It's possible to admire Medeski Martin and Wood's craft and guile in pushing against stylistic restraints while recognizing that their music isn't quite as much fun as it once was--or that this hugely popular trio may thin... more »k it is. Full of shaggy cross-textures, plummy grooves, and spooky electronic underpinnings, Uninvisible is a lively sonic stew. Once a universe unto themselves, keyboardist John Medeski, drummer Billy Martin, and bassist Chris Wood continue to smartly expand their jam-band base, here featuring a brash five-piece horn section from the Brooklyn-based Antibalas Afrobeat Orchestra, turntablists DJ Olive and DJ P Love, and, for a spoken-word number, craggy-voiced Southern rock eccentric Col. Bruce Hampton. When Medeski is riding that Hammond organ and the group is taking its patented soulful detours, as on "Pappy Check" and the Booker T-ish "Smoke," all is right with the world. But even with Medeski dabbling on a roomful of other instruments, including the Mellotron, mini-Moog, and Arp, the songs don't have a lot of variety. And crowded with effects, the music can bog down in its own abstract logic--though there's no resisting the ping-pong game being played on "Off the Table." The chief rewards of Uninvisible are in the details. Until further notice, a headphone advisory is in effect. --Lloyd Sachs« less
It's possible to admire Medeski Martin and Wood's craft and guile in pushing against stylistic restraints while recognizing that their music isn't quite as much fun as it once was--or that this hugely popular trio may think it is. Full of shaggy cross-textures, plummy grooves, and spooky electronic underpinnings, Uninvisible is a lively sonic stew. Once a universe unto themselves, keyboardist John Medeski, drummer Billy Martin, and bassist Chris Wood continue to smartly expand their jam-band base, here featuring a brash five-piece horn section from the Brooklyn-based Antibalas Afrobeat Orchestra, turntablists DJ Olive and DJ P Love, and, for a spoken-word number, craggy-voiced Southern rock eccentric Col. Bruce Hampton. When Medeski is riding that Hammond organ and the group is taking its patented soulful detours, as on "Pappy Check" and the Booker T-ish "Smoke," all is right with the world. But even with Medeski dabbling on a roomful of other instruments, including the Mellotron, mini-Moog, and Arp, the songs don't have a lot of variety. And crowded with effects, the music can bog down in its own abstract logic--though there's no resisting the ping-pong game being played on "Off the Table." The chief rewards of Uninvisible are in the details. Until further notice, a headphone advisory is in effect. --Lloyd Sachs
BRENDAN H. from PALO ALTO, CA Reviewed on 11/7/2011...
ok folks pulease here's a reality check. this is lazy music for white hipster boys and urban-adventure people til they grow up sell out and move to the burbs and breed and revert the the tools that they really are without a fad to follow or identity to wear. no lyrics to write with the music. music that's loaded with the sickly sweet best parts of funk and soul the musicians heard growing up no doubt that makes young white people feel all urban in their safe white enclaves in metro areas in the corporate states of america minus all the danger there used to be thanks to your economic-masters who made it that way. a big safe urban mall-like environment. try doin it back in the 80s kiddies, yeah good luck sunshine you would run to your rents to move back in. hey wait, im gonna run out to the black side of town get one of them old gospel organs and bang around on my brightly tuned snare and unmuffled bass drum and VI-OLA [
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CD Reviews
Get off your high horse, It's dope.
dave | USA | 04/24/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"In April of 2002, Uninvisible was released. Most reviews of this album are negative as the critics were expecting something along the lines of The Dropper. Instead, Medeski, Martin, & Wood give us a fat helping of explosive groove. Those who have negative things to say about this album are advocators of music evolution and are bitter at the group for not continuing their progressive sound that is so prevalent on their last album. If anything should be learned from Medeski, Martin, & Wood's elaborate catalog, it is that we should never be expecting any one style in particular. Also, each album seems to be a testimony to different approaches to jazz music. If the last album was a demonstration of dealing with jazz on an experimental level, one should not expect the next to be as well.
The testimony in Uninvisible is a simple one: big, fat, jazz music that grooves in every direction. The album bursts open with Chris Wood's electrifying descending bassline that is quickly met by wild organ work, a lively hip-hop beat, and triumphant arrangements for a full horn section. This starting track is the richest sound the trio has achieved yet. The album continues with the optimistic vibe as it goes into an organ piece that hints at gospel music. The next track has a voice over of a jazz hound reminiscing the good old days of 1992. This track acts as a reprise or sequel to a tune from Combustication, in which a similar voice recalls the days of Charlie Parker and Lester Young. Perhaps this flashback is there to remind us that MMW have now reached, in the underground jazz scene, the notoriety of the jazz greats of be-bop era. The third song is a funky number that echoes the prevailing influence of Jimi Hendrix. Some impressive record-scratching dances all over this tune. The next track is the first of a few eerier tunes. While it does have a fairly consistent mushroom-jazz beat, you never really know where this tune is headed. The next track is a spacey tune with subtle reoccurring keyboard melodies hidden by ambient sounds that fade in and out over it. The strengths of this song are in the drumming. It sounds as if a D.J. is sampling different beats, but that is all Billy Martin. This is followed by a song that starts with the chirping of the upright bass and ends with delayed percussions. Then we have a slow, but lively track that sounds like something that was left out of The Dropper recording sessions. A half-minute-long piece follows with John Medeski toying around with a Moog synthesizer resulting in a Nintendo-sounding creation. After the awkward interlude, the listener finds himself bobbing his head to the bassline that carries us into another hip-hop beat with spooky keys and a barrage of atonal horn blowing. This is followed by a rhythm and blues flavored jam, where John Medeski finally shows off a bit. Track 12 has bassline that sounds again like something off Combustication. The next track is another piece where the rhythmic side of it is extreme enough to hold its own, but it is decorated with yet more atonality. The last tune features a drum track recorded backwards. This oddly brings closure to this album that seems to be all over the place.
As it spells out jazz music with a complete horn section, organ, bass, drums, record scratching, delay effects, synthesizers, and the occasional blatant disregard for tonal music, Uninvisible is anything but typical. Even for MMW, this album offers brand new sound at times. While this album isn't as hard on the ears as their last one, it is equally as experimental."
More fun groovin' from MMW
treestamp | 06/08/2003
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Jazz can be a lot of things, but one thing it should never be is a "serious discipline." In jazz history, a certain degree of playfulness and humor has always been a trademrk element, from Dixie to swing to bop to fusion. Yet in the pedantry of contemporary jazz, from its being marketed as "adult" music to its sneering brigade of "traditionalists," that element seems to get swept under the rug. Somehow, too many people think that if jazz is "fun," it's also base and lacking in artistic merit, regardless to all the lip-service given to the jazz greats like Armstrong, Gillispie and Monk. The humorous aspect of jazz has often been subtle, since it mostly was a black thing in a white world -- note Armstrong's classic "(What Did I Do To Get So) Black and Blue" -- and rather than make jazz vulgar, it added to its aura of sophistication. It is this colorful element that jazz of the present is dangerously close to forgetting completely, and despite the ongoing controversy of the "whitening" of jazz, if it takes a bunch of white boys to stop it, then so be it. Granted, I don't want to make messiahs out of MMW, but I think they're doing us a huge favor for which they should get credit. This trio has been grooving and jamming for over 10 years now, carving out for themselves a fun little niche which (God bless 'em) they show no intentions of abandoning anytime soon...although they'll gladly have company over. Since I'm neither a purist nor a fascist, I too welcome a bit of company getting into the mix, which is why I find Uninvisible a thoroughly enjoyable album. It's another solid and groovin' album that follows MMW's proven "the whole is greater than the sum of its part" approach, with no signs that MMW is running low on either their creativity or their sense of humor. The openness of their free-jam style allows plenty of room for guest musicians throw in their two cents without it ever getting conjested. As a bonus, this album manages to better refine the "jazztronica" thing MMW began with the somewhat less consistent Dropper. All in all, Uninvisible is a very good jazz album that is testimony to a long-time jazz truth: a good groove and sense of humor will get you far."
Great Art
jamin richmonds | Rochester, NY USA | 04/14/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Uninvisible continues where The Dropper (MMW's last release) left off. Building sonic artwork with layers upon layers of instruments and sounds MMW (with help from a few guests) have reached a new point in their career. They no longer have the sound of a mere funky organ trio (though that alone would have given them a place in the history books). They take it to a new level with the use of everything from a horn section to electronics to various "exotic" percussion instruments. Like any great artist,MMW is constantly moving forward with their artwork. They're far from the place they were 5 years ago and will probably have a radically different sound in 5 years from now. MMW create something new,fresh,and beautiful with every new album they release. Uninvisible may be very different from the albums I was first introduced to MMW on (Friday Afternoon In The Universe,Shack Man etc.), but that driving groove and interstellar connection that Chris Wood,Billy Martin,and John Medeski share is still and will always be the base of their music. The fact is that Uninvisible is great and should be checked out by anyone who truly enjoys music. By the way, if you haven't yet witnessed MMW live do yourself a favor and catch a show. It'll blow your mind."
BEST YET!
Jason Newton | 05/15/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I had the the pleasure of finding this disc on ebay a few months before its release and it is still hard to get it out of my player. I've been listening to these guys for about six years now, and have seen them in concert many times. I have to say, I didn't realize there were negative reviews until I read someone else's post. When I first purchased "The Dropper" (MMW's previous album) it took me a while to adjust to it, since I think it was a very different sound for MMW. This disc went into my player after a long days work, I sat in the middle of my surround system, and a large smile ran from ear to ear from start to finish.
Interested in buying a MMW album? Get THIS!"
Always fresh, always progressive, always pure
dpdsnow | Pittsburgh | 04/14/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Ive been following MMW since their release of Friday Afternoon in the Universe. I was mezmorized by their deep grooves, funky, spacey at times, that real hip beat the chris wood always fits in behind it all. When i first heard that they were still playin the the DJ stuff, I was glad, and almost worried. I love hear them push music, but i cant get enough of their real hip groove sound and style. After The Dropper, which was pretty out there at times... i was wondering if this one would go even farther out. This album, they took it out there, and retained all of their origional groove and funk.
This album caught my ears almost instantly.
Oh, and i was also really glad to hear the horn players on the album. It almost gets back to that feel of 'Its a Jungle in Here', which if you havent heard it, you must pick up.MMW is ontop of their music, and will probably be there for a very long time..."