The Big Gundown | ||||
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Studio album by John Zorn | ||||
Released | 1986 (2000 - 15th Anniversary Edition) | |||
Recorded | 1984−1985 | |||
Genre | Avant-garde jazz[1] | |||
Length | 49:27 (74:54 - 15th Anniversary Edition) | |||
Label | Nonesuch/Icon, Tzadik | |||
Producer | Yale Evelev | |||
John Zorn chronology | ||||
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15th Anniversary Special Edition | ||||
The Big Gundown is the third studio album by American composer and saxophonist/multi-instrumentalist John Zorn. It comprises radically reworked covers of tracks by the Italian film composer Ennio Morricone.
The album is named after a 1966 Spaghetti Western of the same name, directed by Sergio Sollima, starring Lee Van Cleef, and scored by Morricone. The album was first released in 1985 on the Nonesuch/Icon label. In 2000 a remastered 15th Anniversary Edition with additional tracks was released on CD on Zorn's Tzadik Records label.[2]
In 1985 Zorn had been working in New York City's experimental music scene for almost a decade (the album was originally to be called "Once Upon a Time in the Lower East Side"), but The Big Gundown launched him to wider prominence. In the notes for the 2000 reissued CD, Zorn describes The Big Gundown as representing a creative breakthrough as well for being the first time he worked extensively with multitrack recording, overdubbing and ornate orchestration. Though his main instrument is alto sax, Zorn did not play on most tracks, adding only a few touches of piano, game calls, harpsichord or musical saw.
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