| 1. Tea for Two |
| 2. St. Louis Blues |
| 3. Tiger Rag |
| 4. Sophisticated Lady |
| 5. How High the Moon |
| 6. Humoresque |
| 7. Someone to Watch Over Me |
| 8. Yesterdays |
| 9. I Know That You Know |
| 10. Willow Weep for Me |
| 11. Tatum Pole Boogie |
| 12. Kerry Dance |
| 13. Man I Love |
Piano Starts Here,Art Tatum,Sony,Big Band,Jazz,Jazz Music,Pop,Stride,Swing,United States of America
Average customer rating:
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Piano Starts Here
Art Tatum Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002AAW Release Date: 1995-09-26 |
Tracks:
- Tea For Two
- St. Louis Blues
- Tiger Rag
- Sophisticated Lady
- How High The Moon
- Humoresque
- Someone To Watch Over Me
- Yesterdays
- I Know That You Know
- Willow Weep For Me
- Tatum Pole Boogie
- The Kerry Dance
- The Man I Love
Customer Reviews:
The Master of The Keyboard Live.......2007-06-28
Art Tatum CD.......2007-05-12
Piano not only starts here, it ends here, too! (or, Why Art Tatum is God).......2006-12-22
Listening to Art Tatum's masterful performances these past 30 years, something strikes me as odd: I have yet to hear him make a mistake, not even a minor technical misstep in one of his lightning-quick arpeggios. Listen to his rendition of I Know That You Know, and marvel as we all have. What he accomplishes at those speeds, however, is incomprehensible. That alone might validate the legendary comment which the great Fats Waller spoke when, upon seeing Tatum in the audience at one of his concerts, stood up to proclaim, "Ladies and gentleman, I play the piano. But God is in the house tonight."
Ironically, three decades later when Oscar Peterson was a guest on the Merv Griffin Show, Griffin introduced him by echoing those words.
Peterson, however, who is far and away the greatest living jazz pianist and successor to Tatum's prodigious technique, makes mistakes. I know, small potatoes. Everyone makes mistakes. The fact that I've never heard one from Tatum after 30 years continues to amaze me.
Every Peterson performance is driven by his patented, relentless insistence on rhythm. The overpowering pulse that flows--or, more accurately, marches--through his Bosendorfer, is the primary force behind his playing, as he has often noted. Obviously, Tatum relies on rhythm as well. But where Oscar shouts his use of rhythm, Art's application is remarkably subtle and in service to his overall performance, not at center stage. This lends a delightful buoyancy and effortlessness to his playing, even at tempo. He spares you his labor and provides the gift of music in its purest form, leaving the listener in a state of sublime perplexity thinking 'My God, how can a human being possibly do this?!'
He accomplished these feats through nature's bequests and rigorous, classically oriented study of the instrument from a very young age. Because Tatum was born in 1909, when recorded sound was in its infancy, recordings of him as a youth don't exist. However, many people who heard him play in his formative years believed his technique to be virtually complete from the beginning.
Peterson has often related a story from a period in his teens when he confidently believed he was the greatest piano player around. One day his father arrived home with a recording of Tatum's Tiger Rag (included on this disc). After the younger Peterson listened to it, he refused to believe only one person was playing the piano. When his father finally convinced him, he didn't touch a piano key for months. Peterson once compared Tatum to a lion: "It's beautiful and you want to get up close to it, but it's a little frightening." Eventually the two became good friends, and when Peterson, a Canadian, heard that Art was dying, he flew out to Los Angeles to be with him at the end.
Perhaps most astonishing, Art Tatum--an intelligent and eloquent man with a great sense of humor--was blind almost from birth, suffered various medical afflictions throughout his short life (he ate irregularly, drank excessively, and succumbed to uremia in 1956, at the age of 47), and he lived in an era when African-Americans were treated more lowly than second-class citizens. Nevertheless, he raised the bar of instrumental performance so drastically that even 50 years after his death, no other musician has been able to approach it. Simply put, he possessed the ability to take any thought whatsoever and express it on a piano. Even in his final months, people marveled at his playing. Musicians as well as musical scholars universally consider Tatum to be the greatest improvisational musician who ever lived--on any instrument. Any competent pianist understands why listening to him is at once elating, and frightening. When Art Tatum sat down in front of a piano, he didn't become the piano. The piano became him.
I'm grateful for the gift of Art Tatum's music. Listen closely to this record and you'll understand why.
Good Lord!.......2006-11-02
Bud Powell and Oscar Peterson are the offspring of Tatum's genius. All the others- from Monk to Evans to Hancock- merely stand in awe of him.
a mixed bag.......2005-05-30
It's also not too complicated.
Bad news is quite poor sound quality.
Good for listenign through PC speakers but decent Hi-Fi system reveals all recording's shortcomings and make it quite disapointing.
Average customer rating: |
Piano Starts Here
ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000CPGWIC Release Date: 2006-02-28 |
Jazz Music:
- Pillow Talk
- Pork and Beans
- Raise the Roof!
- School Days
- Scobey and Clancy
- So What?
- Soulful
- Sounds Of Healing
- Still Life (Talking)
- Sun Goddess