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So, What Are You Listening To NOW?


JSngry

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Yes, electric piano.

After a day spent with the Prestige sides, I definitely have a better appreciation of just how much evolving this group did. It was a lot. 

And the defection of Kenny Clarke was not at all a loss. It was an opportunity.

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3 hours ago, JSngry said:

And the defection of Kenny Clarke was not at all a loss. It was an opportunity.

I agree.  Even though Kenny Clarke is one of the most important drummers in jazz history, I think Connie Kay helped John Lewis more fully realize his singular conception.

 

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6 hours ago, Rabshakeh said:

Is this on a record?

It is indeed, and on a very enjoyable one at that!

R-1635785-1329218565.jpeg.jpg

Personally, I think that the period of around 1966-1974 (or whenever it was that they broke up) were the peak years for the band. Start with Live at the Lighthouse and go straight through to Blues On Bach..a very/fully realized band concept not at all hampered by the onus of "experimentation". These guys were done experimenting, they were DOING it.

John Lewis...I hear people who dwell on what he didn't get so good, but what he did get right....it was very right, and there's a lot of it. His comping ( if you must call it that) sets up an architecture for the rest of the group to pivot around...not everybody digs architecture, but if you do, the MJQ of this period has it in a glorious abundance!

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11 minutes ago, JSngry said:

It is indeed, and on a very enjoyable one at that!

R-1635785-1329218565.jpeg.jpg

Personally, I think that the period of around 1966-1974 (or whenever it was that they broke up) were the peak years for the band. Start with Live at the Lighthouse and go straight through to Blues On Bach..a very/fully realized band concept not at all hampered by the onus of "experimentation". These guys were done experimenting, they were DOING it.

John Lewis...I hear people who dwell on what he didn't get so good, but what he did get right....it was very right, and there's a lot of it. His comping ( if you must call it that) sets up an architecture for the rest of the group to pivot around...not everybody digs architecture, but if you do, the MJQ of this period has it in a glorious abundance!

Another LP in my collection due to your enthusiasm for later MJQ from a while back.  Thank you!

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37 minutes ago, JSngry said:

It is indeed, and on a very enjoyable one at that!

R-1635785-1329218565.jpeg.jpg

Personally, I think that the period of around 1966-1974 (or whenever it was that they broke up) were the peak years for the band. Start with Live at the Lighthouse and go straight through to Blues On Bach..a very/fully realized band concept not at all hampered by the onus of "experimentation". These guys were done experimenting, they were DOING it.

John Lewis...I hear people who dwell on what he didn't get so good, but what he did get right....it was very right, and there's a lot of it. His comping ( if you must call it that) sets up an architecture for the rest of the group to pivot around...not everybody digs architecture, but if you do, the MJQ of this period has it in a glorious abundance!

Thanks!

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