Ahmad Jamal

Журнал

  • Covering Duke Ellington broadcast

    Апр 23 2009, 0:53 автор: Uhwelluh

    An couple hours of various covers of Ellington compositions. Decided to throw in several different versions of Duke playing Solitude as an example of the changes he'd make to his own compositions depending on the setting. Next week--spotlight on Duke's rhythm section & vocalists.

    Swing Plus #57
    4/21/09 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
    http://www.kbrpradio.com
    http://twitter.com/kbrp

    1- Hot & Bothered – Mercer Ellington 1984
    2- Solitude – Duke Ellington 1946
    3- Everything But You – Eugenie Baird
    4- I’m Beginning to See the Light – Al Casey
    5- I Like the Sunrise – Mel Torme
    6- Azure – Artie Shaw
    7- Rockin’ In Rhythm – Charlie Barnet 1940
    8- Rocks in My Bed – Joe Turner
    9- Warm Valley – Marty Paich
    10- Solitude (alt) – Duke Ellington, Charles Mingus, Max Roach 1962
    11- I’m Just a Lucky So & So – Ella Fitzgerald
    12- Main Stem – Lambert, Hendricks & Ross
    13- Mood Indigo – Sidney Bechet 1941
    14- It Don’t Mean a Thing – Stuff Smith
    15- Solitude – Duke Ellington 1965
    16- Ring Dem Bells – Svend Asmussen 1941
    17- Do Nothing Til You Hear From Me – Dinah Shore
    18- Hey, Buddy Bolden – Nina Simone
    19- Ad Lib on Nippon – Tony Overwater & Calefax Reed Quintet
    20- Stevedore Stomp – Kenny Baker 1944
    21- Lady of the Lavender Mist – National Jazz Ensemble 1976
    22- I Didn’t Know About You – Lena Horne
    23- Black Beauty – Ahmad Jamal 1955
    24- Solitude – Duke Ellington 1950
    25- All Too Soon – Peggy Lee
  • Tom Moon @ Books & Books (notes)

    Апр 11 2009, 3:34 автор: Depa1969

    Thu 9 Apr – Tom Moon - 1,000 Recordings To Hear Before You Die: A Listener's Life List

    Thanks to Books & Books, in Coral Gables, FL for hosting Tom Moon!! It was a great and fun event - with a full house - and I enjoyed it a lot!! Wish we could have extended it to a patio party with spinning by Mr. Moon.... Lô Borges, Milton, Elis and much more....

    Also, I assume the author had a good time at his former residence town, while being able to review some of his old friends – who seemed to be in line for an autograph, as myself. Books & Books – bring on the vinyls....

    Very participative audience, which was allowed to interrupt with questions and remarks at any point of the presentation. This could have meaned opening a can of worms but, actually, most of the remarks were indeed appropriate and smart. Only impact was that most likely the playlist that author Moon had planned to spin was affected and reduced. But anyways, below are the artists he selected to throw during this cozy event (wish it could have been longer):

    Ahmad Jamal and his album But Not For Me

    Erik Satie, with the interpretation by a Dutch pianist

    Howlin' Wolf

    Elis Regina

    Lô Borges


    Some new names mentioned to a young member of the audience:
    The Mars Volta
    The Roots
    Arcade Fire
    The White Stripes

    By the way, all names above are mentioned in the book itself. Even Lo Borges, who 'stole' Van Halen's spot... Just kidding...

    Mention by a member of the audience: Stand By Me Project - music as an agent for peace; documentary film. It seems like a new and interesting idea, worth to investigate further. Here is to serendipity...

    Some take out bullet points:

    We don't listen anymore;
    We don't listen in chunks, such as albums as a piece of work representing an artist's specific phase;
    It is the record industry's job to teach about links to the old music; they have responsibility to their catalog - and to link Kanye West to Count Basie. I partially disagree with this point: there is no reason why labels would refrain to make available their most obscure titles - which have already been paid for production wise - and make some extra money with the downloads, without having to produce actual CDs which could rot in a shelf.
    No more common experience to listeners, as a source of discovery of new music - the death of the record store, and its discerned clerks;
    On the other hand, much more access to information - 'long tail'.

    Check the event's images.

    Written on April 10, 2009
  • Generika HiFi Sound Podcast mixed by A*

    Янв 9 2009, 14:51 автор: nutriot



    Hey listeners,

    It’s that time of the month again, or thereabouts.

    A* steps in to fold this month digging deep exploring new waters and delving into unchartered territories. Kicking off with The J.B’s & IG Culture’s Black, A* masterfully sets the tone with an all round funk, brukish & latin affair.

    The Reel People collective fly in like Flynn featuring Omar on Outta Love before this mix glides into the future with the likes of Model 500 & Kaidi & Dego’s supreme Move Over. Look out for Pleasure’s Straight Ahead remixed by the ever progressive Kyoto Jazz Massive & a new cut by South London based collective, Insomniax ; ).

    Carl Craig’s Landcrusing seems as future proof as a sun stroked 69’ SL Mercedes, & on a decidedly Latin tip, Peven Everett blows through setting the pace with Put Your Back Into It. Jose Gonzalez, Soil & Pimp & Jackson Conti drop certified slammers guaranteed to get you track hunting just like Lewis Hamilton did in Sao Paolo…oh wait (sorry Ferrari fans) check track 16 for a hearty reminder…still LMeffinAO at that one.

    All in all definitely one of the most memorable mixes for 2009 & a tremendous way to start. As always…Generika HiFi Sound doing it BIG every time, every year & everywhere.

    oNe, Generika HiFi Sound.

    01. The J.B's - The Grunt Pt 1 & 2
    02. IG Culture - Black
    03. Reel People - Outta Love
    04. Model 500 - Night Drive
    05. 2000Black - Move Over
    06. Reel People - Alibi
    07. Pleasure - Straight Ahead (Kyoto Jazz Massive re-edit)
    08. The Insomniax - untitled
    09. Carl Craig - Landcruising
    10. Eric Roberson - Change For Me
    11. Peven Everett -Put Your Back Into It
    12. IG Culture - Adjusted Perspectives
    13. Jose Gonzalez - All You Deliver
    14. SOIL & "PIMP" Sessions - Dawn
    15. Jackson Conti - Praca Da Republica
    16. Lewis Hamilton - World Champion*
    17. Dam-Funk - Burn Rubber
    18. The Rah Band - Messages In The Stars
    19. Q-Tip - We Fight We Love (ft. Raphael Saadiq)
    20. Michael Jackson - I Can't Help It
    21. Ahmad Jamal - Misdemeanour
    22. Q-Tip - I Believe

    You can download it here
  • Top Albums of 2008

    Дек 7 2008, 5:00 автор: OhItsJustDan

    Well, it's that time again: the time when the new year is so close you can't possibly hold off compiling a "Best of" list for the year you haven't quite moved out of yet. End-of-the-year lists aren't a perfect art, because most people continue to find albums from any given year that will eventually become personal favorites. Still, I like to compile lists at the end of each year, if only to have a snapshot of what really excited me at that point in my life, however different such lists might look if I updated them to reflect my current tastes. Here's what's good for 2008:


    28. Pentemple - O))) Presents...
    sunnO))) live with drums! Not sure about the name-change for this particular release, but the traditional sunnO))) formula works beautifully with drums (something we sort of already heard with the Boris collaboration).


    27. Slim Cessna's Auto Club - Cipher
    Probably the strongest offering from Slim to date, this time around with an especially prominent Munly contribution. Sometimes these guys get a little too goofy for my tastes, but if you're in to demented country-rock, you'll easily find something to like here.


    26. Ahmad Jamal - It's Magic
    There's something special about the way Jamal uses dynamics and silence in his piano playing, and for more than 50 years now he's maintained his unique position among jazz pianists. Great piano trio stuff, with the almighty Idris Muhammad on drums.


    25. Jeff Gauthier Goatette - House of Return
    Jeff Gauthier's label (Cryptogrammophone) generally gets more attention then the man himself, just as Nels Cline gets more attention for his involvement with Wilco than for his jazz outings these days. Both men are remarkable jazz musicians, and this "Goatette" again demonstrated their wide-range of interests and abilities. Sort of like a less extreme Nels Cline Singers with violin added.


    24. William Parker Quartet - Petit Oiseau
    Though William Parker can lay it down with the freest of the free, I prefer him when he's engaging in slightly more structured improvisation. This quartet outing is some of the best stuff I've heard from Parker: tuneful, playful, and just free enough to be a little dangerous, as well.


    23. John Zorn - Filmworks XIX: The Rain Horse
    I know of very few people that like everything John Zorn does. Most people seem to focus on his most extreme musical experiments, characterizing him by his most avant-garde output, rather than his more tuneful recordings. This album is absolutely beautiful. Catchy, lyrical, emotional, you name it. If Zorn has left a sour taste in your mouth on previous occasions, give this a shot. The man really is a genius. An imposing, fearless genius.


    22. The Verve - Forth
    The Verve is one of my favorite artists and have earned this distinction solely from their work before Urban Hymns. I was really, really afraid that this album, written and recorded after a 10 year hiatus, was going to be awful. Actually, it's pretty good. It's not as much a return to the early days as many fans were hoping, but it most certainly isn't Urban Hymns, Part II. For that we can all be thankful.


    21. Dungen - 4
    Though their album art has been getting steadily worse, the music inside is what matters most, and in that respect, Dungen never seems to fail to deliver. While this wasn't as strong as Tio Bitar, it's still all the warm, 60s-laden psych rock you could hope for in 2008.


    20. Grails - Take Refuge in Clean Living
    Of the two albums Grails released this year, this more laid-back, druggy one is the best. I remember when this band was another by-the-numbers post-rock group, but they really seem to have embraced psychedelia and krautrock in the past few years, and I much prefer the results to their earlier stuff. There's so much going on in these songs, it's hard to pick out all of the different instruments. Stoned, groovy goodness, my friends.


    19. Fleet Foxes - Fleet Foxes
    Usually my knee-jerk reaction to albums that get overhyped by indie kids is "Stay away! Stay away!" However, after encountering a few Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young comparisons, I figured I'd give this a spin. I was pleasantly surprised. It's a little too poppy at times for my taste, but I'll be damned if those vocal harmonies don't latch right on to you and hold you tight. I can dig.


    18. Guapo - Elixirs
    This album is epically creepy. I'm not really sure what exactly is so sinister about it, but it has moments that chill me to the bone. If you want a lesson in expert arrangement, give this a spin. Many different instruments are utilized, and the attention to detail is remarkable. I only wish that the album's centerpieces hadn't already been released as an EP a year or so back.


    17. John Zorn - The Dreamers
    Zorn and a group of long-time collaborators doing a survey of the things Zorn does best: Jewish-flavored jazz, surf-rock, avant-funk and more, all very accessible and highly entertaining. This was a good year to get in on Zorn if you weren't familiar with him.


    16. William Parker - Double Sunrise Over Neptune
    Of Parker's two releases this year, this one is king. It features an expanded ensemble and sports a exotic, middle-Eastern influenced sound, complete with soaring, wordless vocals. A few people claim this is what Charles Mingus would be doing if he were still alive.


    15. Brightblack Morning Light - Motion to Rejoin
    I've never been stoned, but I would put money on this album being an accurate example of what it's like to be high and feelin' a groove. These guys (and gals) have a really repetitive, simple formula that they've been milking for a few years now, but for some reason, the result is always irresistible. If you like jamming, reverb, and kickin' back for a looooong time (or even getting high), this Rhodes-laden release is right up your alley.


    14. Dead Meadow - Old Growth
    This isn't the colossus that Feathers was, but it's still Dead Meadow doing what they do best: bluesy, stoner-rock jams with just the slightest psychedelic aura. Still, probably the best way to catch these songs is live: I stand by my belief that Dead Meadow is one of the best live rock bands currently in operation.


    13. Bonnie 'Prince' Billy - Is It the Sea?
    This is a live album of Bonnie being backed by percussionist Alex Neilson and the Irish folk band Harem Scarem. There's some really beautiful renditions of classic Bonnie tracks, all with warm, droney strings and female vocal harmonies. Bonnie himself is pretty spot on vocally, as well. Yet another example of the ways in which Oldham constantly reinvents and reinterprets his works.


    12. Mogwai - The Hawk is Howling
    Aside from the wretched "The Sun Smells Too Loud," this is actually pretty awesome as far as Mogwai albums go. I was among those that viewed Mr. Beast as something of a slump, and as far as I'm concerned, The Hawk is Howling is more than enough evidence that the life has yet to leave this band.


    11. Howlin' Rain - Magnificent Fiend
    The first Howlin' Rain album suffered from some too-loud moments, probably carried over from Ethan Miller's Comets on Fire energy. This time around, he's add a dash of prog, a lot of organ, and some great songwriting. Plus, it's nice to finally hear just what the raspy-ass voice of his can do without being buried in reverb.


    10. Ocean - Pantheon of the Lesser
    Though my heavy metal days are well behind me, I still have a soft spot for doom metal, and no one does it better than Ocean, a band from my home-state of Maine. An average song time for these guys is about 20 minutes, and this album even packs a 35-minute walloper. I wish I could articulate better just what it is that Ocean does that makes them so much better than all the other slow-as-molasses metal bands out there. I guess you'll just have to hear for yourself. Best consumed without interruption.


    9. Bar Kokhba Sextet - Lucifer: Book of Angels, Vol. 10
    Despite the wealth of material available on their previous, 3-disc album, this is actually the first studio recording of Bar Kokhba Sextet, a group of Zornites who interpret Zorn's Masada songs in an extended string-trio format (the additions are guitar, drums and percussion). As to be expected, this stuff is rip-roaring. Marc Ribot is especially noteworthy here. Probably the best Book of Angels addition to date.


    8. Earth - The Bees Made Honey in the Lion's Skull
    Earth pioneered drone metal in the early 90s, and then disappeared for a while. When they returned, they came sporting some sort of weird doom-country, like Ennio Morricone soundtracks played in slow motion. They've only gotten better from there. This album is a bit heavier than Hex, but only in that it has a much more solid low-end, not an abundance of distortion. These guys have transcended their own invention, and are making truly beautiful music.


    7. charles lloyd quartet - Rabo de Nube
    Reed-man Charles Lloyd was hot shit in the late 60s, and a lot of great players cut their teeth in his quartet, including Keith Jarrett, Jack DeJohnette, and Cecil McBee. Now, at the age of 70, Lloyd is still producing great jazz, this time with a band of 30-somethings that do their best to keep him on his toes. Eric Harland is an amazing drummer, and Jason Moran proves to be an interesting pianist, though at times his solos tend to get away from him. Still, this is transcendent stuff, certainly worthy of the string of albums the recharged Lloyd has released in the past 10 years.


    6. Brad Mehldau Trio - Live
    This two-disc live album is an embarrassment of riches. It is difficult to explain just how amazing a pianist Mehldau is. Everything about the way he plays is advanced beyond the understanding of even respectably competent musicians. I can only listen to a little of this at a time, because it quickly becomes an exercise in sensory overload. If there's one piano trio to be paying attention to these days, it's these guys. Plus, they cover "Wonderwall," and it's better than the original Oasis song. Seriously.


    5. Bonnie 'Prince' Billy - Lie Down in the Light
    I've been a Will Oldham fan for a while, particularly of his last effort, The Letting Go. But this. This, my friends, is the culmination of the Bonnie 'Prince' Billy identity. He sings better than ever, his songs are more striking than ever, and the musical accompaniment is stronger and more sophisticated than anything he's employed before. Oldham is well-regarded as a highly consistent artist, but it's insane that he's still producing work this strong, arguably getting better with every album he releases. Hot damn.


    4. Bohren & der Club of Gore - Dolores
    Despite giving up metal in the 80s, these guys have always had an air of "heavy metal" around them, even when dishing up some of the most striking, slow-speed jazz you could hope to hear. While their somewhat sinister proclivities are still present, they aren't quite as prominent as before. Instead, Bohren have settled into a nice groove, and the music presented here is simply beautiful. Glacially slow, delicately arranged, and beautiful. There's nothing else quite like it.


    3. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Dig, Lazarus, Dig!
    This album was my first introduction to Nick Cave, and it was a marvelous introduction indeed. It's also probably some of the best work he's done in quite a long and storied career. It has stomping rockers, it has moody ballads, it has off-kilter rants. And, most importantly, it does them all equally well, and better than most younger bands can dream to.


    2. Bennie Maupin Quartet - Early Reflections
    Bennie Maupin took a 20 year break between albums where he took front-man duty, and really it's a shame. The Jewel in the Lotus is a classic of the 70s, and this album is so goddamn good, you can't help but wonder how many amazing albums he could have released during his years sticking solely to side-man status. A lot of the success of this album is owed to the backing band of young Polish musicians Maupin has been playing with as of late, in particular the truly incredible piano playing of Michal Tokaj. He'll be a name to watch in the future. This stuff gives me faith in the future of jazz. Spiritual in a way even atheist bastards like me can deeply appreciate.


    1. Nik Bärtsch's Ronin - Holon
    Holy crap. This has taken hold of me and won't let me go. "Zen funk" is the tag that's going around. That sort of explains it. Everything about this group is rhythm-oriented, and every piece contributes so perfectly to the whole of whatever is going on at any given moment that your head could explode. This stuff would be trance-inducing if it didn't get your brain so worked up. It's ritual groove, and it is probably the coolest thing happening in jazz right now. I can't even be articulate about this. Grrrrgleeff.
  • IL JAZZ A BOLOGNA: 1984-1988

    Окт 24 2008, 11:38 автор: pressjazz

    IL RITORNO DEL JAZZ CLUB DI BOLOGNA E DI ALBERTO ALBERTI
    (1984-1988)
    L’Assessore Soster fu quindi costretta nel febbraio 1984 ad accettare la collaborazione del Jazz Club di Bologna (direttore artistico Alberto Alberti) per quella che sarà l’ultima, ma senz’altro la più apprezzata, stagione di Filippo Bianchi quale direttore artistico di Jazz in Bologna. I nomi di Mc-Coy Tyner, Phil Woods, Lee Konitz, Jay McShan di nuovo richiamano schiere di appassionati. La rassegna ’84 - ’85 è affidata dalla Soster direttamente al Jazz Club pur con fondi veramente esigui ed il pubblico torna ad affollare la sala Europa per il grande ritorno del mitico Dizzy Gillespie. Seguiranno Chet Bakere Cedar Walton, Illinois Jacquet e Red Norvo, e tanti altri jazzisti famosi.
    La stagione 1986 fu affidata ancora al Jazz Club dal nuovo Assessore Riccomini, con un budget ben più importante; si aprì con Sarah Vaughan e proseguì con una serie di concerti prestigiosi. Negli anni di Filippo Bianchi la rassegna aveva trovato un ulteriore sostegno economico nella sponsorizzazione della Cassa di Risparmio, sostituita negli anni di gestione del Jazz Club dalla Banca del Monte di Bologna e Ravenna, alla quale si affiancò nell’’85-’86 la Volvo Italia e l’Unipol. Ciò dimostrò ancora una volta come il jazz, se opportunamente gestito e proposto, sia in grado di suscitare notevole interesse anche nell’ambito di enti privati, che se vogliono, possono con il loro sostegno contribuire ampiamente a rendere realizzabili programmi e progetti anche molto ambiziosi purché mirati a migliorare sempre più il livello artistico dei concerti.
    Dal 1986 il Jazz Club, dal punto di vista dell’impostazione generale, volle dilatare la rassegna primaverile fino a realizzare una vera e propria stagione che permettesse ai bolognesi di ascoltare del buon jazz dall’autunno inverno fino a quasi l’inizio dell’estate, predisponendo una cadenza mensile per i concerti. La rassegna “Jazz Bologna ‘87” fu inaugurata il 13 novembre 1986 al Palasport con un concerto, che si può senza esagerazione definire storico, di Miles Davis e del suo gruppo. Suonando per ben due ore e mezza, Miles mandò in delirio i 6.500 spettatori presenti, in gran parte giovani, che gli tributarono un vero e proprio trionfo. E che si trattasse di un evento eccezionale (Miles mancava dall’Italia da 13 anni) fu ricordato da Repubblica che definì quel concerto l’evento jazzistico dell’anno. A quell’epoca Alberti era il manager di Miles Davis. La rassegna continuò con il trio di Petruccianied altri eventi di rilievo.
    La rassegna “Jazz Bologna ‘88” (Assessore Sinisi) portò a Bologna il quartetto di Archie Shepp, Stan Getz, Ahmad Jamal.
  • Jazz stuff I'm longing for to buy on vinyl

    Окт 6 2008, 11:06 автор: Afuera

    John Coltrane - Giant Steps
    John Coltrane - A love supreme
    John Coltrane - My favourite things
    John Coltrane - Blue Train
    Miles Davis - Kind of Blue
    Miles Davis - Bitches brew
    Miles Davis - Steamin' With the Miles Davis Quintet
    Miles Davis - Sketches of Spain
    Miles Davis - My funny valentine
    Buddy Rich - Big Swing Face
    Buddy Rich - The roar of 74'
    Buddy Rich - Blues Caravan
    Buddy Rich & Max Roach - Rich Versus Roach
    Max Roach - It's time
    Max Roach - Percussion Bitter Sweet
    Max Roach - Parisian Sketches
    Clifford Brown & Max Roach - At basin street
    Dinah Washington - Dinah Jams!
    Dizzy Gillespie - For Musicians Only [with Stan Getz & Sonny Stitt]
    Elvin Jones - illumination!
    Elvin Jones - Puttin' it together
    Abbey Lincoln - Abbey is blue
    Charles Mingus - The black saint and the sinner lady
    Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers - Ugetsu
    Louis Armstrong - Plays W.C Handy
    Herbie Hancock - Empyrian Isles
    Herbie Hancock - Takin' off
    Herbie Hancock - Maiden Voyage
    Dave Brubeck - Time Out
    Billy Cobham - Spectrum
    Oscar Peterson Trio - Night train
    Gene Krupa & Buddy Rich - Krupa and Rich
    Gene Krupa & Buddy Rich - The Drum Battle at JATP
    Wayne Shorter - Speak no evil
    Bill Evans - Interplay
    Count Basie - One O'Clock jump
    Ahmad Jamal - Live at the pershing (But not for me)
    Lee Morgan - Search for the new land
    Lee Morgan - The Rumproller
    Lee Morgan - The Procrastinator
    Lee Morgan - The Cooker
    Duke Ellington - Money Jungle
    Ornette Coleman - The Shape Of Jazz To Come
    Stan Kenton - New Concepts of Artistry in Rhythm
    Yusef Lateef - Eastern Sounds

    will add quite a few in the near future!
  • Who've you seen play live?

    Июн 10 2008, 10:58 автор: F_Hole

    I'm getting so fucking old I ought to make a list of musicians I've seen play live.

    If there's any advice I can glean from this attempt, upon reflection, it would be: go see the name acts that everybody goes to see. Our crowd usually tried to avoid the lowest common denominator acts, and now, years later I wish I'd gone to see, in my generation for example, say, The Stones (with Brian Jones); acts that were always around, yet I never saw because everyone else was going to see them.

    I'll try a chronologic approach (and I'm not saying I'm proud of every act I saw):

    Jr. High:

    The Rascals
    Mitch Ryder
    The Critters

    High School:

    Iron Butterfly
    Frank Zappa and The Mothers Of Invention (the Absolutely Free band)
    Jethro Tull
    Emerson, Lake & Palmer
    James Cotton
    Cream
    Terry Reid
    Edgar Winter
    Buddy Miles Express
    Pink Floyd (the Atom Heart Mother band)
    Herbie Hancock (the Maiden Voyage group)
    Freddie Hubbard (the Red Clay band)
    Weather Report (1st incarnation)
    John McLaughlin and the Mahavishnu Orchestra (Inner Mounting Flame was due out soon)
    Sonny Rollins
    Pharoah Sanders
    Norman Connors
    McCoy Tyner
    Sonny Fortune
    Sam Rivers

    I just missed seeing Duke Ellington's small band @ The Rainbow Room, and Jimi Hendrix, New Year's Eve @ the Fillmore East (all to my eternal loss and damnation).

    College ('70's): God let's see, it's so hard to remember:
    Teddy Wilson
    Howard McGhee
    Bill Evans
    Ahmad Jamal
    Cecil Taylor
    Archie Shepp
    Max Roach
    Frank Lowe
    Lowell Davidson
    Charles Mingus
    Ricky Ford
    Freddie Hubbard
    Gary Burton
    Pat Metheny
    Larry Coryell
    Dexter Gordon
    Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis
    Scott Hamilton
    Claudio Roditi
    Dave Samuels
    Barney Kessel
    Herb Ellis
    Dizzy Gillespie
    Herb Pomeroy
    The Widespread Depression Orchestra
    Art Blakey
    Jaki Byard
    Mary Lou Williams
    Seiji Ozawa with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, performing Charles Ives Fourth Symphony.

    I'll keep adding as I keep remembering. God, I'll never remember in chrono order, I'll just start trying to remember the acts I saw in New York in the '80's & 90's:

    Doc Cheatham
    Benny Carter
    Sonny Stitt
    Dexter Gordon
    Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis
    Hank Jones
    Tommy Flanagan
    Jimmy Rowles
    Barry Harris
    Miles Davis
    Joanne Brackeen
    Ruby Braff
    Count Basie
    Dizzy Gillespie, I once got to see him front a big band with Benny Carter in Washington Square, NYC, as well as many other dates.
    Freddie Hubbard
    Jon Faddis
    george kelly
    Panama Francis
    The Brecker Brothers
    Tom Scott
    Al Haig
    Joe Albany
    Lee Konitz
    Heywood Henry
    Clark Terry
    Illinois Jacquet
    Major Holley
    George Mraz
    Jimmy Wood (played on several Lady Day dates)
    Earl May
    Tal Farlow
    Joe Puma
    Chuck Wayne
    Zoot Sims & Al Cohn, w/ Jimmy Rowles (Tony Bennett was in the audience)
    The Mel Lewis Orchestra (standing in front of me on the Village Vanguard steps waiting to get in, Mr. Pepper Adams himself, one of my heroes [I used to double on bari sax])
    Phil Woods
    Stan Getz
    Jo Jones (of classic Basie fame)
    Eddie Locke
    Brooks Kerr
    Ted Sturgis (Mohawk!)
    The Modern Jazz Quartet
    Cedar Walton
    Harold Ashby
    Junior Cook
    Percy France
    Scott Hamilton
    Warren Vaché
    Kenny Davern
    Bob Wilber
    Sammy Price
    Panama Francis
    Milt Jackson and Ray Brown
    Mike Ledonne
    Tardo Hammer
    Michael Weiss
    Howard Alden
    Dan Barrett
    Tad Shull
    Ryan Kisor
    Mike Hashim
    Steely Dan
    Brian Wilson backed by Wondermints
    Devo
    Bill Frisell
  • I Got It Bad (and That Ain't Good)

    Май 15 2008, 17:16 автор: Daphiny

  • 3o about my 30

    Янв 31 2008, 0:02 автор: Williamjones

    1. Nina Simone
    2. The Beatles
    3. Bob Dylan
    4. beastie boys
    5. Miles Davis
    6. Paul Simon
    7. RJD2
    8. Ahmad Jamal
    9. The Rolling Stones
    10. Django Reinhardt
    11. A Tribe Called Quest
    12. Snoop Dogg
    13. Gang Starr
    14. Al Green
    15. Toots and the Maytals
    16. Leonard Cohen
    17. Otis Redding
    18. Lightnin' Hopkins
    19. Dane Cook
    20. The Roots
    21. MF DOOM
    22. Quasimoto
    23. Led Zeppelin
    24. Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers
    25. Van Morrison
    26. Beat Junkies
    27. The Four Tops
    28. Muddy Waters
    29. The Clash
    30. The Velvet Underground





    1. How did you get into 21?
    MF DOOM. I think Caesy gave me an instrumental album. Dope. Thanks CaesyO

    2. What was the first song you ever heard by 22?
    Quasimoto. Probably СлушатьBad Character. it was lkike 99 or something, hard to remember.

    3. What's your favorite lyric by 3?
    Dylan? Jesus. Thats a fucked question. only one - fuck that?
    From Down the Highway.... "well the way I love that woman, I swear its bound to get me killed"
    or
    from Visions Of Johanna.... "Louise is alright she's just near, she's delicate and seems like veneer, but she just makes it all to concise and too clear that Johanna's not here"
    or
    from Don't Think Twice, It's All Right "I once loved a woman, a child I'm told, I'd give her my heart but she wanted my soul"

    4. What is your favorite album by 29?
    The Clash

    5. How many albums by 13 do you own?
    Gang Starr. 5.

    6. What is your favorite song by 10?
    Django... easy СлушатьBrazil

    7. Is there a song by 4 that makes you sad?
    The Beastie Boys.... no.

    8. What is your least favorite song by 15?
    don't know all their songs, probably one I havent heard

    9. What is your favorite song by 5?
    Miles Davis, СлушатьConcierto de AranjuezFrom Sketches of Spain.

    10. Is there a song by 6 that makes you happy?
    Paul Simon, That Was You Mother, from Graceland.

    11. What is your favorite song by 20?
    the roots. Слушать100% Dundee

    12. What is your favorite album by 30?
    Velvet Underground. Rock And Roll. Maybe.

    13. What is a good memory you have involving 23?
    Losing my virginity. OR. Frying, driving down the highway, steering with my foot with my head out the sunroof at 90mph. not a good idea, but fun.

    14. What is your favorite song by 17?
    Otis, "Cigarettes And Coffee" easy.

    15. Is there a song by 19 that makes you happy?
    Dane cook. He doesn't do songs. But, I like the bit about tickling.

    16. How many times have you seen 24 live?
    Art Blakey? Never.

    17. What is the first song you heard by 2?
    The Beatles, that is a stupid questoin.... who the fuck knows the first beatles song they heard?

    18. What is your favorite album by 1?
    I can't name albums. Sad shit it what I like.

    19. Who is your favorite member of 2?
    The beatles... fuck it, ringo4life.

    20. How many times have you seen 14 live?
    Al green.... Never

    21. What is a good memory you have involving 1?
    Always in the bath tub, crying maybe.

    22. What is your favorite song by 16?
    Chelsea Hotel #2. duh.

    23. What is the first song you heard by 7?
    RJD2. Ghostwriter.

    24. What is your favorite album by 9?
    Sticky Fingers

    25. What is your favorite song by 18?
    Evil hearted woman

    26. What is the first song you heard by 28?
    Muddy waters? no idea.

    27. What was the first song you heard by 26?
    Work the Angles remix on a mix tape in lisa connor's car when I was 17. blew my fuckin mind. Then tried by twelve came on next, mind extra blown.

    28. What is your favorite song by 12?
    Snoop? anything from doggystyle.

    29. What is the first song you heard by 11?
    Tribe. Da Booty from A love movement, I was 16 and worked in the mall at a hip hop clothing store, I remember it well, I asked them to play it again.

    30. What is your favourite song by 8?
    anything from chamber music of the new jazz.
  • Summer is here

    Июн 26 2007, 13:53 автор: quangdiggity

    Natural feat. Latanya Lockett

    This track is so dope. It feels like a summer joint from the good ol' days. The Ahmad Jamal sample is gold. Here's the original: Слушатьthe donkey serenade