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, now that you and Rok done shot my best album down, I'm waiting for yours. Not that I'm looking to shoot it down, but add it to my collection.

While that LP doesn't sound so hot now, it was "Somthin Else" when it came out.

Enjoy the music.
Best jazz album is too hard to nail down . . .
But, anyone else really dig the song 'Birdland' by Weather Report? It's got a groove that just hooks you in !
I like 'birdland'. I have it by Quincy Jones and a few more people. All my Weather Report stuff is on LP, but I think I have this number by them.

I did youtube it. The guitar player looked like Chuck Conners as he appeared in 'Geronimo' That was a big turn off, so I killed the sound and went back to Monk's 'Brilliant Corners'.

Birdland is a nice tune. Just need some serious people to play it. At least on video. I realize Joe Zawinul wrote it. He used to play with Cannonball. How the mighty have fallen.

Thanks for the input.

Cheers
Today's Discovery:

THE MONTEREY QUARTET -- Live at the 2007 Monterey Jazz Festival

with / Dave Holland (bass), Gonzalo Rubalcaba (piano), Chris Potter (tenor sax), Eric Harland (drums)

This is the natural progression of BeBop. They call it Modern Jazz. No matter what it's called, this is an excellent example of great Jazz. The Frogman and O-10 should just love this. They being so progressive. :)

I was amazed. I have had this CD for over three years, and have just now got around to really listening to it. It blew my mind. Fantastic!!

Each player contributed two tunes to the program. Rubalcaba's '50' was my favorite, but they are all great.

They sound so different from most groups. They all play at the same time. It's like all four players solo at the same time, but it's all so cohesive. These are really good players. Great writing.

Holland's bass playing is just awesome. And the sax player! Where has this guy been hiding all my life! The drummer? Another new to me, player. Amazing! We all know about Rubalcaba, just his usual brilliant self.

If you call yourself a Jazz lover, you have to have this! So, if you ain't got it, git it!

The sad thing is, they just came together for this one gig. We won't hear them together again. Another reason to get it. If nothing else, try to youtube '50'.

Cheers
****And the sax player! Where has this guy been hiding all my life!****

Rok, you need to get out more often :-)
O-10:
I could not even decide which is the best CD in my collection. I would not even try to name the best album in Jazz history.

My simple test is this: how often do you listen to any particular CD. That's the one you like the most. Is it the BEST, could or could not be.

What / Who do I listen to most often? Mingus, Monk, Oscar Peterson, Louis Armstrong, Horace Silver, Lee Morgan, Cannonball, the most, and many others to a lesser degree.

The problem with naming a best is that you are stuck with it. Can I change everyday?

Today, my candidate is Mingus' Oh Yeah.

Cheers
*******Rok and Frogman, I would like your critical and expert analysis of these tunes*********.

I could find nothing to fault. Great stuff. One of my favorite Tenors, Coleman Hawkins. When you get a lineup of this statue, and everyone shows up, there is nothing to fault. Esp if the tune has the word 'blues' in the title.
I see the CD is still aval on Amazon. I put it in my waiting to order thingy.

The Frogman can give us a more expert view.

Cheers
*********Rok, you need to get out more often*********

When you live in the middle of Texas, that's easier said than done. Nearest Jazz to this place is probably Kansas City!!

I was really Impressed with Potter and Holland. I knew of Holland.

Cheers
Rok, "Mingus' Oh Yeah" could very well work for me as "pick of the day". I've got just about everything by Mingus, including that.

Enjoy the music.
Rok, if you live in the middle of Texas, you wouldn't have to go too far. There is a little bit happening in both Austin and San Antonio, but there is better happening in the DFW area, and some in Houston as well. Try Googling jazz clubs in all of those cities.
Jazz on a Sunday Afternoon:

Hank Mobley -- Soul Station
with / Art Blakey, Wynton Kelly, Paul Chambers

Great Blue Note Hard Bop. One of the most over looked and underrated Tenor players in Jazz. I love his tone.

Not an innovator, but a top tier Tenor player. A mainstay at Blue Note. I guess that's the down side of anointing all these 'geniuses'. A great player like Mobley sort of gets lost in the shuffle.

Great Rhythm section and excellent song selection.
Try it, you won't be disappointed.

Cheers.
Orpheus, my intention was not to shoot down "Somethin Else"; it's an excellent record. But, when something is referred to as "the best" it better standup to the very highest scrutiny.

I don't think I could pick a "best" jazz record; jazz can be too many different things in too many different styles. Besides, what criteria are we going to use to define "best record"? I am not sure how one would compare (for instance) Dave Brubeck's "Time Out" to Coltrane's "Blue Train" or to Herbie Hancock's "Headhunters". All three are great records that certainly belong in a "greatest" list. Having said all that, if someone put a gun to my head and said I HAD to pick one, I would probably say Mingus "Ah Um" for it's great playing and "time capsule" potential in that if someone with zero knowledge of jazz would be able to get more of a sense of the scope and history of jazz is than from any single record that I can think of.
I love "Bean". He was the first great jazz saxophone player. And what a sound! He could sound huge and robust, and sensual and velvety all at the same time. Eventhough his style could sound a little "dated" depending on the context, he was one of the few players of that era that could more than hold his own with the younger more "progressive" players that he recorded with over his fifty year career.

"Sandra's Blues" is classic blues-ballad playing and showcases his wonderful tone and swagger. "Close Your Eyes" is the winner of the two. The rhythm section really clicks on this cut with a beautifully light touch that still cooks like crazy. Notice Eddie Jones' lithe playing. He really moves the tune forward with lines that cover a wide range on the instrument, as opposed to the monotonous lines within a narrow range (with "thuddy" tone) that Sam Jones plays on "Somethin Else". Connie Kay sounds amazing and there is a much greater sense of interaction within the rhythm section. Great stuff!

The importance of Coleman Hawkins cannot be overstated. His solo on his classic recording of "Body And Soul" is one of those solos (Coltrane's solo on "Giant Steps" is another) that young jazz saxophone players study. It literally changed the landscape of the music. The traditionalists criticized that solo (and Bean's improvising, in general) as having a lot of "wrong notes". He was one of the first players that reached beyond the very "inside" colors of the harmonies. The truth is that most players at the time simply could not navigate the harmonic complexity of a tune like "Body And Soul" and would not make all the changes; instead, they "generalized" the harmonic changes as opposed to clearly outlining each and every harmony as Hawkins did. Houston Person on "Moonlight In Vermont" is an example of this "generalization" and not making all the changes. One thing is being able to play over a blues with a nice comfortable, predictable, and sparse harmonic progression; another is being able to navigate a tune with up to four harmonic changes per measure (one per beat) and still make musical sense. Hawkins was one of the first that could do that.

Frogman, "Mingus Ah Um" certainly works for me. He was so far ahead of his time.

Enjoy the music.
Article from BBC Music magazine:

Concert Halls of America. Symphony Hall, Boston.

The hall was built in 1900, the architects hired a physics professor from Harvard to perfect the acoustics. The result was a Hall with a reverberation time of 1.9 to 2.1 seconds and a shape that focuses the sound towards the audience.

The article goes on to say, that the hall is one of the best in America and the World.

My questions are, what is reverb, in a concert hall and what is the significance of the reverb times listed? There was no context given. Close to perfection? What is perfection? Can anyone talk about this?

Cheers
Frogman: Great info on, and analysis of, Coleman Hawkins. I have a lot of his stuff, but not him playing Body & Soul. How can that be?

Cheers
Final inquiry of the day.

Who / what determines the size and instrumental makeup of a Jazz group. Big Bands excluded. i.e. Oscar Peterson has a trio, Cannonball a quintet etc.... How and by whom is that determined?

Cheers
John Hart Trio "Scenes from A Song"
John (guitar) does a very nice rendition of the song, Both Sides Now - Joni Mitchell. This is an instrumental album but...
What a great lyricist she is :)
I came across this gem: Blue Bacharach
"A Cooler Shaker" (Blue Note)
A compilation of covers in the Jazz/Blues style.
Hi Rok - to answer your questions about reverb in concert halls is not necessarily easy. What I assume they mean by those particular numbers is how long a chord, say the last chord of a big piece, will ring in the hall AFTER the musicians have actually stopped playing it. Reverb is a very necessary element of a good hall - too little and it will sound dead, too much is also undesirable. There are way too many architectural/acoustical factors that go into it for me to feel comfortable discussing it in great detail.

Basically, though, the acousticians do have this down to a science, or think they do, anyway. In general, you want the sound to go out towards the audience, but you also want some of it coming back. And you also ideally want the musicians to be able to hear each other well across the stage, too. There are some great halls where it sounds amazing in the audience chamber, yet the musicians have a hard time hearing across the stage. There are also some that sound great in the audience chamber, but too much noise also comes back from there to the stage. There are few that get everything absolutely right, and these are not necessarily the relatively newer ones. Symphony Hall in Boston is definitely one of the very best, as is Carnegie Hall in New York, to name two old school examples that still sound just as good or better than anything built lately. But, just like with audiophile equipment, there will be huge disagreements about which halls sound the best.
Adding to Learsfool's definition: reverb time is how long it takes for sound to die away after it is produced. Because frequency and how loud the sound was to begin with will affect reverb time, acousticians set "60 db below the loudness level of the original sound" as the measuring point.
Isochronism:

******I came across this gem: Blue Bacharach******

Nice CD, but I have three Dionne Warrick CDs. All this sounds very very familiar now.

Cheers

Frogman, learsfool, and Rok, the reason they can never get it right, or get it wrong a lot of times, is because they are working on two different sounds, one for who ever is on the stage, and another for whoever is far out into the audience. When they get the one for the audience right, people on the stage began to complain that it's wrong.

I've been there before. If the people on the stage realize it doesn't have to be right for them, they can get it right for the audience.

Enjoy the music.

Hey you guys, Rok, Frogman, and Leersfool, I've just discovered something that's absolutely fantastic, It's called HD Downloads. It's been fantastic for me anyway, and that's because I only use it for records I already have; that way I'm sure of the music. There is no better way to replace scratched vinyl.

I posted a thread on the Analog forum titled HD Down Load compared to Analog that pretty much covers everything. I got absolutely unbelievable results from "Soul Brothers" by Ray Charles and Milt Jackson. That HD Download had the "nuance" I mentioned on this thread that was lacking on the CD. Check it out.

Enjoy the music.
Yesterday I was Planning to 'review' 'Miles at the Plugged Nickel', but after a few minutes decided I was not in the mood. I then decided to see what O-10 was so excited about, and put on Toshiko Akiyoshi. Was not in the mood for that either.

I ened up with:
Murray Perahia: Chopin Etudes
Aretha Franklin: The Delta Meets Detroit
Howlin' Wolf: The Chess Box

What do you guys listen to when it's not Jazz?

As the good book says: 'Man cannot live on Bop alone'.

Cheers
******It's called HD Downloads******

Does this involve computers? If it does, I will have to start at day one, step one. Like, Bill Gates was born on ..........

Cheers

Rok, forget I ever mentioned HD Downloads. I had a problem that caused me to tell those people they were selling "snake oil", when the problem was in my computer and was not identified till after I called my "geek".

Rok, my grandmother liked "Chopin", I heard her say it when I was very young. It was ages before I discovered "Chopin" and "Sho pan" were the same person. I liked him until he got a little too busy for me.

I saw Aretha live in Detroit, you can't go wrong with Aretha; just the sound of her voice floods me with memories of good times.

You lost me with "The Wolf Man", that's the kind of blues I can live without. One out of three ain't bad, when you consider that it was outside the jazz realm.

Discovering old jazz that I haven't heard before has been most fruitful for me. No current category of music that I'm into lately, but world music is my alternate choice.

Enjoy the music.
*******You lost me with "The Wolf Man", that's the kind of blues I can live without********

That kind of blues is called 'The Blues' :)

Cheers
You are right about Ammons. I have 'Boss Tenor' and 'Boss Tenors', which is Ammons with Sonny Stitt. The one with BEAN looks interesting. I hope it's still aval.

I don't have the SA8004. I have the SA8001 which does not have USB. How Is the USB involved in HD downloads? I do copy CD to USB memory stick for my car.

I was so concerned about CD players disappearing from newer Cars, but I now like the USB stick even better. I copy using the highest (cd) quality.

Your choice of 'alternate' music sounded 'nice'. Won't bother anyone. :)

Cheers
I was fortunate to see this group in the old Caravan of Dreams in Ft. Worth. I was sitting about 3' in front of Di Meola. It was sort of overwhelming to the senses.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ygmboKbCxbs

Rok, I'm using HD Downloads to replace damaged LP's, but since you don't have LP's, forget about it.

Lorez Alexandria is a vocalist I don't believe we've covered, and I like her a lot. She has all the attributes of old school vocalists with no short comings to my ears. Here's Lorez:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qetIA9SoX6c

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RWXimvRssmQ

Enjoy the music.
Acman3, if I had been there, I would have been overwhelmed as well. I've got several discs of Luc Ponty when he was in that bag, after this, I'll have to get that.

Enjoy the music.
Loved the Gene Ammons cuts. What a distinctive tenor sound: dark, fat, and with just the right amount of nasal edge; and man could he ever play in the pocket! Amazing time feel. Thanks, I have not pulled out any of my Jug records in a while.

Since we are on the subject of tenor players, here's two more of my favorites from that era. Johnny Griffin kills on this record. And checkout Ben Riley on drums; amazing! Actually, great rhythm section.

http://m.youtube.com/watch?feature=relmfu&v=NB4lJyFxDPs
Lorez Alexandria sounds good, but doesn't kill me. A little "pitchy", and she and the rhythm section aren't always locked in. I like her tone; nice voice quality.

Here's a great "jazz singer we never heard of". Amazing talent; she writes most her own material AND writes the string and horn arrangements. Fantastic rhythm section on this record.

http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=U21lJqJAxYs

Frogman, I got my order in for Johnny Griffin. Your opinion of Lorez is an indication of just how "subjective" female vocalists are. While I'm not impressed by Carmen Lundy, she seems interesting as a person, and I'm investigating her art and biography.

Enjoy the music.

Rok, sometime I venture into a different kind of spiritual world that's one with the music, it's called "Native American", I can hear the call of the wild through the music.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4fI83WGsuyo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4kvTNbc8d5s&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E7o9_Lh3iH8

You have entered the world of the "human beings" the Native Americans.

Enjoy the music.
Today's Recommendations:

Clark Terry -- Yes, The Blues
with / Cleanhead Vinson (on alto and vocals) and others

Nothing to figure out here. Just pros playing well. Is it Bop, Blues or R&B? Well it depends on which part of which tune you are listening to at the time.

Ella can sound like an instrument, and on this set, Terry's trumpet sounds like a vocalist.

Cleanhead is not a bad sax player either. They both do one vocal number each. Let's hope Terry sticks with trumpet!
Not essential, but nice to have.

Miles Davis -- '58 Sessions
featuring 'Stella By Starlight'
with/ Coltrane, Cannonball, Bill Evans, Paul Chambers, and Jimmy Cobb.

Two different sets on one CD. First 4 tunes in the studio, the last three live at a hotel in NYC.
Great tune selection.

I like the overall ambience of the live numbers. it was at a party given by Columbia to celebrate the state of Jazz at the label. Seems as if Cannonball and Coltrane were engaged in a cutting session on 'Straight, No Chaser'.

The solos were awesome on all tunes. So much horn play, Evans seems to have gotten lost. One of his solos sounded as if he was a few rooms down the hall. Probably due to the miking at the live event.

Essential? It depends on how many CDs you have with Miles, Coltrane, Cannonball, Chambers, Evans and Cobb all playing in the same group. If you have a bunch, you might be able to skip this one. if not, Git it!.

The Live vs studio thingy is an irritant. Slight tape hiss.

Cheers
She is neither native Amerrican or even American. Google says she is from Norway. Lapland?? Nice Music anyway.

Cheers
Rok, as usual, you're right, but at the same time your wrong. Although she's Lapland, the music is still Native American, and she identifies with Native Americans because she's one of the indigenous people of Norway, and Native Americans are the indigenous people of this country. They have similar cultures.

Git in the Geronimo, Sitting Bull, Cochise groove and shut up.

Enjoy the music.
Rok,
I do agree with you most of times. Although, my suggestion of..
"Blue Bacharach - A Cooler Shaker" is NOT in the same category of your three Dionne CDs.
I re-address this just so that other readers here do not assume that is the case. It does have three vocal cuts, two of Nancy Wilson, one of Lou Rawls, otherwise all instrumentals of Jazz and Jazz/Blues artists. @ Blue Note records.
If you don't like it, I'd refund your money! Really
******my suggestion of..
"Blue Bacharach - A Cooler Shaker" is NOT in the same category of your three Dionne CDs.
I re-address this just so that other readers here do not assume that is the case.**********

I agree. I was, in my typically clumsy way, trying to say, that I was over familiar with the tunes on the CD. I did not mean to infer any other similarity.

This is Jazz and Dionne is pop. Very good pop.

Thanks for your post.
I did put the CD in my waiting to buy list on amazon.

Lou Rawls, Nancy Wilson, and Blue Note!! That should be a slam dunk!

Cheers
Jazz Alert!

Most of Freddie Hubbard's best stuff is avalible on Amazon in the 8 - 10 dollar range. Just in case you have missed some of his best. CTI and Blue Note Labels.

Cheers