The Cherry Thing
Neneh Cherry is best known to the pop world as the artist who gave us \"Buffalo Stance,\" but as the stepdaughter of jazz legend Don Cherry, she\'s always been well educated in less popular and artsy strains of music. This collaboration with Scandinavian free-jazz trio The Thing (which took its name from a Don Cherry tune)—like her ventures with Gorillaz, Groove Armada, Massive Attack, and Tricky—illustrates her versatility as a singer, plus her fellow musicians\' eclectic taste and ability to transform material into something entirely new. Their version of Suicide\'s \"Dream Baby Dream\" brews for more than eight minutes, with Mats Gustafsson\'s sax, Ingebrigt Haker Flaten\'s upright bass, and Paal Nilssen-Love\'s drums forming a web of sound that\'s rich beyond its simplicity. The sound is that of an experienced trio whose members have established lines of communication within the notes. The Stooges\' \"Dirt\" retains its punkish hue, while Gustafsson\'s sax hits fever pitch. Ornette Coleman\'s \"What Reason Could I Give\" evokes a gentler side.
Cherry and the Swedish free jazz ensemble achieve a rare feat with the product of a four-day jam; a covers record that's both deeply personal for both parties, and possessed of a fleeting magic.
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Singer Neneh Cherry has spent her career all over the map, taking up residence in several countries and lending her skills to a wide array of projects, from fronting punk bands to her hip-hop solo work. She even served as an arranger on Massive Attack's B
‘The Thing’ are a Swedish jazz trio who took their name from a song by legendary trumpeter - and late stepfather of Neneh - Don Cherry.
Neneh Cherry, collaborating with the Thing for her first outing since 1996, has produced a masterclass in controlled chaos, writes <strong>Paul Mardles</strong>
A frighteningly good shot at a comeback from the Eighties alternative pop star. CD review by Howard Male