Rabshakeh Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago The vibraphone has a close relationship as an instrument to the piano, but I can't off the top of my head think of any vibes players who showed a clear relationship to Thelonious Monk's music. Perhaps the high sustained sound of a vibraphone makes Monk's rhythmic concepts less satisfying. Any ideas? Idle curiosity, really. Quote
Joe Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago Milt Jackson is the only vibes player I can think of who recorded with Monk. That's the session that gave us "Misterioso", IIRC. I would say the version of Bobby Hutcherson who's so integral to Grachan Moncur III's EVOLUTION and Dolphy's OUT TO LUNCH is engaging with Monk's concepts. Quote
Rabshakeh Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago I don't really hear much Monk in Jackson. You're right that he played with him but I just don't hear much of it having rubbed off. Hutcherson perhaps a little? But it seems like more of an expansive modal thing to me. Quote
mhatta Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago When Karl Berger plays with Don Cherry, he uses a lot of dissonance, so he sounds a bit like Monk, but his choice of notes is quite different from Monk’s. https://youtu.be/Z62wpWSraTU?si=ns11I4Ga1KQea0Bt Quote
Rooster_Ties Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Teddy Charles, perhaps? Maybe (especially) that first Prestige Jazz Quartet album with Mal, which happens to include as version of “Friday the 13th” — though even without that Monk tune, I’d still be tempted to suggest that album. And there’s an angularity to a number of albums with Charles on vibes. Can’t say that’s enough to qualify as a ‘Monk’ influence specifically — but I’d say they occupy a similar space, at least in my brain. Quote
Rabshakeh Posted 34 minutes ago Author Posted 34 minutes ago Thanks. That angularity is what I am thinking of specifically. Quote
Alexander Hawkins Posted 33 minutes ago Posted 33 minutes ago 4 hours ago, Rabshakeh said: The vibraphone has a close relationship as an instrument to the piano, but I can't off the top of my head think of any vibes players who showed a clear relationship to Thelonious Monk's music. Perhaps the high sustained sound of a vibraphone makes Monk's rhythmic concepts less satisfying. Any ideas? Idle curiosity, really. I guess of course it depends on how we define a 'clear' influence(!), but for a vibraphonist (though this sells him way short - multi-instrumentalist, electronic musician, producer etc.) who knows this music on a really deep level - the amazing Corey Mwamba. Quote
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