Bolero

BOLERO
 

Boléro  is a one-movement orchestral piece by the French composer Maurice Ravel (1875–1937).  Originally composed as a ballet commissioned by Russian actress and dancer Ida Rubinstein, the piece, which premiered in 1928, is Ravel’s most famous musical composition.  Boléro epitomizes Ravel’s preoccupation with restyling and reinventing dance movements.  It was also one of the last pieces he composed before illness forced him into retirement.  The two piano concertos and the song cycle Don Quichotte à Dulcinée were the only completed compositions that followed Boléro.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 
Billed as the first left-handed album (the gatefold album cover had the front cover printed on what was normally the back, though the album art was so extreme that it was a little hard to tell the difference), Ginger Baker’s Air Force was released in March 1970.  In the 4½ star review of the album in AllmusicBruce Eder raves:  “For a change, the late 1960s yielded up a supergroup that lived up to its hype and then some.  Ginger Baker’s Air Force was recorded live at Royal Albert Hall in January of 1970 – in fact, this may be the best-sounding live album ever to come out of that notoriously difficult venue – at a show that must have been a wonder to watch, as the ten-piece band blazed away in sheets of sound, projected delicate flute parts behind multi-layered African percussion, or built their songs up Bolero-like, out of rhythms from a single instrument into huge jazz-cum-R&B crescendos.  Considering that this was only their second gig, the group sounds astonishingly tight, which greatly reduces the level of self-indulgence that one would expect to find on an album where five of the eight tracks run in excess of ten minutes.”  

 

(May 2014)

 

Last edited: April 3, 2021