pianoless & tasty Byas'd ....
Yard
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Last edited by aka Calum Da Jazbo; 02-07-12, 21:33.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 aka Calum Da Jazbo View Posti am passably certain that ian gave us the nod about this album a while back ... just to say that today it is proving irresistible .... the real stuff etc ...
The tune on that track could almost be one of Kenny Wheeler's - I also hear a bit of Kenny in this trumpet player, if I'm not mistook.
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Calum / SA
"Destinations unknown" is a really unasuming record and typical enough of the 3 Criss Cross CD's I have to suggest a "house style" or atleast a philosophy. For my money, they share alot with the more interesting records that Blue Note would put out in the 60's insofar that the music is performed soley for it's own benefit without any desire to be modish or "cutting edge." They often feature combinations of more "outside" players like Taborn with "conservatives" like Sipiagin and I would suggest that this disc shares wth Walter Smith's "III" and the David Binney "Barefoot town" a happy medium where they are just out to create good quality jazz. I get the comparison with Kenny Wheeler but Sipiagin's writing often gets picked up by Swiss bandleader / arranger George Gruntz and the style is more familiar to me through the recordings that Gruntz has put out. (One chart, "Novgorod bells" is terrific.) I don't think that Sipiagin is quite as lyrical as Wheeler and probably a "harder" player even if they seem similar in other respects. For me, the interesting thing about this disc is the juxtaposition of Chris Potter (a seriously under-rated performer amongst jazz fans yet highly regarded by fellow musicians) and David Binney who is perhaps more unorthodox and not a "hot" player. If you don't pay attention, I think David Binney's playing could pass you by but it is a curious mix and different from the combination with Mark Turner who is probably even "chillier" than the altoist.
The Criss cross website is fascinating with the label moving from recording the last flourish of the boppers in the late 70's at a time when fusion was more fashionable. I think the label has stuck to it's guns with pursuing a more "traditionalist" approach which is now paying dividends with the more interesting jazz these days being performed by artists who aren't so modish or rail against post-bop. In other words, Criss Cross is a proper jazz label that refuses to compromise and in doing so, ensures that a certain standard is maintained. I'm becoming a big fan of this label.
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Originally posted by handsomefortune View Postellington's yard in 1958, ................(humph sounds so like him in manner and accent)?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LBu9l...eature=related
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grippie
er coz i like it .... lots
whole album innit ....
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