1990 studio album by Ronald Shannon Jackson From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Red Warrior is an album by the American jazz drummer Ronald Shannon Jackson, released in 1990.[2][3] It was rereleased by Mango Records the following year.[4]
Red Warrior | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1990 | |||
Genre | Jazz, free jazz | |||
Label | Axiom[1] | |||
Producer | Bill Laswell | |||
Ronald Shannon Jackson chronology | ||||
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The album was produced by Bill Laswell.[5] Jackson opted to record the album without horns, instead utilizing a three-guitar roster.[6] Red Warrior, inspired by a tour that Jackson undertook in Africa, was recorded in one day.[7]
The Washington Post thought that the guitarists "all fall into one hard-rock or funk cliché after another ... For all the volcanic energy happening at the bottom of this music, the top is so uninspired that it dooms the album."[5] The Los Angeles Times called the album "a flawed experiment," writing that Jackson "failed to solve metal's rhythmic stolidity."[12] The Chicago Sun-Times wrote that "the songs cut deeper than any Jackson has delivered since the days of his harmolodic fusion band, the Decoding Society."[9] The St. Petersburg Times relegated it to "the guitar-mag crowd."[4]
AllMusic wrote that "the mix is expanded with plenty of jazz improvisation, weaves of effects-riddled guitar lines, complex head statements, and, of course, the drummer's pan-stylistic rhythmic support."[8] Billboard called Red Warrior an "extremely uncompromising fusion" album.[15] The New York Times, in its Jackson obituary, deemed it "a fiery guitar-oriented session."[16]
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Red Warrior" | 4:43 |
2. | "Ashes" | 4:40 |
3. | "Gate to Heaven" | 5:14 |
4. | "In Every Face" | 6:06 |
5. | "Elders" | 13:33 |
6. | "What's Not Said" | 4:15 |
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