Originally posted by Ian Thumwood
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Quiet dude: we're going for a Jimmy!
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I like all stages of Betty Carter! I bought a double (LP) live album in the mid 1980s, self marketed as I recall, that had a long "Spring can really hang you up the most" on it that was wonderfully done - and with distinct humour. John Hicks on piano?
I also like Julie London a lot, a total opposite who didn't scat, had as she said, a quite small voice, worked a lot with west coast ensembles, but was supremely tasteful with great phrasing and minimal mannerisms. Not full blown jazz maybe, but a friend to many who were, and died while listening to a Ray Charles Atlantic album "The Genius", so taste to the end.
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Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX View PostI like all stages of Betty Carter! I bought a double (LP) live album in the mid 1980s, self marketed as I recall, that had a long "Spring can really hang you up the most" on it that was wonderfully done - and with distinct humour. John Hicks on piano?
I also like Julie London a lot, a total opposite who didn't scat, had as she said, a quite small voice, worked a lot with west coast ensembles, but was supremely tasteful with great phrasing and minimal mannerisms. Not full blown jazz maybe, but a friend to many who were, and died while listening to a Ray Charles Atlantic album "The Genius", so taste to the end.
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Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX View PostI like all stages of Betty Carter! I bought a double (LP) live album in the mid 1980s, self marketed as I recall, that had a long "Spring can really hang you up the most" on it that was wonderfully done - and with distinct humour. John Hicks on piano?
I also like Julie London a lot, a total opposite who didn't scat, had as she said, a quite small voice, worked a lot with west coast ensembles, but was supremely tasteful with great phrasing and minimal mannerisms. Not full blown jazz maybe, but a friend to many who were, and died while listening to a Ray Charles Atlantic album "The Genius", so taste to the end.
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Julie London had had a serious stroke and was still badly affected by it, but invited friends around at the end. She was a huge Ray Charles fan, that album in particular, and that was the last thing played for her that night. One side is the big band material arranged by Quincy etc, the second side ballads including "Come rain, come shine", that in particular arranged by Bob Brookmeyer at short notice, and with his classic trombone introduction. Ray kept that arrangement in his book for a long time and Brookmeyer was very proud of that fact.
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Scat is a component part of the Jazz Singers tool-kit, and there are many extremely able exponents of this, e.g. Diana Reeves.
However there is now a great interest in improvisation using the human voice, not just jazz, but folk, classical, experimental, etc, etc. The whole range of sounds that can be produced by the human voice are used, and I have to admit I find this more interesting.
A good example is a track played on Freeness this week, about 10 minutes or so in: Mankwe Ndosi & Body MemOri - backmouthfindingpulse - great jazz, in my book.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
Fri 22 Oct - BBC4
9pm - Zappa
The first all-access documentary - years in the making - about the American musician Frank Zappa, who died in 1993. It conveys the scope of his prodigious and varied creative output, and the breadth of his extraordinary personal and political life. The documentary team was granted exclusive access by his widow Gail to a vast collection of Zappa's unreleased music, movies, incomplete projects, unseen interviews and unheard concert recordings, much of which was deteriorating and in danger of being lost forever.
And a special thanks once more to Jazzrook for drawing attention to this.
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