randy-11, if you’re looking, here you go:
https://m.ebay.com/itm/SONNY-STITT-HIS-ELECTRIC-SAXOPHONE-JUST-THE-WAT-IT-WAS-LIVE-AT-LEFT-BANK-CD/3...
https://m.ebay.com/itm/SONNY-STITT-HIS-ELECTRIC-SAXOPHONE-JUST-THE-WAT-IT-WAS-LIVE-AT-LEFT-BANK-CD/3...
Jazz for aficionados
randy-11, if you’re looking, here you go: https://m.ebay.com/itm/SONNY-STITT-HIS-ELECTRIC-SAXOPHONE-JUST-THE-WAT-IT-WAS-LIVE-AT-LEFT-BANK-CD/3... |
O-10, big Legrand fan here. I seem to recall that Rok posted or commented on that great record a while back; good to revisit it. Around the same time I posted this record which features Stan Getz as well as Legrand’s wonderful orchestrations: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=B_-6A0vGlLU Speaking of Phil Woods, he and Legrand collaborated quite a bit: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=uUI_993EPY8 https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=_lIAy3WIRuM |
The more I hear Phil Woods, the more I think he could be the top alto Sax player of all time. I am sure his peers recognized his talent and ability, but I think if he had been African-American, his standing in the public's consciousness would be much greater than it is now. He might have had Bird's horn, Bird's wife and Bird's place in the Jazz hierarchy. Just food for thought. Cheers |
Sergei Rachmaninoff : A reviewer once said, all this composer's music sounded like movie themes. I have not liked him since I read that comment. Cheers |
Rok, not all movie themes are bad; "I Want To Live" is one of the best examples of some boss jazz from a movie soundtrack; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4_Ne0Ig9lDU "The Sandpiper" is another; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AfdjwcgkxrE And how about "The Thomas Crown Affair" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8De60rjRR0 Also, when you have the usual suspects for a boss jazz album, and you throw in Michel Legrand, it's like putting a different spin on a dynamite recipe. |
Rok, there is very little, if any, hype about Michel Legrand as a great jazz player. I agree with most of what you wrote and I think your description of him is actually spot on. The hype is about how he is, first and foremost, a great composer/orchestrator of great movie scores and beautiful tunes that often lend themselves to jazz interpretations. When I hear his music I often think of a hip little roadster speeding around mountain roads. I think his music should be judged for what it is and on those terms it’s great. His piano playing has that certain European sense of swing that to says “white” (sorry) and keeps him from the top tier of players. I also agree about Phil Woods; perhaps the greatest...in many ways. The only caveat being that he would have been the first to admit that he copied Bird a lot. As was mentioned recently, he built on Bird’s vocabulary to develop his own voice. Technically, he was unsurpassed. Great player. re Rachmaninov: forget what the reviewer said. How did YOU like his music? I can understand why you think “movie music”. Unabashedly beautiful melodies and masterful orchestrations. One of the greatest composers. Check out his “Symphonic Dances” and get back to me. |
I was looking for new jazz, but instead discovered a beautiful Flamenco singer, "Estrella Morente"; she's new to me anyway, but I haven't been into Flamenco. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yz92rUcc6LA |
The Frogman:
re Rachmaninov
******Unabashedly beautiful melodies and masterful orchestrations.***** A good definition of a lot of movie themes. Which is all the reviewer said. Back in the day, I was interested in buying a Chrysler automobile, until I read a review in Road&Track that said the seats looked and felt like they were covered in Rat Fur. Loved the leather in my Ford SHO. :) Cheers |
Someone once said that movie Themes are America's Classical Music. If they aren't, they should be. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G-MVReDrRwo Cheers |
I knew Dom Um Romao from Weather Report, and found him playing on Ms. Koorax's record, which led me to this 1964 Pablo recording by Dom Um Romao called Hotmosphere. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gPNojdiFgZQ This Muse recording with Joe Beck, Stanley Clark, and Jerry Dodgion. Also, I am finding many more pretty good recordings. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R_2gV22EClI Any of you Latin experts know of these recordings? |
Every since my first Tarzan movie, I've been hooked on African drums; that's a long time. Whether in Cuba, Brazil, or Haiti, we're still talking drums that came from Africa. I've got this album, and I've probably got more by Dom Um Ramao; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u4MWvNAo5NI I was in Cap Haitian, Haiti, riding up a mountain on a half ass (half donkey, half horse, and very sure footed). When I heard these fantastic rhythms coming from around the bend I was expecting to see some Haitian drummers that were there for the tourists; instead there were these kids, all pre-teen, beating on a steel shovel with rocks and dancing. One of them was beating on a shovel that had been abandoned by the road crew. With a rock in each hand, he was jamming the shovel while the others were dancing; they were moving like their bodies had no bones while the young drummer was beating out some mean voodoo rhythms. No matter how poor, the human spirit is irrepressible. Here is another album I have; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mzVjLEzN36M The amazing thing about some drum rhythms in Brazil, you will not find them in present day Africa. My interpretation of that is; the people who made those rhythms are no longer in Africa, they all took the long boat ride to the Americas. "Authentic" Haitian drums are the most fascinating; they originated in "Dahomey"; that's a country with a history so perverse and depraved, that nobody wants anything to do with the name. Present day Benin was Dahomey, it's the home of "Vodoun". https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yq6UOEnsMMw https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iZhAxbAx72U |
@rok2id Oh no - it is very real. The production and recording may be Hollywood. You really hear this stuff on the street in Africa. Nigerian musicians are amazing. I like Rastafarian music too - or nyabinghi which has roots in Africa (Ethiopia) but is popular in Jamaica and Reggae. It uses the call and repeat approach which is popular in all music. This is is an amazing Nigerian musician - Tony Allen https://youtu.be/XeckmmNPwc8 And here is a demo by Gil Sharone (incredibly gifted drummer who teaches Reggae) https://youtu.be/pXVbNGVyV1A |
@Shadorne Those are African folks playing western music. Modern day. Modern instruments. Their take on, or contribution to modern day music. I am speaking of this idea that folks in the third world have been drumming for eons. That they have some special affinity for the drum. That every strike on the drum head has some special and mystical meaning. Each beat striking fear in the heart of the Great White Hunters. All Hollywood/western BS. Cheers |
Hey Jazzbos, Happy New Year to you all! I've been away for a family holiday visit and don't carry digital connections with me, other than a basic c-phone. So I just spent time catching up on your posts made while I was away. The dreaded "Application Error" on Audiogon continues into 2018 so hope this gets posted as I have a collection of comments. "Sing, Sing, Sing" and the Benny Goodman concert was truly groundbreaking, and not only for being the first jazz concert presented at Carnegie Hall. Recently I read that was the first LP album release but that didn't make sense to me. I thought LPs were introduced about 10 years after that concert? frog, speaking of genres in music, this is not exactly jazz, but blues must certainly be considered a close sibling within the family. I first saw an hour's program from this session on PBS several years ago. Then a couple of years later I found an LP with some of the numbers at an audio show. This is the first time I've seen what must be the full length video, great stuff - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mPcGJahjsHY rok, the beautiful car on the Jimmy Smith cover was a Jag XK-150, the last of their 100 series and just prior to their more famous XK-E Type. That image was distorted from spreading by a wide-angle view which made it a little less obvious. Also, if the seat material was important to you, you should have bought a Chrysler with the famed "Corinthian Leather"! ;^) Regarding Hollywood and drumming, one of their biggest sins was the distortion of the Native American beat. It was not "BOOM, boom, boom-boon" as depicted in so many Western movies, but instead a steady, even beat, replicating the human heart. A friend with Native American heritage pointed this out to me some years ago. Lastly, this is a repeat link for me, but I couldn't resist with mention of Haitian music - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L7CoJEyiSfE |
Rok, here is a lady who could tell you all about Papa Legba, and voodoo in "Nawlins" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MaJP8w-jW2k |
She was a distance cousin of mine. She always warned us of an Amphibian from the Northeast, who would try to discredit Jazz in Nawlins. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_eUvjh5t2QM Cheers |
All Hollywood/western BS. Without a doubt, you must be speaking of "Les Baxter". https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EDMI7ez0NZo I thought it sounded pretty good, but it most certainly was not authentic. |
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Kenny Dorham highlights Stereophile's jazz review for January 2018; they give him 4 out of 5 stars for his "K. D. Is Here". He died at 48 in 72. If "Stereophile" has to go back to the 60's for music, I don't feel at all lame for not finding "new jazz". I like this album a lot; it's like being with one of my old flames, I get a warm comfortable feeling, this music is good jazz personified. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hKyt1nqpnNc&index=2&list=PLpqsnWtrepGqfeaVbHQYyfIR6PIGsvvby |
Pryso, I saw Albert King almost every weekend, 59, 60, at the Club Manhattan in E. St. Louis; Ike and Tina Turner appeared at that same club, just prior to when Albert King was there. The sound of his guitar is so familiar to me; I could tell when I first heard Stevie Ray Vaughan, that he had spent a lot of time with Albert. . |
pryso is exactly right about the way that Hollywood distorted Native American drumming. Are we surprised? However, that unfortunate fact should not be taken to mean that drumming was not an integral and very important part of the culture; it was. Same thing goes for African cultures. Its a fascinating topic and there is a ton of interesting reading on the topic available on line. |
The 10 best live jazz albums to own on vinyl? Well, that's the opinion of this author. So, what do you think? http://www.vinylmeplease.com/magazine/10-best-live-jazz-albums-vinyl/ I have all of them except the Sonny Rollins and Keith Jarrett, though not all on vinyl. I do enjoy all the others -- but I find it impossible to pick out 10 for a challenge such as this. There are just too many variables, including my mood at the time of listening. ;^) However for one easy example, I think I'd need to include the "Dave Brubeck Quartet At Carnegie Hall" which would be my pick over all his other recordings if I could have only one, including the ever-recommended "Take Five", with the bonus of it being a live jazz album qualifier. |
My List, if it has to be live, without tooooo much thought. Compared To What -- Les McCann & Eddie Harris Wynton Marsalis & Eric Clapton Play the Blues Mingus At Antibes Ellington At Newport Oscar Peterson Live At The Blue Note Wes Montgomery and Wynton Kelly Smokin' at the Half Note That's all you need. No Filler. Every Track is great. Cheers |
Acman, you are consistently coming up with must have music for me; https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=dom+um+and+jadir+de+castro Check those rhythms; they are ripping Brazilian rhythms that say "Carnival" and gyrating hips with scantily clad, beautiful ladies doing the Samba; this is Rio. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o_6uIS5Whoc Hard Bop Brazil; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VHbEDepj3Zs How about a little Santana; this makes me want to get up and shake my bad hip, if I had two good ones, think what I could do. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rjaQ5_JKxSY |