Phi Yaan Zek – Two Albums
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Imagine if Zappa had written the music on Jeff Beck’s “Blow by Blow”? Or if Steve Vai had jammed with the Beatles in their psychedelic phase? What if in an alternate reality Shawn Lane had played on Mahavishnu Orchestra’s “Birds Of Fire”? The result would come close to describing the magical momentum of the music of Phi Yaan Zek.
Jazz/Fusion/Instrumental
Bohren & der Club of Gore are a noir jazz band founded in 1992 in Mülheim an der Ruhr, Germany by Thorsten Benning (drums), Morten Gass (keys), Reiner Henseleit (guitar), and Robin Rodenberg (upright / double bass). They play a crossover of jazz and ambient, which they self described as an “unholy ambient mixture of slow jazz ballads, Black Sabbath doom and down tuned Autopsy sounds”. Over the years they have continously reduced and compressed their music to extremes.
Originally, the members of Bohren, who were school friends, started out playing in various hardcore bands such as 7 Inch Boots and Chronical Diarrhoea in 1988. Driven by the idea of a more unique style of music, they formed Bohren (German word for drilling) in 1992 to play, as they called it, „doom ridden jazz music“. In 1993 the band released a 7“ep for Suggestion Records. 1993 also saw the band expand their name to Bohren & der Club of Gore, as a link to the Dutch instrumental band Gore, which inspired Bohren to play instrumental music. 1994 followed the longplayers Gore Motel and the double set Midnight Radio (1995), both on Epistrophy Records, where Bohren introduced its musical vision between slow jazz- ballads and doom-guitars.
Henseleit left the band in 1996 and was replaced by Christoph Clöser, a Cologne-based composer and musician in 1997, replacing the guitar with a saxophone at the same time.
Dark/Doom/Funeral Jazz / Ambient
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Dale Cooper Quartet and The Dicataphones – Parole de Navarre
2006
@320 kbps (lame 3.93.1, q=0, stereo, enc. by Doost)
Dale Cooper Quartet & The Dictaphones are the quartet made of musicians covering a wide variety of musical styles (they are former members of Tank, Osaka, TF and ex-groove combo Loupous) creates a music that mixes electronic (samples, cuts, sound treatments) and acoustic (guitars, saxophone, trumpet). They play moody ballads that sounds as if they come out from one of David Lynch’s movies. Like in the Hollywood master of bizarre’s pieces, there is something like a dark and poisonous colour broken by red thunderlights and blue cigarette smoke. The music spawned some odd characters and landscapes while the listener makes out some more friendly faces that loom up out of this nowhere place: the voice of Zalie Bellaccico, Milanese streets sounds, a lazy flute, some distant breathing swim on the surface of this deep troubled waters. “Parole de Navarre” is an invitation for opening the red curtain of this Dark Jazz cabaret made of shimmering and whirling walls.
iFolder: part1, part2
RapidShare: part1, part2
Dark Jazz / Ambient
David Cross

Best known as the violinist for the 1972-1974 incarnation of KING CRIMSON which produced such classics as “Larks’ Tongues In Apsic” and “Red”, many don’t know that David CROSS released a handful of solo albums, which have featured such musicians as Keith TIPPETT, John WETTON, Robert FRIPP and Peter HAMMILL. David’s solo work tends to be very jazzy (though there are some CRIMSON-esque moments) and unfortunately his albums are now for the most part quite difficult to find.
CROSS’ best album is unquestionably his 1997 record “Exiles”. It features all of the above mentioned guests (aside from TIPPETT) and probably sounds the most like KING CRIMSON out of any of them, thanks largely to FRIPP’s guitar and WETTON’s vocals. 1994′s “Testing to Destruction” is also worth a listen. Liking KING CRIMSON is no guarantee that you’ll like David CROSS. He has a style very distinct from the band he’s best known for playing with, and he’s suggested more to fans of jazz fusion than the straight ahead prog that KC is known for.
Progressive/Progressive-Rock/Jazz-Fusion

