What are you streaming tonight?


As we are in the modern age of music I thought I would see how this fares.
We have threads specific for cdp and tt so why not streaming as it is a modern media.
I don't care if you stream Tidal, Deezer, Spotify, Paradise Radio or any number of internet stations.
I would like you to share your tastes and method of streaming.
uberwaltz
Ralph Towner - Travel Guide
(Guitar trio w/Wolfgang Muthspiel & Kazhak Slava Grigoryan; their debut for ECM as per Tidal) 


Great album by Al there Greg.


Crowded House S/T

Qobuz 24/192.

Sounds spectacular!
I haven't listened to the whole thing yet uber, but I like how he pays a fairly straightforward homage to the source material, while playing some really nice licks.
if youse guys are looking for new music, check out the reviews for new bands on metal-temple.com   there is alot of metal - black, speed, nu, classic, whatever and some post rock and stoner-doom. i have found some good music there that are dudes doing it for the love of the art...
Takes repeated listens for things to sink in. These first 2 Eastern Rebellion albums are starting to click...some tracks more than others.

It’s interesting to compare tenor sax players on the two albums. I’d post to jazz aficionados for input from Frogman and others but they seem to be involved in a debate about essential elements of Latin music. Don’t want to interrupt.

Eastern Rebellion vol 1; 5/4 Thing (track 3)
George Coleman - Tenor Sax
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2wgC2x0C6cs

Eastern Rebellion vol 2; Clockwise (track 5)
Bob Berg - Tenor Sax (solo starts at 2:07)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_WXC11uvY0
Two great and favorite records. Two great tenor players and as different as they are great. Interesting to compare indeed.

First, one has to consider that they are (sadly, “were” in the case of the younger Berg) about twenty years apart in age. Coleman was earning his stripes during the heyday of the bebop era. He started on alto saxophone and, no surprise, he credits Charlie Parker as his main early influence. He later switched to tenor. He is an extremely lyrical player and very much a traditionalist in overall concept having escaped the Coltrane tsunami that would shape, to one degree or another, the styles of almost every tenor player that came up from about the mid 1950s forward.

Two solos that come to mind as great examples of his lyricism:

https://youtu.be/hwmRQ0PBtXU

https://youtu.be/XdrAzpYdOYs

Bob Berg was undeniably and unabashedly a Coltrane disciple. Very expressive player with a much more aggressive tone concept that would sometimes sound to me like the horn was splitting at the seams. The Coltrane influence can also be heard in his more “outside” (the harmony) harmonic language and a much more angular shape to his improvised phrases; as compared to Coleman’s more linear and lyrical style. Like other “post-Coltrane“ players of his generation the influence of Fusion and Funk can be heard in some of his playing.

https://youtu.be/8DOh352DetI

https://youtu.be/jzcgAaWK5GM


@frogman 
Thank you very much.  What you wrote makes a lot of sense to my ear! 
I could hear the differences you described but lacked vocabulary (and technical training) to "verbalize" them.  Was tempted to describe Coleman (love his "5/4 Thing") as the more "refined" player but not sure that does justice to Berg as "Coltrane tsunami surfer".  I also did not even consider the difference in their ages/"eras".  Anyway, thanks again for taking time to comment and for posting the solo links.  Ciao.
Gerry Mulligan - The Complete Gerry Mulligan Meets Ben Webster Sessions
Radiohead - Kid A
Klaatu - 3:47 EST

All on Qobuz 
Thanks, uberwaltz.   Not in the mood for head banging music right now, but will put Tesla on my list.  
Silver Apples - S/T
Keith Jarrett - Koln Concert

Qobuz
A great deal, you can tell the hurt is on.

Pretty sure will only be for new subscribers though.

But I will check it out.
Thank you
Listening to White Denim overview on Spotify. Never heard of this band but heard "At Night in Dreams" while out doing "social distance approved" lawn work today.

I like "At Night in Dreams". Hopefully there will be some other great tunes and this will be a new band in my rotation. We’ll see.........
Yellowjackets - Run For Your Life (1994)

First track, Jacket Town, with some excellent bass work by Jimmy Haslip.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p_ss8S0sR54
Close Lobster - " Post Neo Anti - Arte Povera In the Forest Of Symbols"

Spotify