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Gitbox jazz
Gitbox jazz






gitbox jazz
  1. #GITBOX JAZZ FULL#
  2. #GITBOX JAZZ SOFTWARE#
  3. #GITBOX JAZZ WINDOWS#

If you play MQA on a certified product, with an MQA decoder, the file will playback the original studio-master file.

  • An MQA file is backward compatible so will play on any device.
  • Studio Master: MQA (Master Quality Authenticated)

    #GITBOX JAZZ SOFTWARE#

    Supported by Apple OS with software player from Audirvana, PureMusic, JRiver.

    #GITBOX JAZZ WINDOWS#

  • Supported by Windows with software player from JRiver, KORG MediaGate.
  • High-End Network-Streaming players and few D/A Converter's (DAC).
  • Studio Master: DSD (Direct-Stream Digital)

    gitbox jazz

  • Supported by Apple OS with software player from Amarra, Audirvana, PureMusic).
  • For users, using Apple/iTunes and a few Network Streaming players.
  • Studio Master: ALAC (Apple Lossless Audio Coding)
  • Supported by Apple OS with software player from Amarra, Audirvana, PureMusic, Songbird.
  • Supported by Windows with software player from Media Monkey, JRiver, JPLAY).
  • Widely compatible with Network Streaming players and D/A Converter's (DAC).
  • Studio Master: FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) HighRes-Studio Master files are lossless at various sample rates from 44.1 kHz up to 384 kHz or 1-bit (2.8224 MHz) for DSD.

    #GITBOX JAZZ FULL#

    Further evidence of how linear time comes full circle with Curveball. Yet, out of that exotic and evocative melange of styles and influences, what emerges is - and has always been - distinctively Gitbox.įinally, the cover art is by Graeme Gash (also a guitarist, formerly of Waves) whose distinctive work graced the group's previous albums. The listener's mind can be taken towards contemporary classical music allusions to Spanish, Middle Eastern or North African styles the freedom of jazz, entrancement of minimalism or the economy of pop. Gitbox occupies a singular place in New Zealand music in that it draws from diverse sources. The perfect encore for their rebellious, pesky digits. And they close with Ennio Morricone's dramatic theme to The Good, the Bad and the Ugly. The bonus is hearing the ensemble in concert on the second disc where they essay some Curveball material but also other pieces, among them a variation on Threnody for Francisco Mendez from their debut album, a nod to the completion of that circle of time here. And a reminder of how sophisticated and seasoned these players are.įour of the group's original members – Nigel Gavin, Kim Halliday, Bodie Hermans and Russell Hughes – are still here, advancing this distinctive project into its fourth decade. As always, Gitbox subverts expectations but also deliver their beautifully realised, sometimes algebraic, melodies with a lively vigour or an elegant stateliness.įrom the pristine opening chimes of the ethereal Sanctuary where the glistening notes hang in still air and the urgently repeated figure which opens Absent Friend through the sub-tropical balm of the charming Dhoggs (My Dog Doesn’t Respect Me) to the concert chamber concentration and aural dynamics of the title track and beyond, the first disc of studio recordings is a constant revelation. And it has recorded artists as unique as the percussion group From Scratch and now, again, Gitbox.Ĭurveball – an appropriate title for a Gitbox and Rattle album – is the group's third for the label following Pesky Digits and Touch Wood in '94. Under the assured stewardship of helmsman Steve Garden, Rattle has since taken listeners on journeys through classical, jazz, sonic experimentalism, improvised music, the evocative sounds of taonga puoro.

    gitbox jazz

    Thirty years ago, the Rattle label launched itself with the album Pesky Digits by the Auckland guitar ensemble, Gitbox Rebellion. But sometimes we can feel it as circular. Time, as we live through it, seems linear.

    gitbox jazz

    Russell Hughes, Joanne Melbourne, Tomislav Skulic, Rob Mita, Sonia Wilson, Bodie Hermans, Peter Kirkbride, Sam Loveridge, Kim Halliday and Nigel Gavin Gitbox is comprised of ten acoustic guitarists who usually perform left to right in this order: The group’s music is as unique and vibrant as ever, just as Rattle’s enthusiasm for artists who follow their own compass is not only undiminished but even more determined as we move into our fourth decade. As curveballs go, we couldn’t have asked for a nicer one. This year, 2021, is Rattle’s 30th anniversary as an advocate for New Zealand art-music, and it gives us enormous pleasure to mark the occasion with a new album from Gitbox, the band that kicked things off for the label three decades ago with their much-loved and widely acclaimed Pesky Digits, Rattle’s very first release back in 1991.








    Gitbox jazz