The music composer known as Joseph P.
Freije has released his latest experimental music record, “Jazz
Beyond the Chaos.” The album is comprised of 11 original tracks for
a solid hour's worth of listening. As part of the growing 2016 series
of albums from Freije, it comes to the public from the Phrygian Music
independent record label. Tirelessly creative, startlingly innovative
and just plain fun to hear and fail to predict, “Jazz Beyond the
Chaos” by Joseph P. Freije is the most surprising album of 2016 so
far.
Freije's favorite artists come from a
variety of genres including (but not limited to) classic rock, jazz,
classical, experimental, electronica and blues. This mix of
influences is not useful in elucidating the kind of record which is
“Jazz Beyond the Chaos,” however. Even compared to the rest of
Freije's catalog, “Jazz Beyond...” is a particularly varied
collection of songs. This is a good thing because, like most of
Freije's music, categorization doesn't help the music, doesn't fit
the music, doesn't apply to what the artist has created.
Specific elements can be picked
out, though. “Jazz Beyond the Chaos” utilizes electronica and
early EDM beats and sounds as a foundation for a postmodern jazz form
for 2016. He then takes these sounds and sculpts them into songs
which would otherwise fit genres as disparate as house music and
postmodern jazz, trance and adult contemporary, funk and 8-bit, acid
jazz and drum 'n' bass. Fans of electronic music from both the old
school and new have a treat in store with “Jazz Beyond...”
It is a record for music lovers. It is
music for art fiends. Of particular note to audiophiles is “Different
Roads Home,” one of two 10-minute overtures available only as
B-side tracks for purchasers of the entire “Jazz Beyond the Chaos”
album (the other nine songs have been concurrently released as
singles).
And what of the LP's title?
“Life is a rhythm, the result of a
vibration that has always been in harmony with itself,” says
Freije. “Our ability to perceive life may have started with a big
bang, but that bang was just the opening of a door in space/time
through which information could be carried to life in that space
beyond the door the bang opened.”
Physicists, philosophers and
spiritualists have theorized for centuries about the significance of
rhythm, harmony and vibration. They are only recently very interested
in the importance and implications of chaos, though.
“The chaos began to take form,”
Freije says, “and the sound was called jazz. Jazz has become many
forms of life, some which are beyond the chaos.”
Organized chaos is not a suitable
description of this music. “Jazz Beyond the Chaos” is surgically
accurate. It is a careful balance, itself carefully balanced against
a natural ebbing and flowing of imbalance,
and the result is something as easy to hear as falling rain or as
fecund with intricacies to study as grandmaster-level chess games.
It's up to the listener.
“Jazz Beyond the Chaos” by Joseph
P. Freije is available online worldwide. Get in early, fans of
experimental music and postmodern jazz.
-S. McCauley
Lead Press Release Writer
www.MondoTunes.com
“Jazz Beyond the Chaos” by
Joseph P. Freije –
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