Product Details
- An MVD Exclusive
- SKU: BMCCD316
- Format: CD
- UPC: 5998309303166
- Street Date: 09/08/23
- PreBook Date: 08/04/23
- Label: BMC Records »
- Genre: Jazz
- Run Time: 49:03 mins
- Number of Discs: 1
- Year of Production: 2023
- Box Lot: 30
- Territory: NA,GB,AU
Product Assets
Csaba Palotaï & Simon Drappier & Steve Argüelles - Sunako
French-English guitar, baritone guitar, drums trio with a twisted garage jazz and Khruangbin-sound.
- List Price: $15.99
- Your Price: $15.99
- In Stock: 21
You must login to place orders.
The French-Hungarian guitarist Csaba Palotai's new band debuts with a funk-trance-influenced album that seems to transpose the world of Khruangbin into the language of jazz.
The evocation of desert blues and danceable character is also a feature of Khruangbin, but Sunako shares further similarities with the Texas psychedelic funk-rock trio: the line-up consists of two guitars and a drum.
Media
Track Listing
|
|
Bonus Materials
- Csaba Palotai is an established guitar player on the French jazz scene, BMC has already released six albums with him in twenty years.
Sales Points
- Transposing the world of Khruangbin into the language of jazz
- Csaba Palotai has worked on a wide range of projects with Thomas De Pourquery, Vincent Ségal, John Zorn, Rémi Sciuto, John Parish, Fred Pallem, Emily Loizeau, Jeff Hallam, Wladimir Anselme and Bertrand Belin.
Press Quotes
This is splendid Antiquity, it has everything to please: stunning melodies, ultra-cinematographic ambiences, a perfect format for alternating moments of suspension and surges of reaction, a well-designed cover.... And, always on the razor's edge between limpid and murky, jazz and rock, day and night, Csaba Palotaï's guitar even takes on African accents on this album, adding yet another nuance to his palette. A perfect album from A to Z.
—Matthieu Durand, le-grigri.com
The improvisational music of this trio fans out wide and one recognizes its geographical and stylistic sources: in the Mali blues of West Africa, in the folklore of Europe, and in the rock of America.
—Martin Laurentius, JazzThing