clifford_thornton Posted yesterday at 02:49 AM Author Report Posted yesterday at 02:49 AM 3 hours ago, JSngry said: Love that one. Have the Japanese LP pressing with that cover as well. Probably the first place I (and most people outside of Japan) heard Hideo Ichikawa. Quote
felser Posted yesterday at 03:28 AM Report Posted yesterday at 03:28 AM 37 minutes ago, clifford_thornton said: Love that one. Have the Japanese LP pressing with that cover as well. Probably the first place I (and most people outside of Japan) heard Hideo Ichikawa. Definitely was for me. I need to pull that one out and re-listen, it's been a long time. Looong album sides on that one, 29+ minutes each. Quote
Guy Berger Posted yesterday at 03:28 AM Report Posted yesterday at 03:28 AM Incredible drummer. Hard to imagine Miles’s music evolving from “Directions” to On the Corner without his presence, and his appearances on ECM as a sideman/leader were usually of extremely high quality. Strong agreement on Special Edition and Album Album being the best of that band’s work, though all 4 of the ECMs are worth hearing. Quote
JSngry Posted yesterday at 04:49 AM Report Posted yesterday at 04:49 AM 1 hour ago, clifford_thornton said: Love that one. Have the Japanese LP pressing with that cover as well. Probably the first place I (and most people outside of Japan) heard Hideo Ichikawa. Got it when I was 16 or so, a cutout. Only kinda got it then, time took care of that. Interesting now to hear the title track alongside some of Chick's SS material with Maupin sound like the goings on of the Lost Quintet - which at the time unless you had heard them live you HADN'T heard them! You HAVEN'T? Seriously don't that that was the intent, but history makes it's own jokes sometimes. Quote
BFrank Posted yesterday at 05:23 AM Report Posted yesterday at 05:23 AM 4 hours ago, Milestones said: Special Edition and Album Album, in particular, are excellent records. For sure Quote
Pim Posted yesterday at 09:18 AM Report Posted yesterday at 09:18 AM He was among the greatest. RIP Quote
ghost of miles Posted yesterday at 04:12 PM Report Posted yesterday at 04:12 PM Hank Shteamer on The Infinity of Jack DeJohnette. Hard to imagine the jazz world without Jack DeJohnette in it anymore. Quote
sgcim Posted 23 hours ago Report Posted 23 hours ago He even recorded and gigged with the Bill Evans Trio back in 1967-68. RIP. Quote
mhatta Posted 23 hours ago Report Posted 23 hours ago RIP. Papa Joe, Buddy, Klook, Roy, Art B, Art T, Max, Sherry, Philly Joe, Elvin, Tony, Billy, Paul, and now Jack... each had their own distinct personality, and you could tell who it was just by hearing them play. They're all gone now. Am I the only one who thinks drums have become so bland lately? I also quite like Jack as a modal pianist. Quote
clifford_thornton Posted 22 hours ago Author Report Posted 22 hours ago I quite enjoy that Jackeyboard album. “Jazz” is in a weird place and it’s not only one instrument (or set of instruments) that has a blandness problem. But that’s another thread! Quote
T.D. Posted 22 hours ago Report Posted 22 hours ago After spinning the "Special Edition" box I'm listening to some more offbeat recordings with Jack: The duet with Foday Musa Suso Bill Evans Trio At the Montreux Jazz Festival Nick Brignola On a Different Level (my favorite Brignola album) Quote
Milestones Posted 9 hours ago Report Posted 9 hours ago Yes, Jack was great for his amazing skills and his unique style--that's why he is up there with Max, Tony, Elvin, Art, and those true greats. There are some fine drummers our there, like Joey Baron and Bill Stewart. But I think they are a level or two down from Jack. Quote
clifford_thornton Posted 8 hours ago Author Report Posted 8 hours ago 11 hours ago, JSngry said: And then there was Compost... Never connected with them, but that’s probably on me. There are definitely a lot of fine (at a minimum) drummers on the scene! But the working situations leave a lot to be desired and I think that has a detrimental effect on the “feel” of the music. It’s not so lived-in, nor is it particularly cutthroat. Quote
Steve Reynolds Posted 7 hours ago Report Posted 7 hours ago (edited) 15 hours ago, mhatta said: RIP. Papa Joe, Buddy, Klook, Roy, Art B, Art T, Max, Sherry, Philly Joe, Elvin, Tony, Billy, Paul, and now Jack... each had their own distinct personality, and you could tell who it was just by hearing them play. They're all gone now. Am I the only one who thinks drums have become so bland lately? I also quite like Jack as a modal pianist. Not listening to the great drummers of today. Blessed to be seeing Gerry Hemingway tonight at The Stone. It’s actually a golden age for drummers. The older guys like Hemingway, Hamid Drake, Paul Lytton, Han Bennink & Andrew Cyrille still playing at a very high level. the slightly younger drummers than the old dudes like Randy Peterson, Gerald Cleaver, Tom Rainey, Mark Sanders & Steve Noble are incredible. then we have Tyshawn Sorey, Ches Smith, Nasheet Waits, etc. the real gap is we don’t have many under 40 drummers making their mark. Not sure why a few have not emerged as of yet. Especially here in NYC. Edited 7 hours ago by Steve Reynolds Quote
clifford_thornton Posted 7 hours ago Author Report Posted 7 hours ago I agree with the names you mention. Nasheet I first saw with Andrew Hill and Peter Brötzmann (separately) almost 25 years ago. He’s excellent. I don’t know that recordings always capture these artists’ work well, but that has always been the case. Quote
HutchFan Posted 7 hours ago Report Posted 7 hours ago 44 minutes ago, Steve Reynolds said: the real gap is we don’t have many under 40 drummers making their mark. Not sure why a few have not emerged as of yet. Especially here in NYC. Marcus Gilmore? He's 39. Quote
clifford_thornton Posted 6 hours ago Author Report Posted 6 hours ago I really like Joey Sullivan, who’s based in Philly. I don’t believe he’s even 30. Quote
Steve Reynolds Posted 4 hours ago Report Posted 4 hours ago 2 hours ago, clifford_thornton said: I really like Joey Sullivan, who’s based in Philly. I don’t believe he’s even 30. I’m a fan & a friend of Joey. He’s well under 30. He’s getting better too. He’s very good with his assorted cymbals. Got a bit of Lytton in him. 3 hours ago, clifford_thornton said: I agree with the names you mention. Nasheet I first saw with Andrew Hill and Peter Brötzmann (separately) almost 25 years ago. He’s excellent. I don’t know that recordings always capture these artists’ work well, but that has always been the case. Nasheet for one is never well served on record compared to live. Rainey is another. Hard for their dynamics & sound to shine on record. Ches Smith is another. His astonishing power live in a small room never translates to recordings. Plus as I’ve seen lots of the NYC based drummers up to dozens of times, I get very very spoiled. Certainly Drake, Hemingway, Sanders & Peterson come across better on recordings than the above 3 examples Quote
felser Posted 4 hours ago Report Posted 4 hours ago I know I saw Beaver Harris live twice in the 70's (once with Shepp, once in a group with Hannibal Peterson and George Adams), and he blew me away in person to a degree that never happened on the dozens of recordings of him. So I don't think it's a totally new phenomenon. Quote
ep1str0phy Posted 2 hours ago Report Posted 2 hours ago (edited) DeJohnette was a giant. I saw him live only once - in a transcendent trio with Ravi Coltrane and Matthew Garrison - and I marveled at his ability to make a large hall sound small. He had an uncanny time feel, but more than anything else, I appreciated his talents as a texturalist. Considering the fact that he came out of that Miles/Jackie McLean continuum of shredding post-bop drummers, it's amazing what he could do with space and timbre. That final Special Edition record with the AACM guys is pretty extraordinary in that way. (I also like Wadada's The Great Lakes Suites, with Threadgill and John Lindberg, as a recent example of DeJohnette's work in freer contexts.) I second what Steve says about appreciating our giants while they're still here. Cyrille is my hero and a friend, but I sincerely believe that people still don't understand how remarkable he is. There are a host of elder statespeople, like Hamid, Michael Zerang, Gerald Cleaver, Donald Robinson, Chad Taylor, Suzie Ibarra, Marc Edwards, and so on who are still issuing relevant and powerful work. More of an implicit part of the conversation, but the calculus of the music has just changed a lot. Things that seem "new" or woefully contemporary, like the drumming of a Chris Dave or Thomas Pridgen, have been well and truly digested at this point. In the age of new media, music moves incredibly fast. IMO the biggest issue is that art moves too fast, and kids now are tasked with internalizing innovation without accumulating the lived experience that gives that innovation meaning. Edited 2 hours ago by ep1str0phy Quote
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