
Д.Д.
Members-
Posts
4,472 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Donations
0.00 USD
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Blogs
Everything posted by Д.Д.
-
Thanks, it's on "the list"... (as are many of those Verve LPRs, too many) This is turning into a very expensive discussion we are having here!
-
before I got to the end of your review I thought that you were describing something very like his album Karma, which is where the "creator has a master plan" line comes from. I was shocked when I first heard that run of Impulse albums. I had been expecting something more in line with his playing on Coltrane's Live in Seattle. ANybody heard Pharoah's disc on ESP btw? I still haven't checked this one out.
-
I've never heard the Mosaic but those other ones (Free Fall and the 1961 set) are the only discs by him I have heard, and I enjoy all of them. I was lucky enough to find those at the local library back before I moved. Get the recent The Easy Way Verve reissue. It's from pre-Free Fall era (in a trio with Jim Hall and Ray Brown), so it is quite different, but very charming, clever and quetely experimental (but much less so than the Free Fall trio, of course). It should be available cheap everywhere.
-
OK, I start with the ones I didn'tlike Sunny Murray / Charles Gayle "Illuminators" This is a well-recorded duo on Audible Hiss records from mid 90s. I think it's OOP by now. To begin wiht, Gayle plays piano almost exclusively, and his style is adequate, but nothing special, IMO. Not particularly focused... Monkish a bit... not bad in general, but really nothing that could hold my attention. And then (and I know I now have strong chances of getting into P.L.M.'s ignore list) - I really don't like Sunny Murray's playing. Neither here, not in 90% of CDs I heard him at, including the famous 60s stuff). It sounds awkward and even random somtimes, extremely heavy-handed (no subtlety or newance - just constant muddy waves, IMO), and monotone. Morever, this trademark constant high-hat pulse is extremely annoying to me. Overall, if we take the first generaton of "avant garde" drummers - Sunny Murray, Rashied Ali and Milford Graves (and this is of course a grand simplification to cite only these three as first "jazz avant" drummers), I much more prefere the latter two (well, Graves is one of my favorite drumers of all times, together with Blackwell and Oxley). I remeber reading Sunny Murray's interview in which he said he was supposed to be Coltrane's drummer after Elvin left (take it for what it's worth), and just can't imagine them fitting well... Next is Pharoah Sanders "Live At The East" (Impulse! Japan) -and also a pretty big for me. First I would like to note that Sanders' tenot sound is one of my favorite sounds in music. His best solos (as the on on Coltrane's "Olatunji" concert.... pheeeew). I love the man, to put it short. So I didn't hesitate spending some big $$ on this OOP, and was disappointed quite a bit. To me this sounds like flower-power find-the-peace-in-your-inner-self type of jazzy improv. Easy pretty hummable mid-to-slow tempo "spiritual jazz" themes repeated all over again (I guess you should be clapping along.. or shake your tambourine), pink volcano piano solos, some droning idian instrument at the background (tampura?), chants (of course), a little bit of groove, some catharsis saxophone screaming (but not too much)... Predictable and very dated. I was expecting some interesting interplay from two bassists (one is Cecil McBeee, the second one I don't remember) - but they just play some groovy walking lines, pretty somilar to each other - nothing particularly challenging or exciting. I really find this all much more "commercial" that later-perioud Pharoah playing mainstream (which I like). Of course, I cannot say that Sanders was just following the trend or was not sincere in what he was doing - not at all, but the result despite its obvious "spiritual" inclination sounds very shallow to me. I have a couple other Sanders' Impulse! CDs, and I think they follow more or less the same pattern as on this one (the one I remember has Leon Thomas singing "the creator has a master plan..."), except for Tauhid, which I thought was beautiful (with some amazing Henry Grimes).
-
I don't have this one, but I have some other post-Columbia - pre-Savant releases, and I can imagine what this one can sound like. SINOW. I also have some early Blythe stuff (on India Navigation), and it also does not exactly click with me for some reason - all the components are there, but something just does not work out. However, I would highly recommend Blythe's recent work: Arthur Blythe - "Focus" (Savant, 2002) I think here everything goes together just perfectly. A very nice band (interesting configuration: alto-tuba-marimba-drums), Blythe's sound is rich and beautiful here (and it is far from that on his earlier recordings), solid compositions (some of them are pretty old ones) with great variety - from ballads to New Orleans (and tuba sets some nice grooves here) to some (slightly) more out stuff. Blythe playing here is very authoritative and mature - you feel the man knows where he is going and is happy about himself. Marimba adds additional warmth and tuba makes at all more tight and direct, IMO. And they play "In a Sentimental Mood"! Not entirely satidfying version, but it is such a gorgeous composition that hearing it even in a non-optimal performance is a treat. Original. Savant website has some samples. Blythe released on more CD after Focus, also on Savant, and I'll be getting it in dure course as well.
-
Seconding this recommendation. I saw Iyer and Mahanthappa as a duo, Raw Materials, at this summer's North Sea Jazz Festival an Mahanthappa smoked - lots of shaking my head in disbelief at his playing, accompanied by slightly audible "owwww"s and "poooof"s. OK, I am persuaded
-
I've been curious about this CD for quite some time now! - but was not sure about how active the label still is... Ask our friends at indiejazz - they might be able to procure it for you. Or any of the musicians invovled, perhaps? I'll give it a bit more time. If I don't get my disk, I believe I'll send an e-mail to Garth Powell and Matthew Goodheart. Heey, looks like you can bu it from some market sellers at amazon.com: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN%3DB...7415423-1149435
-
I've been curious about this CD for quite some time now! - but was not sure about how active the label still is... Ask our friends at indiejazz - they might be able to procure it for you. Or any of the musicians invovled, perhaps?
-
While on vacation, I was not forgetting about my Rat duties, so I was listening (attentievely, for once) to a bit of music. Will elaborate later, so just a snapshot of the horrors is to come: Kate Bush "Dreaming" Joelle Leandre / Mat Maneri / Joel Ryan / Christophe Marguet "For Flowers" (even , I would say) Old and New Dreams (ECM) Viram Jasani / Gurdev Singh / Ustad Latif Ahmed Khan "Rags, Malkauns and Megh" Beaver Harris "African Drums" Sunny Murray / Charles Gayle "Illuminators" Gene Ammons "Boss Tenor" Lovano /Osby "Friendly Fire" Michel Portal "Arivederchi le Chouartse" Pharoah Sanders "Live At The East"
-
While it's nice that it sold out, it's a shame that it's OOP. I would assume Gianni has about 494 copies left. Anybody in terestd in geting a copy can contact him directly: gebbia@giannigebbia.com. BTW, from Gebbia's website: "... then two new recordings at Sonoma State Music College one new solo and the second one a deep duo with Gino Robair who also played piano!". I want both, of course.
-
If I remember correctly, there is a really powerful and quite "out" version of Footprints on some Freeman live CD. If it is on this one, then this CD is worth hearing if only for this track alone. I think I also have a CD of Von Freeman with Chico Freeman (BIrthday at Blue Note or something like that) and I remember it being pretty boring, mainly due to Chico's playing which I find absolutely bland.
-
New release by great Jean-Jacques Avenel on Songlines (SACD hybrid!): http://www.songlines.com/warabacontent.html Looks like this is some African folk music-influenced thing. I'll get it! Are there any other releases under Avenel's name, btw?
-
I have Berne's CD called "Ornery People" - it's a duo with Michael Formanek (bass), and I find it absolutely outstanding. I also have some larger band projects (on JMT) and they seemed very dry dense and soulless to me. Now this ubu guy sent me some more of Berne - I'll listen and will report here.
-
They could do special limited editions: "funny rat edition: no aebi overdubs"... ubu That would be the karaoke version, right?
-
What, too much laughing last night and too much coffee this morning?
-
This is a wonderful disc indeed - warm and relaxed, and with very good sound. As for Aebi being overdubbed later, who knows what was the reason... probably she was not in a good voice on the day when the band recorded... or Roswell Rudd might have had some totally disastrous experience with some female vocalists before, so he insisted that there would be no vocals while he is in the studio.
-
I would assume it refers to additional material not on original LP.
-
No Tony, you would not be wrong. Revolt is a terrific disc! Besides Moondoc, who is great here - very bluesy and lyrical, we have Khan Jamal providing some unique vibes playing - also very lyrical, but also very inventive - his solos are compositions by themselves. Together with Walt Dickerson (it's such a shame the man is retired from music now!), Jamal is one of my favirite vibists. Check out his great trio disc called Three with Johny Dyani and Pierre Dorge on SteepleChase.
-
Did a search for Solal at amazon.fr - rather large discogrpaphy. And look what the European BN guys came up with:
-
All JMTs are OOP, but hopefully they will all get eventually reissued on Winter & Winter (http://www.winterandwinter.com). Of later Solal I have Solal-Griffin duo on Dreyfus (I guess it's after 1995), and I find it very charming, if not exactly a masterpiece. Also Solal's solo in Jazz'n'emotion series is very good (recommended by you-know-who) - but this is probably before 1995. Solal is the man. Portal, I don't have too much hope for (having seen him live several times in the last 5 years).
-
According to Sunny Murray (not the most reliable source), Dolphy was supposed to join a little modern jazz combo for a tour in the end of '64. Not just some combo, but this one: Ayler Cherry Peacock Murray And Dolphy. That could be he-he, for sure.
-
D O N ' T Y O U D A R E M Y F R I E N D ! ! ! (you won't be my friend anymore ) Before I make any further comment, let me work through my Dolphy collection again.
-
Such an insult. The Cafe Montmartre sessions were originally released on Danish Debut LPs. First one was 'Live at the Cafe Montmartre'. Second was 'Nefertiti, The Beautiful One Has Come'. This one had a Marte Roling cover which was 'adapted' from one of a series of Cecil Taylor photos I took back in 1965 (old story!). The full session was reissued on a double LP by Arista in 1975. The double LP was also issued under the title 'Nefertiti, The Beautiful One Has Come'. The content of the two LPs have appeared on a number of CD issues (on the Freedom and Black Lion labels). The Revenant CD has two additional alternates of 'D Trad That's What' and 'Call' that have not been issued before.
-
Yeah, P.L.M., what do you think, you are in for relaxin here?!! Gotta justify your GROOVER status!! YOu'de better drop everything you're doing and prepare an extended analysis of Solal/Portal NOW!