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- Past hour
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Junior Cook Quintet, You Leave Me Breathless (Steeplechase) The only Christmas album in my collection.
- Today
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You made no mention of the Horace Silver Band with Mobley. I find it a close call between the Bands with Cook and with Mobley. I prefer both to the the ones that came later.
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Percy plays great there!
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That definitely sounds like an interesting area for exploration and explanation/analysis. I’ve only recently come to the conclusion that Cook (plus Mitchell, with an honorable mention to Louis Smith) were really the best — and maybe even ideal — front-line for Horace. I slept on Horace quite a bit for a decade or two because — for me — I usually found his albums with JoeHen slightly lacking. Don’t want to overstate that — but for me they never seemed to quite click as well/hard as I felt they should. But it’s only been in the last half-dozen-years that I went back and really spent some time with the Mitchell/Cook Silver band — which ON PAPER (for me) always seemed like it ought to have been somehow ‘lesser’ than the Silver albums that came after Mitchell/Cook. (And that’s entirely my own biases that frankly let me come to that utterly wrong conclusion.) Now I think Cook maybe did some of his very best work with Silver — and those bands with him were among the best things Silver ever recorded.
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More Bobby Gordon, with another Bob. Booby Gordon and Bob Wilbur “Yearnings” Arbors cd
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Very happy to share two tunes featuring Percy France and Papa Jo Jones ... I learned a couple of months back that Percy was the last tenor saxophonist to play in Papa Jo Jones & Friends but was so disappointed to not find any recorded examples of those gigs to date. But a WKCR Benefit at The West End is better than none. With Loren Schoenberg (piano) and Skinny Burgan (bass):
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“Bobby Gordon Plays Joe Marsala: Low Register” Another great Bobby Gordon cd on Arbors. He’s a great interpreter of 'thirties swing music in particular by clarinet leaders. Bobby Gordon-clarinet Randy Reinhart-trumpet Keith Ingham-piano, celeste and arrangements Russell George-violin James Chirillo-guitar Vince Giodano-bass Arnie Kinsella and Steve Little-drums
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What Classical Music Are You Listening To?
Peter Friedman replied to StarThrower's topic in Classical Discussion
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I like to tell my students that when they solo they're a guest of the song and to treat their host with respect. As a soloist you're there to enhance the song, not to use it exclusively for harmonic gratification. A tune's identity is more than a set of chord changes. Charles McPherson, who in addition to being one of the great instrumentalists is also IMO one of the best verbalizers about jazz. From one interview: "See, here we go with, “There’s a lot of ways to be a typewriter,” because a lot of people chase chord changes. But harmony and chord changes are just there as collateral. They tell you what group of notes might be valid for the moment, but they don’t tell you what’s the best note for the moment. Your eyes can tell you right notes if you know harmony, but your ears — if you got some — will tell you the best notes out of the many right notes. It’s up to the melodic ear to eke out the greatest four or five notes for the moment. That’s when the phrasing and rhythm comes in.... ... But Bird and Dizzy played so well and so correctly that it was very easy for the younger players to start treating chord changes as the greatest thing of all. There’s a danger there because chords are not the “reason why.” Chords shouldn’t be the jumpstart of your creation. Your jumpstart of creation is your melodic ear and rhythm. The chords are there, they’re like parts of speech. Nouns, verbs, prepositional phrases, adverb phrases: they’re meaningless on their own, but they’re there to create sentences, paragraphs and stories. But parts of speech are not the reason for your creation. When you get ready to speak your thoughts and express your feelings, you’re not saying, well now let me use a noun or a verb or an adverb. It’s the same when you play an A minor seven. An A minor seven has no dignity unto itself. It just is what it is. The A minor seven is just acting as part of speech, helping you express your emotion. A lot of the players after bebop on became top heavy with the harmony. Now we have a bunch of players who will basically chase chord changes, that’s all it is. If they’re grammatically correct, they think they’re great, you know? And that’s part of it, of course. At least you’re in the ballpark if you outline the changes. But that ain’t the main event!"
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That definitely makes sense ... a decent editor would have caught it especially for a book in a Lives of Musicians series.
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Well, it’s been a long haul but I’m finally in the home stretch. It’s not a page turner and can’t be treated as such.
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As a "younger" regular at the Star Cafe perhaps my name should have been substituted for Joe Albany, although I did meet him there. He showed up on a couple of occasions.
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I like the sound of JT’s first album
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I was pleased when Lewis Porter asked me for a copy of my 2007 phone interview with Sonny Rollins during the summer, which was done to write a feature in Hot House promoting his 50th anniversary concert at Carnegie Hall. It was published today on his Playback with Lewis Porter Substack page, here is the link: https://lewisporter.substack.com/p/sonny-rollins-phone-interview-with I asked Lewis if I could edit the interview, as phone interviews inevitably have gaffs that would be edited out of a transcription or radio broadcast, but he believes it is important to share the conversation as it happened, He also shared a link to my original Hot House article. The interview has never been broadcast or shared on line in any form. Merry Christmas, everyone!
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CD 1
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If you want to hear some "liturgical jazz," there is Mary Lou Williams' Black Christ of the Andes. Below is a link to Gayle Murchison's study of the piece and a link to "St Martin de Porres" https://tools.bard.edu/wwwmedia/fisher-files/Murchison Mary Lou Williams.pdf
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