Be Gentle and not Argue
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View PostOoooooooooo....nicely formatted for silky smooth use of the jass listening public on R£3....
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Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX View PostPeculiar/strange Chet Baker etc track on JRR, at least to me. Chet picking up the change? And heresy, I find that era of John Surman more dated than and bop post bop boppera.
Apart from that...
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
Wasn't it just!!! It felt like Chet's party had been gatecrashed, however good the singer. I agree too about the Surman - there is a definite tailing off of energy and inspiration in later years, though I have one BBC studio session with that band (mentioned in the pre-conversation with Alyn) and there have been fine recordings tucked among a variable mix: one from around the Millennium with an oud player. Oud have thought it?
Here's oud player Anouar Brahem with Surman & Dave Holland from the 1997 album 'Thimar':
Anouar Brahem (oud); John Surman (soprano saxophone, bass clarinet); Dave Holland (acoustic bass). Recorded at Rainbow Studio, Oslo, Norway on March 13-15, 1...
JR
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Originally posted by Jazzrook View Post
John Surman described that 'Stranger Than Fiction' session as 'magical' and I quite enjoyed the track.
Here's oud player Anouar Brahem with Surman & Dave Holland from the 1997 album 'Thimar':
Anouar Brahem (oud); John Surman (soprano saxophone, bass clarinet); Dave Holland (acoustic bass). Recorded at Rainbow Studio, Oslo, Norway on March 13-15, 1...
JR
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Originally posted by Tenor Freak View Post
I would have to be in the mood for oud. In the moud.
Or In the Mode. John Litweiler's first edition book The Freedom Principle contained a misspelled chapter heading, "Model Jazz". From what I remember subsequent editions had it corrected to "Modal Jazz".
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
Wasn't it just!!! It felt like Chet's party had been gatecrashed, however good the singer. I agree too about the Surman - there is a definite tailing off of energy and inspiration in later years, though I have one BBC studio session with that band (mentioned in the pre-conversation with Alyn) and there have been fine recordings tucked among a variable mix: one from around the Millennium with an oud player. Oud have thought it?
I have to say that i am a big fan of John Surman albeit one my my mates is an even greater fan. I really like john Surman as a bloke. He was kind enough to once autograph my Book One of Bach's WTC and wrote "Enjoy this real music."
I am not sure where you think there is a tailing off in the energy of his playing. When i was about 16 the most shocking jazz record i heard was "My friends" with Karin Krog. I was horrified that jazz could sound lke that , as opposed to sounding like Coleman Hawkins. Beginning to understand Surman's music was one of the doors that I was able to push open to explore more contemporary jazz. When I managed to nderstand it, it was a revelation to me and I have been a fan ever since. Forgotten just how many times I have seen him perform live - much be about 6 or 7.
As far as "great" John Surman recordings I would single out the following:-
1. "The Amazing adventures of Simon, Simon " which was a duet with Jack DeJohnette. These two musicians have collborated frequently and I think that the energy and inspiration in their work is on another level. One of the great sax / drum duos.
2. John Abercrombie - "November" - Surman is on this record with Marc Johnson and Peter Erskine. Really good straight ahead jazz.
3. Miroslav Vitous - "Journey's End." Another "must have reord from the 1980s
4. Paul Bley - "Fragments" - I think this is one of the greatest jazz records from the 1980s albeit very introspective. It features a stellar quartet of Bley / Surman / Frisell / Motian. The opening "Memories" is, in my opinion, probably the greatest example of swinging hard at am almost glacial tempo. The whole disc is gem and marks a high waterlevel for ECM. Some of Carla Bley's finest compositions get the ultimate work out here. A much better disc than Bley's more celebrated "Open, to love."
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I do like listening to jazz from time to time, especially vocalists but claim no insight or expertise. Taken along by a friend I saw Surman at a pub in Redhill, I think, about 1970. I must have enjoyed it, especially his big old baritone, because I got a couple of ECM albums and a few years later after we had moved to Wiltshire, l immediately booked tickets when I noticed he was on at the Arnolfini in Bristol. A great evening, as I remember. It must have been 1981 because my wife was heavily pregnant and she reported that our unborn child was responding to the sound - baritone again I would guess - by jumping around vigorously in the womb. I later reported this to our daughter and played her some Surman to revive what was presumably her first experience of jazz.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostI do like listening to jazz from time to time, especially vocalists but claim no insight or expertise. Taken along by a friend I saw Surman at a pub in Redhill, I think, about 1970. I must have enjoyed it, especially his big old baritone, because I got a couple of ECM albums and a few years later after we had moved to Wiltshire, l immediately booked tickets when I noticed he was on at the Arnolfini in Bristol. A great evening, as I remember. It must have been 1981 because my wife was heavily pregnant and she reported that our unborn child was responding to the sound - baritone again I would guess - by jumping around vigorously in the womb. I later reported this to our daughter and played her some Surman to revive what was presumably her first experience of jazz.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostI do like listening to jazz from time to time, especially vocalists but claim no insight or expertise. Taken along by a friend I saw Surman at a pub in Redhill, I think, about 1970. I must have enjoyed it, especially his big old baritone, because I got a couple of ECM albums and a few years later after we had moved to Wiltshire, l immediately booked tickets when I noticed he was on at the Arnolfini in Bristol. A great evening, as I remember. It must have been 1981 because my wife was heavily pregnant and she reported that our unborn child was responding to the sound - baritone again I would guess - by jumping around vigorously in the womb. I later reported this to our daughter and played her some Surman to revive what was presumably her first experience of jazz.
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This one always puts a smile on my face....and I can't not think of elephants walking....https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1cEx76xksrAbong ching
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Originally posted by Ian Thumwood View Post
As far as "great" John Surman recordings I would single out the following:-
4. Paul Bley - "Fragments" - I think this is one of the greatest jazz records from the 1980s albeit very introspective. It features a stellar quartet of Bley / Surman / Frisell / Motian. The opening "Memories" is, in my opinion, probably the greatest example of swinging hard at am almost glacial tempo. The whole disc is gem and marks a high waterlevel for ECM. Some of Carla Bley's finest compositions get the ultimate work out here. A much better disc than Bley's more celebrated "Open, to love."Last edited by Tenor Freak; 17-11-23, 17:43.all words are trains for moving past what really has no name
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