Zappa & Jazz
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Jazzrook View Post'It Ain't Necessarily The Saint James Infirmary' from Frank Zappa's 'Guitar':
JR
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Jazzrook View PostZappa conducting Ravel's 'Bolero' with his band in Barcelona, 1988:
JR
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Jazzrook View Post
Never much of a Zappa fan. He was the sort of artist you'd know was important and influential, but rather a masculine, some might even say misogynistic, niche taste. Interestingly, I've noticed 'Peaches in Regalia' is included in a little 3CD box set of mine called 'The Best Prog Rock Album in the World - Ever!', alongside the likes of Yes, Genesis, Curved Air, Hawkwind, Tull (of course) ELP, Colosseum ... the list goes on. One of my ebay bargains, under a fiver including postageAnd the tune ends too soon for us all
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Jazzrook View Post
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Jazzrook View PostJ-L P - prize winning classical violinist who went on to become a master of jazz violin. He appeared on stage with Grapelli in the sixties and went on to play with most of the jazz fusion greats: Al de Meola, Stanley Clarke, Chick Corea. Easy to underestimate the effect that Zappa must have had on his career (… this could get a bit boring … ), all 12 of his albums reaching the Billboard jazz chart’s top 5 between about 1975 and '85 ... started life as a prize winning classical graduate of the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris. Long overlooked imho.
And the tune ends too soon for us all
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Constantbee View PostThanks again, JRJ-L P - prize winning classical violinist who went on to become a master of jazz violin. He appeared on stage with Grapelli in the sixties and went on to play with most of the jazz fusion greats: Al de Meola, Stanley Clarke, Chick Corea. Easy to underestimate the effect that Zappa must have had on his career (… this could get a bit boring … ), all 12 of his albums reaching the Billboard jazz chart’s top 5 between about 1975 and '85 ... started life as a prize winning classical graduate of the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris. Long overlooked imho.
Comment
-
-
Speaking of the Zappa influence, I would also cite Django Bates (Loose Tubes, Delightful Precipice) as a non-cynically disposed influencee; and also... RICHARD BARRETT, ARE YOU THERE? Henry Cow. I've just been listening to Henry Cow's final release, "Western Culture", which was recorded in 1978 and released the following year. I hadn't heard it before; here it is:
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
Wiki states that the band could not agree over songs to include, ended up doing this instrumental album (apart from the pen-penultimate track, which is sung by the entire band), releasing a separate album of songs, "Hopes and Fears", under the rubric of Art Bears, which after HC's split-up became a band in its own right:
Hopes and Fears began as a Henry Cow album, but after the first recording sessions in Switzerland, some of the members of the band were unhappy about the pre...
Something in the spirit of this music is really needed nowadays. By me!!!
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostRICHARD BARRETT, ARE YOU THERE? Henry Cow. I've just been listening to Henry Cow's final release, "Western Culture", which was recorded in 1978 and released the following year.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostYES HERE I AM - I like Western Culture a lot, and obviously it has a direct FZ influence, though compared with his stuff it comes over as much more of a group effort. My favourite Art Bears album is their second, Winter Songs. The Western Culture direction pops up again in some of Fred Frith's solo projects, like Gravity.
I may have a listen to Winter Songs tonight, as it seems likely that with lively thunderstorms now encroaching on this region, I will be kept awake in any case!
Comment
-
Comment