Originally posted by Ian Thumwood
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..... which ear ungifted ne'er heard
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Tom Audustus
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Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View PostAlyn includes Mr F Waller playing in London
JLU goes Sinatra/Lounge with Mr C Stigers and the Danish Radio Big Band after checking out some new releases nice
Geoffrey salutes Roland Kirk bless
Jon3 gives us:
"avant-funk trio Medeski Martin & Wood, in a standout performance from last year's London Jazz Festival."
cool
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... the Complete Mercury set is available used for £88 on Amazon; the Golson orchestra is on that too ...According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI met a bloke in a pub today who took everything I said literally and seemed to have been at every important gig that ever took place. Ornette Coleman Fairfield Hall; Sonny Rollins at Ronnies when he came out of the Gents playing something that wasn't "Bye Bye Blackbird". "I keep meeting people who claimed to have been at the Little Theatre Club", Evan Parker says, adding, "but it could never have been true: there wouldn't have been enough room to fit them all in".
BN.
Re Ianesco's savage critique of Paul Desmond....Jackie Mclean greatly admired his playing...
You see what OPEN minds can do?
AND I always liked that Desmond used to sign autographs at the height of Take Five....."Good Luck from Chet Baker!"Last edited by BLUESNIK'S REVOX; 02-06-14, 12:48.
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Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX View PostRe Ianesco's savage critique of Paul Desmond....Jackie Mclean greatly admired his playing...
You see what OPEN minds can do?
"
I wouldn't call my comments about Desmond savage. It is just that I don't like that style of jazz .
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Originally posted by Ian Thumwood View PostI would have to share SA's perception of Dave Brubeck but I think that he was still the most interesting of the soloists in his quartet. I can't stand Paul Desmond's alto sound which , for me, is amongst the most "un -jazz like" in jazz. He's almost like a 1950's Kenny G insofar as to the purity of sound. Brubeck is like a swing era pianist who had absorbed some of the vocabulary of the Classical composers from between the two world wars and at least there was a spikey quality in his solos that contrasted with the ultra-smooth alto.
On the subject of dross and notwithstanding the fact that the appeal of Bob Dylan has also passed me by (absolutely no interest) , I couldn't believe the Lars Danielsson track posted by Calum. Got to say this tends to send me to sleep and I'm not sure if it is actually jazz. It sounds like something that they used to play in supermarkets in the 1970's. Absolute rank. .
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Ian If you were a saxophonist, you'd know that reed players of a certain age thought Jimmy Dorsey was the bee's knees because he had a technique that way surpassed most others of the age. Ornette was still marvelling in the 50s, but Lester Young (according to Lewis Porter and Frank Bochmann Muller) thought Dorsey and Frank Trumbauer were both role models.... And BTW, I think Desmond was one of the most romantic of soloists in terms of his phrasing and timing. His solo albums, like Skylark for Creed Taylor show off aspects of his playing not always apparent from the Brubeck work. And, he gave his piano to Bradleys in NY, giving me and others who went there in its heyday, countless nights of listening to great players on a great instrument.
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Originally posted by Alyn_Shipton View PostIan If you were a saxophonist, you'd know that reed players of a certain age thought Jimmy Dorsey was the bee's knees because he had a technique that way surpassed most others of the age. Ornette was still marvelling in the 50s, but Lester Young (according to Lewis Porter and Frank Bochmann Muller) thought Dorsey and Frank Trumbauer were both role models.... And BTW, I think Desmond was one of the most romantic of soloists in terms of his phrasing and timing. His solo albums, like Skylark for Creed Taylor show off aspects of his playing not always apparent from the Brubeck work. And, he gave his piano to Bradleys in NY, giving me and others who went there in its heyday, countless nights of listening to great players on a great instrument.
I think he had a very dry sense of humour and I'm a great fan of the Qrt dates with Jim Hall and the Desmond/Mulligan session.
BN.
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One of the best jazz books I have read is Gene Lee's "Meet me at Jim & Andy's" which offers pen portraits of various musicians who used to frequent this bar. Desmond is one of those characters and Lee's shows him to have a brilliant sense of humour. For what it is worth, I think Lee was a brilliant writer and someone whose opinion was always interesting even if he does come across as an arch-conservative.
It is a good coincidence that Alyn mention's Trumbauer as I was listening to his a lot last week in my car. There is a coolness about his phrasing that you can see feeding down to Lester Young and many other modernists of the 1950's. It is quite easy to be dismissive of his playing in 1927 but not once you recall how players like Hawkins were playing at that time too. I think the sax was still in it's infancy until a couple of years later.
I think player's perceptions of other performers are always interesting as they will have insider knowledge about how to play an instrument so that they might consider certain musicians higher than others for reasons not apparent to the casual jazz fan. However, picking up on the idea of jazz soloists being "romantic" is probably worthy of a thread in itself. Setting aside the various merits of musicians working with strings, the most obvious examples of soloists who you would consider to be "romantic" would be Ruby Braff, Bobby Hackett, Stan Getz and you could even broaden the net to include someone on the fringes of jazz like Harry James. Personally, these aren't musicians I particularly like and whilst, as Bluesnik points out, I could find a place for the later work by Getz, a player like Ruby Braff is too saccharine for me to listen to - as much as I love "mainstream jazz." There is almost a perception that jazz is compromised if it becomes too sentimental and there is a fine balance to be had if this is to be successful. I generally shy aware from ballad albums for this reason but a disc like Branford's "Eternal" probably nails this approach to perfection as it doesn't sacrifice toughness for the kind of glibness I associate with Paul Desmond. I can totally appreciate his musicianship and Getz's too for that matter. It is just not my taste. If you want to equate "Romanticism" with jazz, surely there is no finer example than Bix?
In contrast, if a "Romantic" element does have a place in jazz (and I am not convinced that it is such a favourable component) I would have to plum for players like Ben Webster, Ike Quebec or even David Murray where there is an underlying toughness in the music beneath the surface. The problem with "romantic" is that it can be marooned by the passage of time and seem a bit hackneyed or dated. I seem to recall that composers like Tchaikovsky are similarly dismissed by many critics of classical music for the chocolate box approach to composition even if I understand that this might be a bit unfair. (Can't comment as I've only ever listen to "1812.")
I once found myself mistakenly at a concert by the singer Seal and was amazed at the reaction of the female members of the audience. Granted that he had nothing to do with jazz (don't know why Vienne booked him other than £££££££££££££) but he was "giving large" to the ladies in the audience. Not an experience I would be anxious to repeat but it just goes to show that pop music can always surpass jazz when it comes to being slushy. The experience was slightly nauseating and had to leave after about 5 tunes.
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I think Kenny Dorham was a wonderfully "romantic" ballad player in the very best sense...no sugar but heartfelt, a superb note placement, and with a realisation of what the song and its lyrics were about.
BN.
The fact that he sang also may have helped. A JRR looms...Last edited by BLUESNIK'S REVOX; 02-06-14, 21:54.
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Originally posted by Alyn_Shipton View PostAnd BTW, I think Desmond was one of the most romantic of soloists in terms of his phrasing and timing. His solo albums, like Skylark for Creed Taylor show off aspects of his playing not always apparent from the Brubeck work. .
As I appreciate matters, the 19th century Romanticism movement in Art covered a lot of ground, and had a great deal of philosophical underpinning. It is possible that Jazz in its entirety would be regarded as Romantic in that sense.
And then there is "romantic" jazz, the type that is played on Dinner Jazz, Jazz FM, for cuddling up and canoodling. If anyone indulges in those activities any more.
But I feel this thread is talking about another sense of romanticism. But giving heartfelt expression to a song: is that romantic? Or isn't that what the greater part of Jazz is about?
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As I appreciate matters, the 19th century Romanticism movement in Art covered a lot of ground, and had a great deal of philosophical underpinning. It is possible that Jazz in its entirety would be regarded as Romantic in that sense.
In the contemporary music culture, the romantic musician followed a public career depending on sensitive middle-class audiences rather than on a courtly patron, as had been the case with earlier musicians and composers. Public persona characterized a new generation of virtuosi who made their way as soloists, epitomized in the concert tours of Paganini and Liszt, and the conductor began to emerge as an important figure, on whose skill the interpretation of the increasingly complex music dependedAccording to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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