Coleridge Goode RIP

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  • BLUESNIK'S REVOX
    Full Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 4327

    Coleridge Goode RIP

    "It is with the deepest sadness that I share the
    news of the passing of my very dear friend and
    mentor, the Jamaican bassist, Coleridge Goode.
    He died at his home in West London following a
    heart attack at 8pm on Friday 2 October.
    It was my great privilege to have celebrated his
    100th birthday with Coleridge and his wonderful
    family last November, and I’d really hoped we
    would be marking his 101st with him this year.
    Sadly this was not to be.
    I’ll write in more detail soon, but just wanted to
    share this very sad news with friends and fans of
    Coleridge." Gary Crosby website.

    RIP

    BN.
  • Serial_Apologist
    Full Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 37907

    #2
    Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX View Post
    "It is with the deepest sadness that I share the
    news of the passing of my very dear friend and
    mentor, the Jamaican bassist, Coleridge Goode.
    He died at his home in West London following a
    heart attack at 8pm on Friday 2 October.
    It was my great privilege to have celebrated his
    100th birthday with Coleridge and his wonderful
    family last November, and I’d really hoped we
    would be marking his 101st with him this year.
    Sadly this was not to be.
    I’ll write in more detail soon, but just wanted to
    share this very sad news with friends and fans of
    Coleridge." Gary Crosby website.

    RIP

    BN.
    Thanks for letting us know, BN. I was lucky to have met Coleridge once, having been introduced by Michael Garrick. It was always Coleridge who explained Joe Harriott's "free-form', as they always preferred to distinguish it, and I guess Dave Green and Don Rendell are about the only ones left from the original groups involved in that and Indo-Jazz fusions.

    Comment

    • Alyn_Shipton
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 777

      #3
      S-A Bobby Orr still with us (as far as I know) - and of the Harriott circle, Tony Kinsey and Frank Holder both still about...

      Comment

      • BLUESNIK'S REVOX
        Full Member
        • Dec 2010
        • 4327

        #4
        Interview extract, Jazz Internationale Jan 2013:

        "One more question, Coleridge. Can I ask you
        about the two drummers the quintet used –
        Bobby Orr and Phil Seamen. How did they differ?

        Bobby was a master of time. He got a beat and
        he kept that absolutely dead the whole time. I
        always knew exactly where the beat was. It
        meant a lot to me because then you can phrase
        things and do things around this beat but when
        it’s all over the place I don’t enjoy playing with
        it. They say they are pushing the beat. They
        describe it as pushing the beat and it gets
        gradually faster and faster. You can’t relax on
        that. That’s my feeling and Bobby was absolutely
        a master at that. I loved playing with him. Phil
        was exciting and very talented. His skill was
        superb. On the whole, after Bobby came Phil."

        BN.

        Comment

        • Serial_Apologist
          Full Member
          • Dec 2010
          • 37907

          #5
          Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX View Post
          Interview extract, Jazz Internationale Jan 2013:

          "One more question, Coleridge. Can I ask you
          about the two drummers the quintet used –
          Bobby Orr and Phil Seamen. How did they differ?

          Bobby was a master of time. He got a beat and
          he kept that absolutely dead the whole time. I
          always knew exactly where the beat was. It
          meant a lot to me because then you can phrase
          things and do things around this beat but when
          it’s all over the place I don’t enjoy playing with
          it. They say they are pushing the beat. They
          describe it as pushing the beat and it gets
          gradually faster and faster. You can’t relax on
          that. That’s my feeling and Bobby was absolutely
          a master at that. I loved playing with him. Phil
          was exciting and very talented. His skill was
          superb. On the whole, after Bobby came Phil."

          BN.
          Phil Seamen, shouting at John Stevens at gig: "Where's the f*ckin beat?!"

          Comment

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