Originally posted by Caliban
View Post
CotW - Big Band Jazz
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Flay View PostI think they may well be http://www.kolberg.com/products/en_G...group/888.html
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostGreat contextualisation - wonder who wrote the introductions: Alyn?
That said, this ain't exactly comprehensive now, is it - not even in the US context. No Sun Ra, no JCOA, no George Russell, no Braxton Creative Music Orchestra, no Barry Guy, no Globe Unity, no Vienna Art Ensemble... Token Gil Evans, Kenny Wheeler and Maria Schneider is like saying Prokofiev is avant-garde... by downplaying it they're almost writing Modernism out of the story.
Cosmetic.......
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Flay View PostI think they may well be http://www.kolberg.com/products/en_G...group/888.html
NB that video is ten hours long
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
Comment
-
-
Calum,
You are confusing big bands with dance bands there. That Al Bowlly recording was made with the HMV studio dance band (record label as Ray Noble and his Orchestra) in 1934. Over 20 musicians on the recording.
But for me 'big bands' didn't really start (or referred to as big bands) till the late 1930s
Paul Whiteman had a large orchestra in the late 1920s but it was a dance band not a 'big band'.
The Duke had a large orchestra in the early 1930s but it was a jazz orchestra not a 'big band'.
Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Post- - -
John W
Comment
-
-
points taken but not necessarily accepted John W
they are all big bands no ... even the LSO! and Al Bowly was specifically for salymap and bugger the thread, the inadequacies or otherwise of this particular COTW deserve no further commentary ....According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
Comment
-
-
Well the point was that 'big bands' was a term for the later swing stuff, Goodman, Miller, Basie etc. In UK big bands in the 40's were Squadronnaires, Skyrockets, and what Joe Loss, Lou Preager and Oscar Rabin became (they had 'dance band' in the 1930s).
Yeah, I was disappointed with the first 'episode' of CotW and so forgot to listen to the rest.- - -
John W
Comment
-
Comment