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hooblie

climber
from out where the anecdotes roam
Jun 9, 2018 - 02:46pm PT
how does one bring to a close a page
which has been elevated to "such" a page?
well, let's try just puttin' it to bed:

allen toussaint ~ solitude: http://youtu.be/aWqhrkb88x8
[Click to View YouTube Video]




Largo

Sport climber
The Big Wide Open Face
Jun 10, 2018 - 10:33am PT
Damn, Hoob, that's a transcendental piece right there. I really needed that one.
Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Topic Author's Reply - Jun 10, 2018 - 11:14am PT

Hooblie's version didn't work on this side of the pond, so here's another:

Solitude: Allen Toussaint & Marc Ribot

[Click to View YouTube Video]
Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Jun 16, 2018 - 06:06am PT
[Click to View YouTube Video]

The full show:

[Click to View YouTube Video]
Jaybro

Social climber
Wolf City, Wyoming
Jun 16, 2018 - 07:36am PT
Wow Roy, thanks! Just preordered, Both sides. The world needs more Coltrane!

Even if I Am going climbing today.....
Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Jun 17, 2018 - 07:58pm PT
[Click to View YouTube Video]
hooblie

climber
from out where the anecdotes roam
Jun 19, 2018 - 04:00am PT
[Click to View YouTube Video]
[Click to View YouTube Video]
hooblie

climber
from out where the anecdotes roam
Jun 21, 2018 - 03:17am PT
django bates ~ the study of touch: http://youtu.be/j-rxpMf8JFQ
[Click to View YouTube Video]

anouar brahem ~ blue maqams: http://youtu.be/M4Kh985eJGU
[Click to View YouTube Video]
hooblie

climber
from out where the anecdotes roam
Jun 21, 2018 - 03:42am PT
toots thielemans ~ emmanuel: http://youtu.be/[youtube=zFL0XEh1gbw]
[Click to View YouTube Video]
Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Topic Author's Reply - Jun 21, 2018 - 12:45pm PT

Four Women: Lisa Simone, Dianne Reeves, Lizz Wright, Angélique Kidjo

[Click to View YouTube Video]
Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Jun 30, 2018 - 06:23am PT
- Four Women! The way they walk out on that stage: you know you better check your attitude at the door because they are kicking ass and taking names !!!

...............................................................

Tito Puente

Five Beat Mambo
[Click to View YouTube Video]

Take Five
[Click to View YouTube Video]

Morning
[Click to View YouTube Video]
yanqui

climber
Balcarce, Argentina
Jun 30, 2018 - 07:15am PT
Enjoyed all the posts

[Click to View YouTube Video]
Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Jun 30, 2018 - 07:29am PT
[Click to View YouTube Video]
Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Topic Author's Reply - Jun 30, 2018 - 10:44am PT

Bill Frisell: NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert

[Click to View YouTube Video]
hooblie

climber
from out where the anecdotes roam
Jun 30, 2018 - 05:07pm PT
^^^ if he'd rent me the upstairs apartment i'd roll up the carpet and sleep on the floor
Jaybro

Social climber
Wolf City, Wyoming
Jun 30, 2018 - 06:28pm PT
https://g.co/kgs/5R1iBF

New Coltrane release Both Directions at once ; The Lost Album

From the Link;
John Coltrane
Both Directions at Once: The Lost Album

BY: BEN RATLIFF JUN 30 2018
JAZZ
The newly discovered, unreleased album from 1963 featuring the “classic quartet” finds the jazz giant thrillingly caught between shoring up and surging forth.
From April 1962 to September 1965, while under contract to the record label Impulse!, John Coltrane led a more or less consistent working group with the same four musicians. After his death in 1967, this group—Coltrane on tenor and soprano saxophone, McCoy Tyner on piano, Jimmy Garrison on bass, Elvin Jones on drums—became known as Coltrane’s “classic quartet.” The group was powerful, elegant, and scarily deep. It was also a well-proportioned framing device. It made an artist with great ambitions easier to understand.

It is possible to hear conviction and morality in some of the classic quartet’s best-known music—like the devotional A Love Supreme, recorded in late 1964—as clearly as you can hear melody or rhythm. As a consequence, all of it can appear set on one venerable plane. As it moves inexorably from ballads, blues, and folk songs into abstraction, the classic-quartet corpus can seem an index not only for the range of acoustic jazz but for possibly how to live, gathered and contained, as if it were always there. But the corpus is only what we have been given to hear. And then one day a closet door flies open, a stack of tapes fall out, and a dilemma begins.

A fair amount of Coltrane’s music has been released after the fact, but nothing that would seem, from a distance, quite so canonical as Both Directions At Once, which is 90 minutes worth of (mostly) previously unheard recordings made at Rudy Van Gelder’s studio on March 6, 1963—the middle of the classic-quartet period. The Van Gelder studio, in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, can be considered part of the framing device. It was where the group did nearly all its studio work. For reasons of acoustics, it had a 39-foot-high, cathedral-like, vaulted wooden ceiling, fabricated by the same Oregon lumber company that made blimp hangars during World War II. Coltrane’s music during that period, possibly encouraged by the cathedral-like room, became blimpier and churchier.

Why have we not heard these tapes before? It’s hard to imagine that they could have been blithely ignored or forgotten. The 2018 answer is that mono audition reels of the session were only recently found in the possession of the family of Coltrane’s first wife, Juanita Naima Coltrane. (Impulse! didn’t have the music; the label’s master tapes may have been lost in a company move from New York to Los Angeles.) The 1963 answer is unknown, and probably more complicated.

Coltrane’s contract with Impulse! called for two records a year. Whether that day’s work in March was to be conceived at the time as a whole album, or most of one, is uncertain. The extent to which you believe the record’s subtitle—The Lost Album—might be the extent to which you are excited by the news of Both Directions. I can’t quite do it, but there are other reasons to be excited.

It may be hard to hear as a coherent album for back then, though it is easy to hear it as one for now, in our current, expanded notion of what an album is. The music does not seem, in its context, to be a full step forward. It’s a little caught between shoring up and surging forth. (The after-the-fact title—alluding to a conversation Coltrane had with Wayne Shorter about the possibility of improvising as if starting a sentence in the middle, moving backward and forward simultaneously—helps turn a possible liability into a strength.) It can give you new respect for the rigor, compression, and balance of some of his other albums from the period. It is at times, as Coltrane’s son Ravi pointed out, surprisingly like a live session in a studio; parts of the music sound geared toward a captive audience. That may be the best thing about it.

Included on the album—which comes either as a single-disc version or a double-disc with alternate takes, both including extensive liner notes by historian Ashley Kahn—is a sunny, bright-tempo melody (the theme from “Vilia,” written by the Hungarian composer Franz Lehár for the operetta The Merry Widow); a downtempo, minor-key, semi-standard (“Nature Boy,” from the book of eden ahbez, the California proto-hippie songwriter); one of Coltrane’s best original lines, in four different takes (“Impressions,” which he’d been working out in concert for several years); a couple of pieces for soprano saxophone which are representative but not stunning (“Untitled Original 11383,” minor-key and modal, and “Untitled Original 11386,” with a pentatonic melody); “One Up, One Down,” a short, wily theme as a pretext for eight minutes of hard-and-fast jamming; and “Slow Blues,” about which more in a minute.

Coltrane was already building albums from disparate sessions, a practice that would soon yield 1963’s Impressions and Live at Birdland, two records that set live and studio tracks side by side. He may have been stockpiling without a clear purpose; he also had to consider what would sell. Since his recording of “My Favorite Things” in 1961—a hit by jazz terms—Coltrane had become recognizable. His subsequent working relationship with Bob Thiele, the head of Impulse!, was based on the notion that he could expand that audience, not shrink it. Six months before the Both Directions session, he’d made a record with Duke Ellington; the day after it, he’d make another with the singer Johnny Hartman. He was entering the popular artist’s paradox of striving to repeat a past success and trying not to run aground on retreads.

The sense of strength and inevitability we associate with Coltrane’s music didn’t just tumble out. It was likely a byproduct of diligence, restlessness, exhausted possibilities, obsession and counter-obsession. He thought about progress. He passed through serial phases of exploring harmonic sequences, modes, and multiple rhythms; when he acknowledged one phase in an interview, he was generally looking for the next. At the height of the classic quartet, he often didn’t have the time or psychic space for study and practice. “I’m always walking around trying to keep my ear open for another ‘Favorite Things’ or something,” he told the writer Ralph Gleason in May, 1961. “I can’t get in the woodshed like I used to. I’m commercial, man.” More: “I didn’t have to worry about it, you know, making a good record, because that wasn’t important. Maybe I should just go back in the woodshed and just forget it.” At the time, a record like Both Directions might have seemed an open admission that he could have used less worry and more woodshed.

What he meant by “another ‘Favorite Things’” might have been a similar act of counterintuition: a sweet, sentimental tune made paranormal, a curiosity that could break out beyond the normal jazz audience and anchor a hit record. If “Vilia” was intended for that role, it isn’t strong enough. “Impressions,” on Both Directions, in its first known studio recording—especially take 3—sounds sublimely focused. But I’m not sure Coltrane plays it here any better than he did sixteen months earlier at the Village Vanguard, the live version he’d choose later in 1963 when finally issuing the tune, on the record of that name. (It’s complicated, I know.)

“Slow Blues” is the one. There is no narrative here, as there sometimes was with Coltrane’s originals; it is not expressly about love or hardship or religious joy. But Coltrane turns himself inside-out. First, he phrases in bare, hesitant strokes, using negative space; then he begins to whip phrases around, repeating them up and down the horn in rapid, shinnying patterns, reaching for inexpressible sounds, getting ugly. (McCoy Tyner’s solo, directly following Coltrane’s, is tidy and elegant, thorough in its own radically contrasting way.) There is the idea of the “new,” and then there is something like this track, which transcends the burden of newness........
yanqui

climber
Balcarce, Argentina
Jul 2, 2018 - 08:26am PT
Is there a deficit of funk in the Jazz thread?

[Click to View YouTube Video]

[Click to View YouTube Video]
Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Topic Author's Reply - Jul 2, 2018 - 10:47am PT

Minoru Muraoka

 Take five

[Click to View YouTube Video]

 Ying & Yang

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Tarbuster

climber
right here, right now
Jul 7, 2018 - 11:05am PT
Willow Weep for Me

Sarah Vaughan
[Click to View YouTube Video]

Cannonball Adderley
[Click to View YouTube Video]

Art Tatum
[Click to View YouTube Video]
hooblie

climber
from out where the anecdotes roam
Jul 11, 2018 - 05:02am PT
i don't know ...[Click to View YouTube Video]is this the third time up?
Messages 981 - 1000 of total 1219 in this topic << First  |  < Previous  |  Show All  |  Next >  |  Last >>
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