduced to mere background noise, there to fill an aural void. Yet DeAndrade stands defiantly in the way of the art form’s visceral extinction, piercing intravenous shots of life into his wildly expressive, ardorously zealous arrangements. Crossover meets him at his creative zenith; if he were composing in the time of the Zoot Suit riots, the carnage would have been colossal. There’s a feral sophistication to the way DeAndrade builds his structures. His piano work feels less like accompaniment and more like an axis around which chaos organises itself, bending to his command. Crossover feels lived, reactive, and irrepressibly human, reminding anyone who has forgotten that jazz, when treated as conversation rather than composition, still has teeth sharp enough to puncture complacency. As a pianist, composer, and applied theorist, Levy DeAndrade has long rejected the superficiality of […] The post ‘Crossover’ met Levy DeAndrade at his jazz fusion zenith appeared first on A&R Factory.
Levy DeAndrade may take a theoretically cerebral approach to his jazz compositions, but his rhythms speak to the pulses of both savants and jazz fusion laymen alike. The live recording of his seminal single, Crossover, exhibits the tour-de-sonic-synthesising-force’s distinctive demand to give yourself over to his sound fully. Along with the decline of the album format, all music is under threat of being reduced to mere background noise, there to fill an aural void. Yet DeAndrade stands defiantly in the way of the art form’s visceral extinction, piercing intravenous shots of life into his wildly expressive, ardorously zealous arrangements. Crossover meets him at his creative zenith; if he were composing in the time of the Zoot Suit riots, the carnage would have been colossal. There’s a feral sophistication to the way DeAndrade builds his structures. His piano work feels less like accompaniment and more like an axis around which chaos organises itself, bending to his command. Crossover feels lived, reactive, and irrepressibly human, reminding anyone who has forgotten that jazz, when treated as conversation rather than composition, still has teeth sharp enough to puncture complacency. As a pianist, composer, and applied theorist, Levy DeAndrade has long rejected the superficiality of […]
The post ‘Crossover’ met Levy DeAndrade at his jazz fusion zenith appeared first on A&R Factory.
