Kind of Blue


This was the first Jazz CD I ever owned.  I currently have over 200 Jazz CDs and Kind of Blue is still #1 on my list.

What are your favs?

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Walt Dickerson an underscored musical genius with Sun Ra as sideman... Sun Ra did not accept often to stay a sideman save with a genius...😊 ... But Sun Ra do it again as full  partner this time  with Dickerson in "Visions" album a less easy album to appreciate but my favorite...

 

Interesting article critic from amazon which i concur with :

Reviewed in the United States on June 2, 2005
 
Of all the music presented by master vibraphonist Walt
Dickerson, 1965’s sadly rare IMPRESSIONS OF A PATCH OF
BLUE tends to be the album which many Dickerson
enthusiasts swear by the most. Small wonder. Its
chamber dynamics, multiharmonic precision, compelling
swing and iridescently free balladry mark this Jazz
variation of Jerry Goldsmith film themes as an
unforgettable tone poem to gentle fascinate the
cautious ear, and boldly stir the adventurous soul.

Here, Dickerson showcases his artistry in the midst
of kindred spirits who’ve been dismissed or taken
for granted for far too long. In particular, catch
the probing delicacy of the one-and-only Sun Ra on
piano and harpsichord. Chromatically jabbing with
focused glee, swirling the changes with nimble
poise, the Myth Realist strikes home with memorable
charm, class, and delight.
Bassist Bob Cunningham is steady on the tempo while
elusively dancing about the beat. Likewise for
drummer Roger Blank, boiling with rhythm, simmered
and stirred to a tempestuous tee. With the vibraphonist,
these men form a quartet for the ages.

For decades, Walt Dickerson has been recognized as
one of the most dynamic innovators in all of Music.
The measure of his instrumental orignality places
Dickerson on a par with the likes of Louis Armstrong,
Thelonious Monk, and John Coltrane; all of whom have
singularly redefiened the voice of their respective
instruments, and have richly nurtured the overall
conception of Music as a whole.
Time and again, albums such as PEACE (Steeplechase),
TO MY QUEEN (OJC/Prestige/New Jazz), and LIFE RAYS
(Soul Note) have showcased the malleteer’s seamless
ability to merge the straight-ahead, the avant-grade,
and the soulfully down-home into resurgent rhapsodies
of epic, highly motivational, incredibly unique Jazz.

Let there be no doubt that Walt Dickerson is a
hallmark of excellence which distinguishes the
legacy of African American musical achievement.
Classics such as IMPRESSIONS OF A PATCH OF BLUE
are more than momentary curios to titillate
merchantile hobbyists.
Exciting and inspiring, such work resounds with
deep passion, sharp pertinence, and resilient
life in the Here and Now; touching all who
listen, and dare to hear.

Despite the odds.
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This one is certainly one of the great tune of Jazz masterfully played as if someone was speaking to you seated near you at midnight ...

No drugs could kill this melodic genius...

 

 

If you poured your heart, mind, body and soul, blood, sweat and tears into creating something, would you appreciate it being summarily reduced to some generic label?
Or would you rather your creation was taken on it’s own terms for the thing it is?

I did not bother myself with labels anymore...

Music is done by musicians ... Labels are only useful to use on a wall to class the cd or vinyl by countries and era ....

For sure if we write a book about jazz for example, labels will appeal decisions about what we must put in the book at which place or not...

i dont write book about jazz then... labels means little for me ... 😁

When i was young "labels" mattered much for me because i excluded most labels genres 😁... I was "snob" i guess...

But after 40 years i begun to listen out of my innate taste (choral music before Bach mostly ) even jazz, eastern music and all eras in classical...

I discovered that my innate taste was limiting me , that music is done by musicians. it is not a written matter not a labelling matter. it was about each individual musician uniqueness gesture playing...

i am less snob now than i was once ... Less ignorant too ...😊

In my next life i would want to be a musician ... 😊

Probably poor ...

These are in no particular order:

Miles Davis - Kind of Blue, In A Silent Way, The Complete Bitches Brew Sessions, Nefertiti, Filles De Kilimanjaro

John Coltrane - A Love Supreme, The Complete Africa Brass Sessions, Coltrane’s Sound, Complete 1961 Village Vanguard Recordings

Herbie Hancock - Empyrean Isles

Sun Ra - Angels and Demons at Play, The Nubians of Plutonia

Cassandra Wilson - Blue Light Til Dawn

Don Cherry - Brown Rice

Alice Coltrane - Journey in Satchidananda

Wayne Shorter - Juju

Stan Getz / Charlie Byrd - Jazz Samba