Jazz for aficionados


Jazz for aficionados

I'm going to review records in my collection, and you'll be able to decide if they're worthy of your collection. These records are what I consider "must haves" for any jazz aficionado, and would be found in their collections. I wont review any record that's not on CD, nor will I review any record if the CD is markedly inferior. Fortunately, I only found 1 case where the CD was markedly inferior to the record.

Our first album is "Moanin" by Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengers. We have Lee Morgan , trumpet; Benney Golson, tenor sax; Bobby Timmons, piano; Jymie merrit, bass; Art Blakey, drums.

The title tune "Moanin" is by Bobby Timmons, it conveys the emotion of the title like no other tune I've ever heard, even better than any words could ever convey. This music pictures a person whose down to his last nickel, and all he can do is "moan".

"Along Came Betty" is a tune by Benny Golson, it reminds me of a Betty I once knew. She was gorgeous with a jazzy personality, and she moved smooth and easy, just like this tune. Somebody find me a time machine! Maybe you knew a Betty.

While the rest of the music is just fine, those are my favorite tunes. Why don't you share your, "must have" jazz albums with us.

Enjoy the music.
orpheus10

Frogman, I really appreciated the comments on your last post. Pepper Adams is my favorite baritone sax man, and I had to play those cuts twice. Your bass player has eluded me in the past, consequently, I don't have anything meaningful to say about him.

My collection is full of Pat Metheny; he hit's the ball out of the park one time, and then fouls out the next time; but all in all I like Pat Metheny.

Next we'll be comparing Miles quintets to Art Blakey's jazz messengers.



Enjoy the music.

I decided to play a game called; Miles Davis vs The Jazz Messengers. I can't see why everyone is so "ga ga" over Miles, when Blakey's Jazz Messengers had the best music and musicians by far.

Let's investigate; Jazz Messengers were an influential jazz combo that existed for over thirty-five years beginning in the early 1950s as a collective, and ending when long-time leader and founding drummer Art Blakey died in 1990. Blakey led or co-led the group from the outset. "Art Blakey" and "Jazz Messengers" became synonymous over the years, though Blakey did lead non-Messenger recording sessions and played as a sideman for other groups throughout his career.

Yes sir, I'm gonna to stay with the youngsters. When these get too old, I'm gonna get some younger ones. Keeps the mind active.

Art Blakey, A Night at Birdland, Vol.2 (CD),
The group evolved into a proving ground for young jazz talent. While veterans occasionally re-appeared in the group, by and large, each iteration of the Messengers included a lineup of new young players. Having the Messengers on one's resume was a rite of passage in the jazz world, and conveyed immediate bona fides.

Many Messenger alumni went on to become jazz stars in their own right, such as: Lee Morgan, Benny Golson, Wayne Shorter, Freddie Hubbard, Bobby Timmons, Curtis Fuller, Cedar Walton, Chuck Mangione, Keith Jarrett, Joanne Brackeen, Woody Shaw, Wynton Marsalis, Branford Marsalis, Terence Blanchard, Donald Harrison and Mulgrew Miller.


Miles Davis's quintets:   Miles Davis Quintet was an American jazz band from 1955 to early 1969 led by Miles Davis. The quintet underwent frequent personnel changes toward its metamorphosis into a different ensemble in 1969. Most references pertain to two distinct and relatively stable bands: the First Great Quintet from 1955 to 1958; and the Second Great Quintet from late 1964 to early 1969, Davis being the only constant throughout.


1 First Great Quintet/Sextet (1955-58)
2 Second Great Quintet (1964-68)
3.1 First great quintet (1955-58)
3.2 Second great quintet (1964-69)

In the summer of 1955, Davis performed a noted set at the Newport Jazz Festival, and had been approached by Columbia Records executive George Avakian, offering a contract with the label if he could form a regular band. Davis assembled his first regular quintet to meet a commitment at the Café Bohemia in July with Sonny Rollins on tenor saxophone, Red Garland on piano, Paul Chambers on bass, and Philly Joe Jones on drums. By the autumn, Rollins had left to deal with his heroin addiction, and later in the year joined the hard bop quintet led by Clifford Brown and Max Roach.

At the recommendation of drummer Jones, Davis replaced Rollins with John Coltrane, beginning a partnership that would last five years and finalizing the Quintet's first line-up. Expanded to a sextet with the addition of Cannonball Adderley on alto saxophone in 1958, the First Great Quintet was one of the definitive hard bop groups along with the Brown-Roach Quintet and the Jazz Messengers, recording the Columbia albums Round About Midnight, Milestones, and the marathon sessions for Prestige Records resulting in five albums collected on The Legendary Prestige Quintet Sessions.

In mid-1958, Bill Evans replaced Garland on piano and Jimmy Cobb replaced Jones on drums, but Evans only lasted about six months, in turn replaced by Wynton Kelly as 1958 turned into 1959. This group backing Davis, Coltrane, and Adderley, with Evans returning for the recording sessions, recorded Kind of Blue, considered "one of the most important, influential and popular albums in jazz". Adderley left the band in September 1959 to pursue his own career, returning the line-up to a quintet. Coltrane departed in the spring of 1960, and after interim replacements Jimmy Heath and Sonny Stitt, Davis plus Kelly, Chambers, and Cobb continued through 1961 and 1962 with Hank Mobley on tenor sax.


Second Great Quintet (1964-68)
Mobley, Kelly, Chambers, and Cobb all left Davis by the end of 1962, and during 1963 he struggled to maintain a steady line-up. By the late spring, he had hired the core of the Second Quintet with Herbie Hancock on piano, Ron Carter on bass, and wunderkind Tony Williams on drums. Initially with George Coleman or Sam Rivers on tenor sax, the final piece of the puzzle would arrive in late 1964 with saxophonist Wayne Shorter.

The performance style of the Second Great Quintet was often referred to by Davis as "time, no changes", incorporating elements of free jazz without completely surrendering to the approach, allowing the five men to contribute to the group as equals rather than as a leader and sidemen peeling off unrelated solos. This band recorded the albums E.S.P., Miles Smiles, Sorcerer, Nefertiti, Miles in the Sky, and Filles de Kilimanjaro, and the live set considered by The Penguin Guide to Jazz to be their crowning achievement, The Complete Live at the Plugged Nickel 1965.


Discography is where the rubber meets the road, or the sound reaches the ear; or any other euphemism you can invent for evaluating which one is the best.


Let's compare 55-58 "Jazz Messengers"; Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers - At the Cafe Bohemia, Vol. 2 (11/23/55)
Horace Silver - Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers (11/13/54, 2/6/55)
Horace Silver and Art Blakey / Sabu (10/9/52, 11/23/53)                                 Art Blakey - A Night at Birdland, Vol. 1 (2/21/54)
Art Blakey - A Night at Birdland, Vol. 2                                                 Art Blakey - Orgy in Rhythm, Volume 1 (3/7/57)                                           Art Blakey - Orgy in Rhythm, Volume 2 (3/7/57)



Now we'll go to Miles 55-58
First great quintet (1955-58)
Miles Davis — trumpet
John Coltrane — tenor saxophone
Red Garland — piano
Paul Chambers — bass
Philly Joe Jones — drums
increased to Sextet in 1958 with Cannonball Adderly — alto saxophone
 


Now that I've thrown my 50 cents worth, you can throw in your 2 cents worth.






Enjoy the music




According to Wynton,   Metheny and Miles were not playing Jazz. 

Not trying to start anything,  just saying.

Of course this was the Sinbad era.

Cheers

Here's Blakey and the messengers from the album "Night In Tunisia", "So Tired" is the name of this one


                  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MEFaBKok1jg


My favorite "Nica's Dream", is this dream  with Horace Silver on piano.


                  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Lju13U1zEE


OK you Miles fans, beat these by Blakey and The Messengers.





Enjoy the music.


****I can't see why everyone is so "ga ga" over Miles, when Blakey's Jazz Messengers had the best music and musicians by far.****

O-10, that's the kind of statement that, especially on the heels of you posting that great documentary about KOB, will certainly raise some eyebrows.  Any one jazz fan may like the music of The Jazz Messengers more than that of Miles, but to declare that they had "the best music and musicians by far"?  Really?!  

We could dissect that statement and look at the musicians: "better" than Coltrane, Cannonball, Bill Evans, Philly Joe, Wynton Kelly, Paul Chambers, Ron Carter, Tony Williams, Herbie Hancock, George Coleman, Dave Liebman, Chick Corea, and on and on..... and, "by far"?  I think that assertion merits some sort of explanation.

The music:

Your documentary and the comments by all those jazz giants do a great job of explaining how just one single recording by Miles both defined and changed the face of jazz more than any other.  As I have suggested before, there just might be something to what all those great jazz musicians have to say on the matter....just maybe 😉 .  There has been so much written and documented about how Miles was one of the great guiding forces in the evolution and history of jazz than just about any other musician that it frankly seems silly to get into it here; a quick search will bring up more info than one can absorb in one siting.  A better way to perhaps answer your question is to consider that if one listen to The Jazz Messengers from their inception all the way to when Wynton was in the band, you'll find very little difference in the music; hard bop.  Great hard bop, but fairly traditional hard bop at that.  Now, listen to Miles' various quintets; all different, and all great.

Dont get me wrong, Blakey was great even if he was not my favorite drummer; I prefer drumming with a lighter touch.  He was also undeniably a great "school" for a lot of great players; and so was Miles, if perhaps and arguably not to the same extent.  However, imo, to compare Blakey playing "Nica's Dream" to Miles' "Nefertiti" is kinda pointless; apples and oranges.  The playing, within the respective styles of the music is on an equally high level; and, on "Nefertiti" more complex harmonically,  making it more interesting to listeners with a certain sensibility.  But, if play the game I must, I'll take "Nefertiti" any day.

Regards.
Btw, I could make a joke about the title of the first Jazz Messengers clip, but it really wouldn't be fair; it's great stuff.
Any Jazz is good Jazz. I rather enjoy Bop, Hard Bop and Modal the best.
Then, there are greats like Pharoah Sanders, Sun Ra...etc., that take an extra exploration on the Jazz theme.
If one believes that jazz (or any art form) should stand still and that change in jazz is something that is "perpetrated" on the music, rather than being the natural and inevitable process that is the product of a truly creative mind, then it becomes very difficult to appreciate something that may not be in our comfort zone
.
I love the way that sometimes seemingly unconnected themes in these discussions connect.  Recently the subjects of the role of drummers vs frontline and the relative importance of Miles have come up.  I mentioned "Nefertiti"; Miles' last all-acoustic record.  The tune "Nefertiti" nicely connects a lot of dots.  Here is a tune in which the frontline simply plays the haunting melody; the horns don't solo. The tune is all about the drums; it's almost like a jazz concerto for drums.  And what drums they are!  Tony Williams sounds fantastic and solos throughout the tune as a horn player would traditionally do.  THAT is but one of the reasons that people go gaga over Miles.  He had an incredibly creative mind and tremendous vision for new sounds and ideas.  One may not like all those new sounds and ideas; but, for whatever it may be worth, check out the KOB documentary again and listen to what some of those guys have to say.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?list=PLdhGk7gKuZxbOipdilbqLR0ck2GseBAEg&v=Qzib_oUoyrw

Frogman, as you know, I have been prone to exageration ; but not much, especially when we put a short time frame on this, and end it at 1965. There is a very good reason for the time span; after that we began to get into what is, and what is not jazz; example, I saw Miles in Chicago with a buckskin vest that even had fringes on it. The music was a rehearsal for "Bitches Brew"; since there was a fellow from New York with us, and as everyone knows New Yorkers know everything, so I asked him. "What the...."?

"That's Miles new thing, group, music and all", was his response.

That was in the late 60's, after that, jazz changed forever, but it often left me on the sidelines.

"Nerfertiti" does not float my boat, but since there is no one else in my boat but me, that might not be highly relevant in the larger scheme of things. I think we should compare the two discography's between 55 and 65; that will specify the universe of where I'm coming from.

"Bobby Timmons" and "Horace Silver" were better than anybody Miles ever had on piano. Although Bobby Timmons didn't live long enough, his compositions withstood the test of time; "Moanin, Dis here, Dat Dere, and So Tired" have been used over and over by many others. The same could be said for Horace Silver; I don't have enough room for his compositions.

Lee Morgan was better than Miles on trumpet, he just didn't live long enough. Curtis Fuller on trombone was (is) fantastic; thank God he's still around, age 81.

Taking "Nefertiti" over "Nica's Dream" means you lose by a knock out; we'll have to let others decide that, but according to me, it's not even a contest.

As important as KOB was, there is no way it was "that important"; to put KOB up against all the fantastic albums that have been made since that time is absurd; "they" say a lot of absurd things.

"Moanin" by Blakey, has the same status as KOB with hard core jazz fans, and we don't claim to speak for nobody but us.

Frogman, we have fundamental different tastes in jazz; it's a "subjective" difference, there is nothing "objective" about music, because my normal reaction to Classical is "Huh", but since you're a classical musician, and many jazz musicians can go back and forth plus, Nina Simone was a classical pianist before she was a jazz vocalist, I'm sure you will find my stance unique, but that's the nature of "subjective" differences.





Enjoy the music.

O-10, thanks for your response. I don’t find your stance unique at all. However, I do find it to be rather narrow and, with all due respect, somewhat arrogant; sorry. I really mean no disrespect. I think I will invoke the title of that tune re this recurring debate: "So Tired". What I mean by my comments is simply that I don’t see the value in comparing two players or recordings of universally recognized greatness and very different styles, and trying to establish one as "better than another, by a mile". A pointless exercise, subjectivity and all. Horace Silver "better" than Bill Evans? Really? C"mon! It’s like saying a great orange is better than a great pear. I think the difference between our perspectives is that I feel no need to call one or the other "better". I like them both and appreciate their differences. I also listen to them both. Sometimes I am in the mood to listen to "Nica’s Dream" and sometimes I am in the mood to listen to "Nefertiti". Moreover, when I say arrogant, what I mean is that when brilliant musicians like those in your documentary tout the greatness of a recording such as KOB to refer to those comments as simply another example of the "absurd" things they say is simply,,,,, well, I’ll leave it to others to fill in the blank. From my vantage point, the more productive and positive attitude would be to respect those comments and to recognize that there is always much more to understand. Lastly, and most frustrating to me, is that no explanation or details are offered as to why your "better" players are better than the others. Now THAT would make for interesting discussion. I’m game; speaking of games. Fundamental difference in taste of jazz? I suppose. I don’t think I like "Nica’s Dream" any less than you do. But, I like "Nefertiti" and you don"t. Is it a matter of difference or a matter of scope? Noah was asked to build an arc and to bring two of everything. I think your arc is a little smaller than mine; that's all 😊 Regards.

Frogman, calling this better than that, amplifies the subjectivity of this music. "Better" is a bad choice of words. Although the difference between Bill Evans, and Bobby Timmons is as wide as the Pacific Ocean, "better" is a word that could be left out of the discussion.

Bobby Timmons music projects a philosophical, and sociological point of view, that is probably foreign to Bill Evans, and vice versa. The fact that both of these individuals can strike a piano key, and say more than a short story is incredible; however, just as frequency is all important, whenever music is sent and received by transmitter and receiver; so it is by musician and audience; they both have to be on the same wavelenth.


No one has sent messages that have encompassed the depth and volume of Bobby Timmons music. People who can neither read nor write, understand Bobby Timmons musical messages. Bill Evans music is beautiful and eloquent, and comparing the two is apples and oranges.

Those eloquent discussions in that documentary were an attempt to come to some "objective" conclusion in the "subjective" world of music. They would have had to include the music of "Charles Mingus" in order to bring it closer to the truth. " Fables Of Faubus" is every bit as dynamite, as the tune "Kind Of Blue"


                                  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=48eAYnfgrAo


As a matter of fact, the inclusion of "Mingus Ah Um Charles Mingus" would have made the discussion more objective, and less like a "Miles Davis fan club"





Enjoy the music.


           


O-10, I love both those bands, but if you forced me to choose the best group from that time period…..


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VaYQ-I0xQmA
You guys aren't exchanging salvos, you're exchanging Tomes!!

Keep'em coming. :)

Cheers

Acman, The very first record I wore out was "Clifford Brown, and Max Roach", he was my favorite drummer for ages.


Enjoy the music.
O-10, I continue to feel that judgment by using only the subjective standard is a flawed concept and a ruse.  Using that approach I would feel justified in simply saying "O-10, you are simply wrong, THIS other music is better".  I see that as pointless and unproductive and choose to focus on that fact that you simply like a certain style of music more than others.

Honest judgment can only occur with a combination of the subjective and the objective and contrary to your assertion that "there is nothing objective about music", there is much about music that can be judged objectively.  You, yourself, in posting the KOB doc, admitted that there was much commentary about music in it that went over your head.  THOSE are the things that are primarily in the objective realm.  You choose to not concern yourself with those things; but, that doesn't mean that they are not there.  Simple example:  a jazz pianist's job (besides soloing) is to provide the harmonic underpinnings of the music.  If that piano player is prone to playing wrong notes in the chords that he plays and a given listener is able to recognize the fact that those are wrong notes then he is judging objectively.  A wrong note is a wrong note; a drummer losing time is losing time.  

I have previously commented that the truly smart music lover needs to never lose a certain amount of humility; humility about the inevitable fact that there is always much to learn about art, and I won't repeat my previous comments about the arrogance of describing some of the commentary about KOB as absurd.  I will say, however, that in my universe of musicians of all genres ((including jazz) and many very avid and passionate listeners, anyone who can rightfully be considered a "hardcore fan" does not dismiss "swing" (and earlier), "big band", "post bop" (Nefertiti) and other styles.  Jazz is not only "after Bird"; it's all valid and part of the big picture.  Some is good and some not so good regardless of style.  I have no issue with anyone wanting the label of "hardcore fan", but if it is used to somehow buttress one's point of view when there is disagreement, and suggest that the disagreeing person is not a "hardcore fan", then there's a problem.  Anyway, spirited discussion is a good thing; Rok, seems to think so.  

Jafant said it very succinctly ****All jazz is good jazz**** and then he goes on to state which styles he likes best.  Can't argue with that.


Frogman, I am subjective to the Nth degree when it comes to selecting and listening to jazz music. If I detect 1 objective hair on my body, I will pull it out.

My musician friend who lived with me that Summer, never practiced (that Summer). What was an improvising, performing jazz musician going to practice? He didn't just start playing jazz yesterday.

Although I had been a fan of his eight years before he moved into my apartment, I had never heard the music he was currently playing. I was truly mesmerized at each performance, never the same music. We never talked music before or after the performance. He enjoyed telling me about his life as a professional jazz musician, and I enjoyed listening.

That was 40 years ago. When I reflect back to that time, I know there was something intensely personal between him and his "new" music. When he was on stage, he went to that place where jazz musicians go; that's where it's at, either you got it or you don't; he just let his fingers fly trusting his inner muse, there was nothing "objective" about that.

I recall that he played center stage at that big 4th of July extravaganza we have under the arch every year here in St. Louis, and got rave reviews. I didn't attend, I can't stand being in the midst of a bazillion people.

The only thing I've got to personally compare, is when I went out on the tennis court and hit perfect backhands and forehands. I wasn't thinking about anything, I just kept my eye on the ball. Of course I had spent years playing and practicing before this occurred, but it would not have occurred if I had been "objectively" conscious of what I was doing.

I witnessed on TV, the best game Isaih Thomas (Detroit Pistons) ever played in his life. When he got so tired that he barely got across the half court line, he threw the ball up, and nothing but net; he couldn't miss.

After the game news people were all over him; he said everything was like in slow motion and he was in what they call, the zone.

Here is where I'm coming from, if you're going to be a star jazz musician, you have got to quit thinking "objectively" about what you're doing; either you got it or you don't, but you can not get it by practicing (when you're a performing musician) That might be just the thing for a "classical" musician, but not an improvising jazz musician.

Of course if you're not performing, you have to practice; but an improvising jazz musicians performance has to be instantaneous; otherwise it sounds "stilted", and that's not good in jazz.


Enjoy the music.




O-10, we've been down this road way too often and I don't know how or why you got on the subject of practicing; it has little to do with the subject of objectivity and would be applicable to musicians in any genre, not just jazz.  With all due respect you are simply mistaken in making connections that don't exist, and it demonstrates why some of these discussions become so strained.   I won't beat a dead horse and can only suggest that you not be so quick to pull those hairs out.  But, since you brought up the subject of practicing:

"If I don’t practice for a day, I know it. If I don’t practice for two days, the critics know it. And if I don’t practice for three days, the public knows it." - Louis Armstrong
Posting this for the benefit of the Great Unwashed,  so we can follow this 'ruckus'.


sub·jec·tive1
/səbˈjektiv/ adjective
  1. based on or influenced by personal feelings, tastes, or opinions: Contrasted with objective.
  2. synonyms:personal, individual, emotional, instinctive, intuitive

ob·jec·tive1/əbˈjektiv/ adjective
  1. (of a person or their judgment) not influenced by personal feelings or opinions in considering and representing facts: Contrasted with subjective.
  2. synonyms:impartial, unbiased, unprejudiced, nonpartisan;  More

Don't see why there should be any disagreement.   Each point of view is valid.

Cheers

Frogman, Improvise means to create and perform spontaneously or without preparation.  Improvise comes from the Latin word improvisus, meaning "unforeseen, unexpected." Think about when something unexpected happens to you — you have no choice but to react in the moment, or improvise.

I'm sure he, (meaning my musician friend), practiced so much that he could visualize his instrument in his sleep during his formative years. Why do so many musicians play with their eyes closed? That's because they don't need to even see the thing their playing, even when it's as complex as a "Koto". I saw June Kuramoto play the Koto most of the night with her eyes closed; she was playing improvisational jazz better than on any records I have of "Hiroshima"; with her eyes closed, I even have pictures.

You see classical musicians practicing morning noon and night; I'm sure it must be necessary; but if you are going to be improvising, playing new music that you have in your head, what are you going to practice? When improvising, each note you play, depends on the note someone else played before you; that's why good jazz musicians sound so good, because if you play a wrong note, someone else can play a note that will make it sound good, and it all comes out sounding beautiful.

Although you keep harping on the "fact" that my friend did not practice when he was performing at least three nights a week; the elephant here is "improvisation"; that's the ability to create "spontaneously"; either you got or you don't, but no amount of practice will enable you to do this.




Enjoy the music.

Here it is, all the way live HIROSHIMA! I am 100% into this including the Tibetan aspect at the beginning.


                  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lxImZTT1AEY


I wanted you to see the beautiful June Kuramoto on Koto. I'm sure you can find a better picture if you like what you hear and the audio is not the best; that gal can git down on that Koto when she wants to. I saw them in the 80's at a free concert in the Botanical Gardens, and they played like I've never heard them on any records; they were feeling it, and there was a large responsive audience; that can put high energy into any group.



      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jme2Z0HIzQU

                 

  (she was more beautiful in 1980, it don't last forever)



                https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wU3oPGanY3I


There is nothing on you tube that will provide an example of that evening, they were feeling good and just jamming.






Enjoy the music.
Rok, thanks for your valiant effort as peacekeeper.  Those are good definitions.  But the issue is not the validity of subjectivity.  Inherent in its definition is the idea that personal feelings are part of it.  It makes my point.  I have no issue with O-10 feeling that this or that is better FOR HIM.  My point is simply that there ARE aspects of music that can be judged objectively.  But first one must be willing to learn and understand the language of objectivity that relates to music; those pesky nuts and bolts.

O-10, I am not harping on anything.  I believe it is you who is harping on the subject of objectivity.  I don't know who your friend was nor know anything about his success (or not) in music.  I don't mean to be so blunt, but concerning this issue I am afraid that you don't know what you're talking about.  Of course, every musician can go through periods of little or no practicing; but, I assure you that eventually it catches up with him and it starts to show in his playing.  And, no, Louis was not talking about his formative years.  Bird practiced incessantly, so did Trane and on and on.  In fact, as a humorous footnote; it is the bane of every hotel when a touring jazz band would/does come to town with the endless complaints from guests about the practicing in the rooms.  Yes, the creative process happens in a player's head, but the chops need to be exercised and ideas developed and translated from the abstract to the physical and executed.  C'mon O-10, you seem to have created this bubble with your own personal reality of what it's all about.  I respectfully encourage you consider that your reality needs a little tweaking if it's going to be presented as anything but just your own.  Regards.
Hiroshima Live EMMY WINNING VIDEO

In what 'category' did they win this Grammy?

Cheers

Frogman, there is no universal reality; each individual should cling to his or her reality for all it's worth, because ultimately, that is the only reality.

Let's go around the world, this is fun. Rok, when we saw that dancing in Cuba, I told you and Frogman it was structured; those drumbeats are connected to movements in dance. The dancing that accompanies this music is as structured as any European dance; they have certain movements on the beat, they have to practice. I saw dancers in the Kathryn Dunham school of dance where they are taught dances she learned in Africa.

Descendants of slaves all over the Caribbean, and in Brazil still dance to these drums.


                https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_e8bUyC55cc



Enjoy the music.
Just one of the reasons people go gaga over Miles.  Check out "My Funny Valentine".  He lets you know what tune he's going to play in his first two statements, and from there he just hints at the original melody without ever straying so far that you lose track of it.  It all works and is brilliant.  And talk about setting a mood with that muted trumpet sound; the guy was a genius.  Before anyone gets worked into a tizzy, one of many geniuses in this music; but he was one of them without a doubt.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=OcIiu1kQMx0

It seems to me that we are step away from a disscusion about aestethics in music, and that is time to stop using subjective vs objective terms, because the theme asks for much broader explanations. In doing so we should talk about history of music (jazz at least) and about of evolution of personal, cultural and social values that one needs to comprehend before can give a worthy opinion about the subject. In this case the subject or the question would be to understand what is considered as the 'quality or beauty' of some performerd piece of music, and why do we think or feel so and second, what we  consider as 'quality or skill' when we talk about  some performing artist. My question to you guys is are you intersted in trying to find consensus on this matter, or shall we just conclude with that latin 'de gustibus non est dispuntadum? 
If the answer is positive, let me just start with a qoute that some of you may find appropriate...'Thanks therefore, to what is harmonicus in us, we perceive harmonius composition of sounds, and we delight in them for we understand that we are made in their likeness.Similarity is pleasing, therefore, whereas dissimilarity is odius'.Boethius (480-526) De Musica

Frogman, there's one thing for certain, you could never mistake Miles for anyone else; with or without the muted trumpet, he had an unmistakable sound.

Maybe it's because you're a learned musician, but we have slightly different tastes; this is too laid back for me, I prefer "Walkin". Maybe you can critique that one.


              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4egXm9LRj2I


Enjoy the music.


***** those drumbeats are connected to movements in dance.*****

Well they must be doing the same movements over and over forever, because this stuff is just repetitive.

Think of the dancers as the soloists.   The drummers are just laying down a track.   Sort of like rap.

***** The dancing that accompanies this music is as structured as any European dance;*****

You cannot be serious!!

***** they have to practice*****

I thought you said improvisers don't have to practice!   You are confusing the Unwashed.

***** I saw dancers in the Kathryn Dunham school of dance where they are taught dances she learned in Africa. *****

Bogus.   Part of the pitiful attempt by Liberals and 'activists' to create things in Africa that don't exist today, let alone centuries ago.

I mistrust anything that can't be written down, or at the least, be perform over and over again with a high degree of fidelity.

Cheers

 


In the meantime...Eddie Costa 'My funny Valentine'  and 'Diane' from 1959, 'the house of blue lights' album. Very intersting, imho.

https://youtu.be/M-8mI5W-0Hk

https://youtu.be/YThwn4J0htc
Alex, Amen!.  That is precisely what I have been suggesting for quite some time.  If I am understanding you correctly, and if you read my posts, what you suggest is behind many of them.  Count me in!

O-10,  great playing by all and classic Miles.  Different vibe from the "Cookin'" session.  It should be noted that it (they, actually; its a compilation) was recorded 2 1/2 years before "Cookin'".  In the scheme of the many phases of Miles and rapidly evolving style, 2 1/2 years is an eternity as shown by how this recording harkens back to an earlier period in jazz.  Listen to Lucky Thomson's playing; shades of the swing players that came before in his sound and vibrato.  Yes, less laid back that "Cookin'", but not quite sure why being laid back should be a disqualifier.  Great stuff. Thanks!

Rok, I agree word for word and made the same comment first time around; except perhaps for your last comment.  I don't have an opinion on that.

***** .'Thanks therefore, to what is harmonicus in us, we perceive harmonius composition of sounds, and we delight in them for we understand that we are made in their likeness.Similarity is pleasing, therefore, whereas dissimilarity is odius'.Boethius (480-526) De Musica*****

Sounds like the Subjectivity  O-10 is talking about.   "if I like it, it's good".  Of course, The OP was not as long winded and pompous as brother Boethius.

Cheers
***** In doing so we should talk about history of music (jazz at least) and about of evolution of personal, cultural and social values that one needs to comprehend before can give a worthy opinion about the subject. I*****


This being a Jazz thread, I assume you will talk about the history of Jazz.   That means starting in the Southern U.S. in general, or New Orleans in particular.   That's where Jazz and it's history started.

Now, you should quote folks like Jelly Roll Morton and Louis Armstrong.

Cheers
   
Rok, I'm glad you're as critical as you are, I jumped the gun on that one, scratch the drummer; you were right. I'm going to overlook your last two sentences.

This is the way the Dunham Dancers moved to the beat, can you dig it? That gal is hypnotic, you have to be tuned to that frequency in order to dig it, but your tuner can't get that channel, it's busted.




          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwR1V5w_KB8


If this girl got a cd out, I'm going to order it tonight.



        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GCkRAPG7sZQ


Cuba is where it's at.



Enjoy the music.
Alex, you hit a home run in your quest for unrecognized talent.  I knew the name Eddie Costa, but I am almost embarrassed to say that I had not heard his playing.  Wow!  What an interesting player! That rendition of My Funny Valentine is possibly the most interesting one that I have ever heard.  But it was "Diane" that really knocked me out; those "stop time" breaks are fantastic.  I love the way that he uses the left hand and bottom of the keyboard for more than just accompaniment and extends the right hand melodies into the low registers.  Now, check this out: when I first listened to your clips one of my first thoughts was "this guy's chord voicings sound like Bill Evans; in fact, he sounds a lot like Bill Evans, but looser, less introspective and with a bit of humor".  Then I looked at the listed personnel and noticed that the drummer was Paul Motian who also played with Evans.  Then,  I looked at the other related clips that come up on the side of the screen and what do I see?  Bill Evans/Eddie Costa Quartet.  The guy was also a vibraphonist and had a quartet with Evans.  Interesting indeed.  Wonderful player on both intruments.  And I love the way he ends the tunes; very unexpected.  I must say that of all the "forgotten talent" posted this is one whose records I am buying.  Thank you!


Rok, I played it twice in order to focus on the sound of each instrument; I didn't know all of the reeds; different types of clarinets, oboes, and bassoons, or were some just black wood, and others metal.
Wind solos in order:

flute, clarinet, bassoon, E flat (sopranino) clarinet, oboe d'amore, trumpet (with flute), tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, trombone. 

Thank you Frogman, and Rok; now that I can see the instrument when it's being played, I know precisely what sound it makes, fortunately I like Bolero, because I'll be playing it over and over. I can pipe it into the big rig and check my speakers. Maybe this is my first lesson in "objectivity".



Enjoy the music.

David Pike is someone I haven't heard a lot of, or about, and I can't figure why not? I have him on a CD, "Pike's Peak", that doesn't have one weak cut on it, they all rate 4 stars at least, plus Bill Evans is on piano.


                      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2NHC_CNpBLk



David Samuel Pike (March 23, 1938 – October 3, 2015) was a jazz vibraphone and marimba player. He appears on many Herbie Mann albums as well as those by Bill Evans, Nick Brignola, Paul Bley and Kenny Clarke. He also recorded extensively as leader, including a number of albums on MPS Records.

All Smiles (MPS, 1968)
With Herbie Mann

The Family of Mann (Atlantic, 1961)
Herbie Mann Returns to the Village Gate (Atlantic, 1961 [1963])
Herbie Mann Live at Newport (Atlantic, 1963)
My Kinda Groove (Atlantic, 1964)
Herbie Mann Plays The Roar of the Greasepaint – The Smell of the Crowd (Atlantic, 1965)
Monday Night at the Village Gate (Atlantic, 1965 [1966])
Latin Mann (Columbia, 1965)

Well Frogman, according to "There's a reason they are not well Known", how does David Pike fit?




Enjoy the music.
O-10, I believe my words were "there's USUALLY a reason they are not well known"; iow, there are exceptions to every rule.  Having clarified that, just because any one of us is not familiar with a player doesn't mean that he's not better known to others.  I have known about Dave Pike for years from his work with Nick Brignola (one of my favorite baritone players) and the Francy Boland/Kenny Clark big band, the great European big band.  That band, by the way, featured Johnny Griffin on tenor and Benny Bailey the trumpet player in the often discussed Les McCann "Swiss Movement".   Pike recorded over twenty (!) records as a leader so he is clearly well known to some.  Lastly, I don't think jazz vibes is all that popular.  I know some listeners who unfortunately downright dislike the vibraphone, so I think there's probably a smaller "market" for vibes players than most other, and more popular, instruments; so, room for fewer players to be in the limelight.  Imo.
Frogman, I like the way you answered that.  I know I would hate to be competing with "Bags" and Lionel Hampton.

Since I like vibes, I will most certainly add more of his CD's to my collection.  I'll let yall know what I have chosen after I do the "you tube" thing


Enjoy the music.
Dave Pike's CD's are running $20 used; it seems as soon as I want to buy somebody's  CD's, the price goes up; it's a conspiracy.  There are no stores that sell CD's close buy, they all went out of business, and now they're raising the prices on line.  First Leon Thomas, and now Dave pike; do those people's estates get more money, or just the record companies see more profit?
Hi all - just caught up on the last few days of this thread.  O-10, I would like  to attempt to help explain one thing you are puzzled by -  yes, one MUST practice improvising.   As Frogman said, all of these great improvisers practice all the time.  One must practice developing one's musical ideas so that they are coherent and understandable for the listener.  You can't just go up there and play whatever the hell you want, as you seem to think - that is NOT what any of them are doing.  They still have to fit in with everything else going on - the harmony, the rhythm, etc.  Think about this - if one did not have to practice improvisation, then any classical musician or rock musician or folk musician or whatever kind of musician could improvise just as well as any jazz musician could.   The reason the jazz musician is so much better at improvisation is because he has practiced it, very very hard for a very long period of time.  Classical musicians in fact used to do this, especially in the Classical era - performers would improvise during their concertos all the time, in a section called the cadenza.  Nowadays, just about everyone memorizes a cadenza and plays the same one all the time, though there are a few who do still improvise one on the spot.  One example that I have worked with a couple of times is the famous current pianist, Stephen Hough.  He always improvises his cadenzas on the spot, and when he did a children's concert with us one time, he asked the kids for melodies that they wanted worked into the cadenza, and then obliged them.  In doing this, he is going through the exact same mental processes as a jazz musician improvising is.  The only difference is the idiom, not the process.  
***** First Leon Thomas, and now Dave pike; do those people's estates get more money, or just the record companies see more profit?*****

One of the strange, and good things, about recorded Jazz music is that a lot, if not most, of the greatest Jazz ever recorded, can be had for less than $10 per CD, while the newer 'Jazz' sometime cost $20 or more.  Go figure.

KOB $6.99 on Amazon.

Cheers

Learsfool, your whole post was "wack". I had no idea there was so much difference between a jazz musician, and a classical musician. The only thing you can practice is a written piece of music, or you can practice familiarity with your musical instrument.

This is what it is about; to have a musical idea in your head, and to make your instrument audibly produce that sound exactly as you hear it in your head. That means your brain extends through your hands into the musical instrument and the precise sound you want to hear comes out.

The more I talk about this the clearer it becomes. Simply because others don't believe what I'm saying, only means they can't do it. How specific can I be in regard to the time he practiced, 00 during one summer when he lived in my apartment. Before that time, he had a number of jazz albums that he led, and many more where he was a side man with some of the musicians we have talked about ad infinitum. I have all of those albums and I listen to them frequently. None of those albums have the same music he was performing three nights a week to packed houses; he was in no way new to St. Louis fans and musicians.

I was mesmerized at each performance, and since I drove him to each performance (in the deuce) I never missed a one. Jazz musicians in St. Louis have performed as sidemen with practically all the famous jazz musicians we have discussed. A local musician I've known for a long time, showed me his photographic portfolio where he performed with the musicians we have discussed when they came to St. Louis, and needed his particular instrument. My friend had no trouble in getting accomplished jazz musicians on whatever other instruments he chose.

Jazz is really the best music to represent America because: It is partly planned and partly spontaneous; that is, as the musicians perform a pre-determined tune, they have the opportunity to create their own interpretations within that tune in response to the other musicians' performances and whatever else may occur "in the moment" -- this is called improvisation and is the defining element of jazz. Improvisation is the key element of jazz. There is no better example of democracy than a jazz ensemble: individual freedom but with responsibility to the group. In other words, individual musicians have the freedom to express themselves on their instrument as long as they maintain their responsibility to the other musicians by adhering to the overall framework and structure of the tune. He was the leader and they discussed for about an hour before they went on stage what was to take place. I looked and listened, but I might as well been looking and listening to Martians, musician talk is Greek to me.

These musicians did not play any standard tunes; that's why the house was packed, his fans did not come to hear "Stardust", they came to hear him "wail", jam, rock the house; they came to hear him, and he was like a wild man on his instrument.


Enjoy the music.




Frogman, I know you and Rok, are sick and tired of this, so am I, but it will go on until it ends.

When you see pictures of Miles talking to Coltrane, Cannonball, or Gil Evans, there is always written music in front of them. When these guys talked about what they were going to do before the event, there was no written music. I never recall seeing any "written music" at any time; now you can make whatever you like out of that.


Enjoy the music.