| 1. Lodgellian Mode |
| 2. Time for Love |
| 3. Mr. Oliver |
| 4. What Can We Do |
| 5. Come Home to Red |
| 6. Blues in the Guts |
Live at the Village Vanguard,Red Rodney,Muse,Bop,Hard Bop
Average customer rating:
|
Live at the Village Vanguard
The Bill Charlap Trio Manufacturer: Blue Note Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000PC6FP2 Release Date: 2007-05-22 |
Tracks:
- Rocker
- Autumn In New York
- Godchild
- The Lady Is a Tramp
- It's Only a Paper Moon
- My Shining Hour
- All Across the City
- While We're Young
- Last Night When We Were Young
Customer Reviews:
You are there realism.......2007-07-19
4 ½ stars.......2007-06-04
Speaking of "My Shining Hour," let me not be guilty of the same Charlap-centered commentary I lamented earlier. As the liner notes point out, "the incandescent playing captured here is made possible by trust," a trust which in turn is only possible thanks to the rock-solid foundation provided by Peter Washington on bass and the combustible energy released by Kenny Washington on drums. Although I feel that Peter has not yet been ideally captured on recording, it is quite evident from this album and others that Kenny sets the fire under the band and leads them to "Shining Hour" heights. The very swinging feel of a potentially square tune like "Rocker" and potentially static arrangement of "While We're Young," as well as "Last Night While We Were Young's" magical coda, owe much to Kenny's fire, too.
It should be no surprise, then, that numbers like "Lady is a Tramp" cook when the Charlap Trio plays `em, and ballad arrangements like "All Across the City" are so good they almost hurt. But "While We're Young" also provides indisputable proof that this group can play in 3. So let's hear some more waltzes, and more of that glorious ebb and flow that another pianist named Bill inspired at the same Village Vanguard :) How about more bass and drum solos too?!? (come now, 2 bass solos and 1 drum solo really are not enough for a whole album). Then, consider the possibilities of straight 8, Latin, funk, mixed meter...you know these guys can do it. To me, this would make a visit to see them at the Vanguard or Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola that much more memorable - and their group that much better.
A Great Snapshot of an Excellent Trio.......2007-06-01
In all, this is a most welcome document of an exceptional group in action. It is also long overdue, so let's hope that volume two will follow in short order!
Average customer rating:
|
Live At The Village Vanguard: The Master Takes
John Coltrane Manufacturer: Grp Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000065KK Release Date: 1998-02-24 |
Tracks:
- Spiritual
- Softly As In A Morning Sunrise
- Chasin' The Trane
- India
- Impressions
Amazon.com
John Coltrane's legendary 1961 stint at the Village Vanguard marked one of many watersheds in his career. For the first time on record, Coltrane was delving into extended solos, featuring another saxophonist in his front line and extending the rhythmic palette of his group to include East Indian tinges. Eric Dolphy stands out in the Village Vanguard sessions, both for his poingnant bass clarinet work on "India" and for his dragon-like alto sax elsewhere. As usual with the "classic" Coltrane Quartet, pianist McCoy Tyner and drummer Elvin Jones create a storm of crisp chords and torrential rhythms. This creates an ideal foil for Coltrane's irrepressible saxophone creativity. Andrew BartlettCustomer Reviews:
The master at work.......2007-07-17
Got Soul?.......2007-04-14
great live coltrane musical magic act........2007-03-24
Excellent introduction to the Quartet.......2006-03-09
And even within those two cuts, it's not about quantity, but quality. He doesn't exactly play a flurry of notes, but keeps his ideas relatively simple, and just builds and builds for all those choruses (I recall reading somewhere that he blew 96 choruses on "Chasin' the Train").
If you're into Coltrane's playing with Miles, then this shouldn't be that far of a stretch for the ears. This also seems to be one of the very few albums he recorded live with the quartet that didn't feature "My Favorite Things", which seemed to be his Quartet's staple later on.
One of the greatest of live music albums.......2005-10-16
Average customer rating:
|
Live at the Village Vanguard
Wynton Marsalis Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00003A9NY Release Date: 1999-12-07 |
Tracks:
- Welcome (#1)
- Cherokee
- The Egyptian Blues
- Embraceable You
- Black Codes From The Underground
- Harriet Tubman
- Monk's Mood
- And The Band Played On
- The Cat In The Hat
- (Set Break)
Tracks:
- Welcome (#2)
- Uptown River
- Down Home With Homey
- Reflections
- Jig's Jig
- Sometimes It Goes Like That
- In A Sentimental Mood
- Knozz-Moe-King
- (Set Break)
Tracks:
- Welcome (#3)
- Buggy Ride
- I'll Remember April
- Stardust
- In The Court Of King Oliver
- Bona & Paul
- Four In One
- Way Back Blues
- Rubber Bottom
- Midnight In Paris
- Play The Blues And Go
- (Set Break)
Tracks:
- Welcome (#4)
- Pedro's Getaway
- Evidence
- Embraceable You
- A Long Way
- The Arrival
- Misterioso
- Happy Birthday
- The Seductress
- (Set Break)
Tracks:
- Welcome (#5)
- The Majesty Of The Blues
- Flee As A Bird To The Mountain
- Happy Feet Blues
- Thelonious
- Stardust
- Intro To Buddy Bolden
- Buddy Bolden
- Swing Down Swing Town
- Bright Mississippi
- (Set Break)
Tracks:
- Welcome (#6)
- Citi Movement
- Winter Wonderland
- Brother Veal
- Cherokee
- Juba And O'Brown Squaw
Tracks:
- Welcome (#7)
- In The Sweet Embrace Of Life
- Local Announcements
- Altar Call
- Final Statement
Amazon.com
This stupendous seven-CD collection from the all-world trumpeter, composer, and bandleader Wynton Marsalis chronicles the amazing evolution of his underrated live septets at the legendary Village Vanguard from 1990 to 1994. Sequenced to simulate a week-long gig, the set melds together three different incarnations of Marsalis's ensemble: the gifted New Orleans-born drummer Herlin Riley, the ebullient Wessel Anderson on sopranino and alto saxes, and the fluent trombonist Wycliffe Gordon are the constants. The mercurial Marcus Roberts and the fleet-fingered Eric Reed alternate on piano, while Ben Wolfe and Reginald Veal lock it down on the bass. These selections showcase the astounding "school" of musicians that followed Marsalis's first superband with his brother, Branford Marsalis, the late Kenny Kirkland, and Jeff "Tain" Watts. Marcus Roberts's articulate lines sonically sigature his uptempto original, "The Arrival," and his solo on Thelonious Monk's "Misterioso" calls forth the soulful spirit of Monk's mentor, James P. Johnson. Eric Reed accompanies the leader with a well-traveled, harmonic magic carpet on "The Seductress" and provides some imaginative ivory ticklings on the 5/4-cadenced "Uptown Ruler," with Herlin Riley's Big Easy backbeats and Mardi Gras Indian chants. Wycliffe Gordon makes a stylistic stop in Kansas City on Count Basie's "Way Back Blues," with his territory trombone tones, and pays his dues to Tricky Sam Nanton on Duke Ellington's "Play the Blues and Go." Reginald Veals's "Brother Veal" rings with his deep sound, while Wes Anderson's Afro-Arabic "The Egyptian Blues" and Todd William's uptempo, Coltrane-like "The Cat in the Hat Is Back" display their horn and composition skills. Another Marsalis cohort, Dr. Michael White, makes a surprise appearance with his Preservation Hall clarinet on the traditional hymn "Flee as a Bird to the Mountain." Marsalis's studio recordings are revisited, from the early '80s tune "Knozz-Moe-King" to the parade pulsations of "Juba and a O'Brown Sqauw" from the 1997 Pulitzer Prize-winning masterpiece, Blood on the Fields. His encyclopedic command of the trumpet tradition is in full effect. Check out his bop-ballad renditions of "Cherokee," "Embraceable You," "Stardust," and the muted musings on the short but sweet "Bona and Paul," inspired by two character's from Jean Toomer's literary classic, Cane. Two extended compositions, the 40-minute "Citi Movement," with its aural impressions of urban life filtered through swing, ballad, and Afro-Latin forms, and the nearly hour-long jazz spiritual "In the Sweet Embrace of Life," a movement from In This House, on This Morning, are well paced for this enthusiastic crowd. With Wynton Marsalis's superb playing and leadership, along with his dowm-home introductions of Lionel Hampton, Cassandra Wilson, and Joshua Redman, this potpourri of selections does what all remote recordings are meant to do: it puts the listener at home in front of the bandstand and captures the one-of-a-kind ambience and interplay of live music making. --Eugene Holley Jr.Customer Reviews:
Great Music, Great Sound, Great Price .......2007-07-13
ACCEPTABLE, POLITE & MUSHY.......2007-05-28
Instead a well trained group of musicians provide archeological coverage of what jazz must of sounded like when it was alive.
I started listening to Jazz at 11 years of age with no encouragement from anyone. My first album ever was "Monk's Dream" I still love that album today & it brings back rich memories of learning to appreciate an obscure musical dialogue.
Marsalas never puts me in mind of anything more daring then a Jackie Gleason alum.
Here are two examples of what I mean; the "drum solo" 10 min. in on Uptown Ruler is unbelievable pallid & of no interest. I don't like drum solos but may a good drummer has sucked me in against my will. Now the next track , "Down Home with Homey" (really that title says it all about how generic this music is) has a bass solo about 90 seconds in that sound like the guy is just plucking the strings till the ensemble comes to his rescue. Compare this to any of many Charlie Haden discs on his own or with Ornette Coleman & I think you'll see the difference between these 3 bands & what the best Jazz is like. I mean there are good moments (Wynton does a few good trumpet licks, the players strike a real groove at times) on this set, it is 7 discs, but the overall effect is really a turn-off. Even at 20 bucks it barely seems worthwhile. Three stars for value, one star for the tunes.
The great Wynton in a week.......2007-05-12
For the price you gotta love it. and its delectable.......2006-11-25
Marsalis is a Genius.......2006-06-09
Buying this 7-CD set for 30 bucks made me feel like a thief. Most people who gave this CD a bad rating can't get over what Wynton said about Miles Davis. They are both great and enjoying Marsalis doesn't take anything away from Miles Davis.
Wynton Marsalis is the greatest living jazz musician and one of the best ever and he proves it with this CD. It is a must buy for all jazz fans and all trumpet players.
Average customer rating:
|
The Art of the Trio, Vol. 2: Live at the Village Vanguard
Brad Mehldau Manufacturer: Warner Bros / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000062VD Release Date: 1998-03-10 |
Tracks:
- It's Alright With Me
- Young And Foolish
- Monk's Dream
- The Way You Look Tonight
- Moon River
- Countdown
Amazon.com
This live set, recorded at New York's Village Vanguard in the summer of 1997, presents pianist Brad Mehldau with bassist Larry Grenadier and drummer Jorge Rossy, the same personnel as on The Art of the Trio, Volume One. This is hardcore jazz, with tunes by Cole Porter, Thelonious Monk, Jerome Kern, Henry Mancini and Johnny Mercer, and John Coltrane. Mehldau hasn't yet earned a place in the highest rank of the jazz pantheon, but if he keeps making recordings of this caliber, he'll blow away a lot of the opposition. He doesn't wear his influences on his sleeve but, with the support of Grenadier and Rossy, executes harmonic reconstructions of standard texts. --Stanley BoothCustomer Reviews:
notes on a controversy.......2005-01-18
Some of Mehldau's points (e.g., racial troping and the role of the bassist) are repeated in a well-written review on this page. I'd like to respond to a few of those points--because methinks it has gotten to the point where Mehldau (and some of his fans) doth protest too much.
Let me grant three points immediately: 1) Mehldau is a unique and gigantic talent. His personal expression is not in any way invalidated by similarities or differences with Bill Evans or any other pianist. 2) Harmonically, Mehldau is not an impressionist the way Evans was. 3) Collective improvisation is not the key to the Mehldau Trio as it was to Evans's best trios.
But!
The comparisons to Evans did not come out of the blue, and racial troping (or "profiling") seems to me something of a red herring. I mean, if it were that simple, why isn't Mehldau also frequently compared with George Shearing, Dave Brubeck, Vince Guaraldi, and Chick Corea?
Beyond the obvious facts of performing in a trio and playing in a Romantic, introspective manner, Mehldau is frequently compared to Evans, I believe, mainly because of his choice of repertoire. On his very first album, for instance, Mehldau recorded two Richard Rodgers classics--"It Might as Well Be Spring" and "My Romance"--that had long been associated with Evans. In fact, Evans recorded "My Romance" many times, starting with *his* first album. And on this album (AotT2), Mehldau plays "Young and Foolish," which Evans recorded several times.
Beyond such specific examples, there is a general similarity in what they play, a mix of high-quality standards (Rodgers, Porter, Gershwin, etc.), originals, and unexpected works by contemporaries. That might sound generic enough to be true of nearly any jazz performer--but if you look carefully at what Mehldau plays, you will see it resembles the things Evans recorded much more than it resembles what most other jazz performers, pianists or otherwise, play. Keep in mind, too, that using the "great American songbook" as the basis for major league jazz improvisations (and writing pieces in a similar vein) was quite unusual and not exactly fashionable during Evans's peak years, which coincided with the free jazz and fusion movements. It's less unusual now, after the Keith Jarrett and Wynton Marsalis standards collections, but there is no question that Evans is an important link between pre-bop and contemporary performance of standards material.
Mehldau and Evans also resemble each other in the things they play that are off the beaten path (for the jazz world). Mehldau has covered material by such elder statesmen of the rock establishment as Paul McCartney and Paul Simon--which is still a little unusual for a jazz performer. But the Paul Simon song he recently covered, "Still Crazy After All These Years," comes from the same album that the Simon song Evans liked to cover ("I Do It for Your Love") does. Also, Mehldau has gotten a lot of attention for covering tunes by Nick Drake and Radiohead--just as Evans received attention for covering Johnny Mandel's Theme from M*A*S*H and songs by Burt Bacharach (before he was considered one of the "old masters"). In both cases, they saw the lyrical value of material that others wouldn't might not have thought to convert into jazz.
So the claim that there are "no similarities" between Evans and Mehldau just doesn't ring true. In addition to their similar choice of repertoire--which suggests a great amount of temperamental affinity if not necessarily direct influence--both are classically trained pianists, and you can easily hear that (although I don't think Mehldau's touch is quite as refined as Evans's was).
Also, the claim that Mehldau has "a fire that Evans never envinced [sic]" doesn't wash with me. Miles Davis said he hired Evans specifically because he wanted Evans's "quiet fire." And that fire wasn't always all that quiet, as anyone who has heard Evans's early recordings with George Russell (e.g., "Concerto for Billy the Kid" and "All About Rosie") well knows. Evans was perfectly capable of barnstorming when he wanted to. This was a man who played Beethoven's Third Concerto at his senior recital and who liked to play Rachmaninoff's Third Concerto for his own private enjoyment. If you think you can play those virtuoso masterpieces without fire in your belly, guess again.
Okay, those are my points. I just think the pendulum has tended to swing too much from uncritical comparisons to (blindly following Mehldau's own not disinterested lead) uncritical disavowals of all affinities. Hey, it's a massive compliment to be compared to Evans. And it shouldn't mean that Mehldau isn't his own man, because he most definitely is. It's just that given what he's playing (esp. in a jazz piano trio format), Evans is the obvious point of reference and will remain so, just as Verdi would be an obvious point of comparison for Puccini. Sure, let's be aware of the crucial differences between them. Let's look for and celebrate everything that's distinctive in Mehldau's playing (because there's plenty of that). But when we look through the musical universe, to whom are we likely to compare Mehldau? Verdi? Madonna? Bill Monroe? Stuff Smith? No one picked Evans's name out of a hat.
P.S. If you love piano jazz, get all of Mehldau's albums, including this one (well, maybe except Largo). You see, he's this great contemporary jazz pianist, a little like Bill Evans, only different . . .
Fine piano trio music.......2004-03-28
Volumes 1 and 3 are studio recordings; volumes 2 and 4 are live (I don't have volume 5, yet, another live volume, this one on 2 CDs). I think Mehldau is great, and I especially like the studio recordings. They are lyrical and melodic, whereas the live recordings tend more toward pyrotechnics and displays of virtuosity.
If you like the kind of music Bill Evans played, you'll certainly like volumes 1 and 3. You may prefer the live ones, especially if you're into Keith Jarrett (at least Mehldau doesn't grunt and squeal all the time). In any case, this is great music, well played and the trio has a great rapport.
The guy is really good, so take a chance on him..........2003-08-16
Today's Most Challenging and Refreshing Jazz Trio........2001-11-20
The album is definitely a highlight of the Trio's material and it brings Mehldau's outstanding musical virtues as a pianist directly into the audience. One of the best way to evaluate the musician is live, in direct with no studio cosmetics or second chances. Mehladau not only passes the test -or any test you wish to give him- but also exceeds any expectations you may have weather you are a Bill Evans, Keith Jarrett or Corea follower. Critics impose a heavy stigma on Mehldau when they compare him to Bill Evans and claim that he is the next successor to the throne. I never buy or reject any artist's music because of his influences, similarities, or differences, but rather on his own capabilities. Within the piano jazz trio format, Mehldau is extremely creative, very sharp, takes risks, very moving, a virtuoso when it comes o technique, and takes jazz into music boundaries where very few artists can go. Without getting into the similarities or differences with the other piano masters, having heard all of the Evans, Jarrett, Corea, and Hancock albums I recommend you that if you appreciate free format jazz piano trios, include this CD in your collection. It will either be one of your best and favorites ones throughout time of the most challenging one if you are an extremely conservative listener. I celebrate that modern jazz has a young pianist with such talent and capacity.
The repertoire is composed of six "covers" and does not including any of Mehldau compositions -as he did in the Trios Vol IV: Back at the Village Vanguard-. During the CD's one hour twenty minutes, the tunes range from "Monk's Dream" (T. Monk) and "Countdown" (J. Coltrane) to classic standards like "Moon River" (Mercer-Mancini) or "It's Alright with Me" (C. Porter) allowing Mehldau to expand his creativity to the max.
Lastly, try not to get to involved with Mehldaus' very extensive comments and reflections that appear in the inside of the CD's cover, like some reviewers who have rejected and criticized Mehldau's thoughts as if the item offered were a book instead of a jazz piano CD. Believe me, Mehldau's language is the piano and his thoughts make a lot of sense when he plays "his jazz" into our souls. Keep speaking Mr. Mehldau, your playing came just in time as jazz piano was getting monotonous.
Major, major jazz.......2001-09-19
As a pianist, Mehldau is a virtuoso, secure in both hands and with an effortless variety of articulations at any speed. But he's no Oscar Peterson, he has plenty to say. Plenty.
To his own frustrated bemusement, Mehldau has often been compared to Bill Evans [even among the professional editorials on Amazon] yet that is a shallow case of racial-profiling. Other than being a white piano player, there are no real similarities. Mehldau is lyrical and introspective in the Evansian sense only in the manner with which jazz musicians call ideas from out of themselves. He has a fire that Evans never envinced and a style that is unique and refreshing. Like a lot of modern jazz artists, he has gone to the classical repertoire to expand his harmonic range and his improvisational sense, but where for most jazz players, the classical touchstones are Stravinsky, Bartok and Debussy, Mehldau has turned back to the 19th century, especially the piano music of Robert Schumann. So instead of expanding jazz harmonics by extending tonalities, he uses the more subtle but richer approach of placing simpler chords in an overall harmonic structure that is more complex; basic inversions that give a sense of false cadence, diatonic harmonies over extended pedals to create ambigiuous key relationships, etc. These are all composers' concerns, and that is what Mehldau often does, his improvisations are re-compositions. He frequently takes apart the structure of a tune, examining it from many angles, and does so with tremendous vitality and swing. The approach is more like Sonny Rollins, with the advantage of the harmonies a piano provides. And it's tremendously gripping and exciting, rich in detail and imagination. There is the sense in listening to him that you are discovering what he is right along with him.
Also unlike Bill Evans, this is definitely a soloist-accompanist trio, not a collective. Grenadier and Rossy could not be more solid or sympathetic with the leaders approach, and they are vital in maintaining the ideas and energy. Pervious criticism is cloth-eared and unwarranted. Mehldau is fast becoming an essential part of the music, don't let him get away without you.
Average customer rating:
|
Stepping Stones: Live at the Village Vanguard
Woody Shaw Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0009Y26P4 Release Date: 2005-08-16 |
Tracks:
- Stepping Stone
- In A Capricornian Way
- Seventh Avenue
- All Things Being Equal Are Not
- Escape Velocity
- Blues For Ball
- Theme For Maxine
Customer Reviews:
Woody Shaw is no joke...........2006-11-30
After hearing this album its hard for me to listen to Freddie Hubbard in the same way any more since Woody takes Freddies style up about 10 notches.
Woody's career was too short and inconsistant to be considered the Greatest of all time but at his peak (on this album) there was nobody better in my opinion.
By the way, I would not have happened upon Woody's music if it hadn't been for sites such as amazon, allmusicguide etc etc.
Needless to say this music isn't advertised at your local record store and is rarely stocked.
I ordered this album a few months ago off of amazon and since then I've picked up pretty much everything I can find with Woody on it.
One last note, the sound quality on this recording is incredible..it sounds better than most studio recordings.
Great post bop jazz.
d--n good recording .......2006-08-20
Total agreement with all the reviewers!!!!!!.......2006-08-20
OK, I think you get the gist--buy this record!
It's About Freekin' Time. Does not suck. The Anti-Wynbag........2005-12-15
For whatever reason, Columbia sat on this after the initial vinyl release in '78 and never released it to CD during Woody's lifetime. Mosaic did not include it in the recent Columbia retrospective. I have owned this on vinyl since 1979 or so and I still find it exciting and fresh. Most of this was recorded at the Vanguard. This is a document of a real, working quintet with NY-style hard-edged playing. These guys play like they've been touring together for years. If you're looking for a crappy-ass LA rehearsal band or a college pick-up band or some lame jam session laboring through Stella and Straight no Chaser, then you should give this one a pass.
But that's just my opinion, K?
Jazz Masters of the '70's.......2005-09-02
Average customer rating:
|
Lift: Live at the Village Vanguard
Chris Potter Quartet Manufacturer: Sunny Side ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00023GG4E Release Date: 2004-05-25 |
Tracks:
- 7.5
- What You Wish
- Stella By Starlight
- Lift
- Okinawa
- Boogie Stop Shuffle Sax Intro
- Boogie Stop Shuffle
Amazon.com
Tenor saxophonist Chris Potter has been recording as a leader for a dozen years, after a rather audacious start in Red Rodney's band at the age of 20. A melodic player given to deliriously swooping runs in his improvisations--Sonny Rollins is a notable influence--Potter and his quartet stretch out on originals and three covers. From the gorgeous "Okinawa" to the relentless closer, Charles Mingus's "Boogie Stop Shuffle," the four musicians form a perfectly matched combo, playing off each other with evident glee. The live setting has energized them and given them an opportunity to fully explore these compositions, as on Potter's solo intro to the Mingus tune. What's astounding about it is that, at nearly 15 minutes, it never falls into a rut as he finds ever more layers to peer under and pull apart. --David GreenbergerCustomer Reviews:
Lift.......2006-08-08
He then says "Sorry, but good Jazz is loaded with improvisations, and written music is but an out line". This line is particularly aggravating. How does he not realize that except for the heads of the tunes, all of the albulm is improvised. More than hour of improvised music, none of which he managed to hear.
What angers me the most however is what he says last. "Take note Smooth Jazz. You are just a tiny bit above elevator music." Now, normally, i woould agree, i cant stand smooth jazz. But (please note this) THIS IS NOT SMOOTH JAZZ! i do not understand how this albulm could possibly be misconstrued as smooth jazz. I think that just his assertion that it is smooth jazz suggests that "book and music lover" clearly has no idea what hes talking about.
This is more closely a fine work of hard bop, perhaps best in line with the later live Coltrane work (think, say, 1964). It is of course very distinctive, but it is easy to hear the strains of coltrane in Potter's solos. The pianist (Kevin Hays) reminds me particularly, when he's playing piano proper and not the synth, of McCoy Tyner, one of the other central pillars of the Classic Coltrane quartet. I can similar things about the bassist and drummer (Scott Colley and Bill stewart, respectively) but im sure you understand my point by now.
"Lift" is a solid piece of modern Jazz, particularly since so many so called jazz musicians have turned to lesser things. For any true jazz fan, this is a must have. Chris Potter himself is certainly one of, if not right next to Coltrane, one of the best tenor players of now, or any time, and there is no better way to showcase his talent then in this brilliant live performance.
Pleasant Surprise!.......2006-06-15
Regarding the Chris Potter Quartet's Lift CD, I purchased it just to see what motivated the above reviewer's consternation ... and I loved it! I don't think that I would have ever found these artists, since I don't possess anything else from them, were it not for my little "crusade". If you don't like Smooth Jazz, then this CD is not for you .... if you do, and you're especially drawn to the unique sounds of live Smooth Jazz, then give this CD a listen. I'll bet you'll be as pleasantly surprised as I was!
A creative and singular voice catches fire on stage!.......2006-03-19
"Gratitude" was a tribute to the many saxophone influences who left their mark in developing Potter's distinctive sound and compositional style. It was a fantastic record that managed to capture the style of this enormously diverse collection of players (Webster, Bird, Brecker, Shorter, Joe Henderson, Ornette...even the often overlooked Eddie Harris!) and still maintained a singular voice which was unmistakably Potter's.
"Travelling Mercies" put a greater emphasis on Potter as a composer and a multi-instrumentalist, but also displayed his desire to explore the possibilities of the studio. Many tracks featured obvious (but not at all out of place) overdubs and loops, and bled into one another. Although the end result was a little uneven, it is still a fascinating record that stands up to repeat listenings. Also worth mentioning is the piano/bass clarinet rendition of the traditional hymn "Just As I Am" (erroneously credited to Willie Nelson???) which closes out the album...I mention this track in particular for its elegant simplicity, and its deeply subtle soul.
This brings me (in a very roundabout way) to "Lift" which is curious in that it is a live album which falls somewhere between his previous two studio albums. Kevin Hays' sometimes unusual, but always tasteful keyboard sounds almost make this "traditional jazz" quartet sound heavily produced at times. And the eternally creative, yet still air-tight interplay of the rhythm section would make you swear you were listening to a studio recording if you weren't holding that CD booklet in your hand that screams in bold capital letters; "LIVE"! Meanwhile, Potter's playing is acrobatic and impressive, but never in a way that is outwardly flashy or undermines the compositions or the overall effect of the ensemble...his playing here is the perfect marriage of technique and soul.
While the very dry mixing does take a slight period of adjustment, it eventually makes you feel like you are in the club with the group; and the playing is incendiary and spontaneous from the first note to the last. This quartet clearly has chemistry oozing from every hair follicle, and the set captured here is an engaging mix of distinctive, well-crafted originals and standards, that culminates in an explosive "Boogie Stop Shuffle" which simply must be heard to be believed!
"Lift" is a must-own for any fan of proficient and creative modern-jazz.
pleasant surprise.......2006-03-14
The drumming and bass(7.5) remind me of a powerful recording of "Impressions",of McCoy Tyner memory(Trident was the vinyl),with Elvin Jones and Ron Carter to complete the trio. Potter's quartet,though playing with the same vigour, has different touches: piano wizard Hays plays like old time virtuoso Oscar Peterson and Potter like 1/3 Coltrane + 1/3 of Joshua Redman + 1/3 Brandford Marsalys(and what a nice cocktail!). All in all this album was a really wonderful surprise,for someone like myself that knew nothing about Potter. And music with the 3Bs:Beautiful,Beautiful, Beautiful. I love fast pace swing,and this album has plenty of it,but not only.
PS: THE RATING WAS SUPPOSED TO SHOW 5 stars,NOT 2(?).My mouse must have slipped at the wrong moment.
What?.......2006-02-14
If someone is looking for Mingus in this music, they are in absolutely the wrong place. Just because Potter plays "Boogie Stop Shuffle" doesn't mean the track or the CD will have Mingus's influence. Quite frankly, Mingus's style is one-of-a-kind and easily distinguishable from others, and Potter's is not even close... and that isn't a bad thing.
Secondly, what is this "simple bit of instrumental music?" The technique and abilities by each musician individually and as a whole unit are showcased in this album and are anything but "simple." And, when asked where the emotion is in the album, how can one NOT feel the energy of this band? From the very beginning of the heads I can feel a surge of emotion through everyone, and that's before all of the improvisation. Check out each player's interaction with one another and you will easily feel the intensity.
Furthermore, the reviewer comments that "good jazz is loaded with improvisations and the music is but an outline" and he fails to hear it in this album. Is that a joke? Does the reviewer believe that the tracks are simply written out? The composed parts of this album are but a small percentage of the overall performance and this reviewer is a fool for believing that there is no emotion, barely any improvisation, and mostly, that this in not good jazz. Chris Potter IS the future of jazz music, as shown each time he releases a new record as a band leader, and also each time he is a sideman.
This record is simply unbelievable. Purchase this for Potter in a live, more traditional setting, and then go out and purchase his latest CD "Underground" or the one previous to this, "Traveling Mercies" to see what else he is a about. All of his albums are distinctly different, but all have amazing playing and shed light to the future of the greatest, most diverse music on the planet.
Average customer rating:
|
Plays John Coltrane - Live at The Village Vanguard
McCoy Tyner Manufacturer: Umvd Labels ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005NY2T Release Date: 2001-10-16 |
Tracks:
- Naima
- Moment's notice
- Crescent
- After The Rain
- Afro-Blue
- I Want To Talk To You
- Mr. Day
Amazon.com
McCoy Tyner has paid tribute on record to his former boss John Coltrane several times before, notably on the 1972 solo effort, Echoes of a Friend. But he is a different pianist now than he was then. Once a player of volcanic force and eddying intellect, Tyner has become a more elegant, restrained stylist. Recorded at New York's Village Vanguard on what would have been Coltrane's 71st birthday, and released to commemorate the saxophone legend's 75th, McCoy Tyner Plays John Coltrane could hardly be more even-tempered. Working outside his standing trio--the bassist is George Mraz, the drummer Al Foster--Tyner brings the same lilting delicacy to "Afro Blue" that he brings to the classic ballad "Naima." That isn't to say he lacks intensity in returning to the Trane songbook, which is also represented by the title track from "Crescent," "Moment's Notice," and the infrequently heard "Mr. Day" (from Coltrane Plays the Blues). With his gleaming note clusters, flowing lyricism, and spiritual weight, he makes it clear that the songs and their original singer still mean a lot to him--just as Tyner still means a lot to anyone who cares about the modern jazz piano. --Lloyd SachsCustomer Reviews:
McCoy Tyner-the most overrated jazz pianist .......2006-02-13
But as any classical educated piano professor will tell you, virtuosity makes no good pianist. And thats totally the case for Tyner. If I listen to his recordings, its always the same - huge accord clusterings, incredible fast playing, but no feel for the music, no elegance whatsoever and no interesting development or experimenting. His solos are really boring.
Just listen to Naima, one of the greatest pieces in Jazz. Start with the original Coltrane recording, the wonderful piano in it (NOT Tyner!), the feel for the music. Then listen to Breckers solo on the 2003 Directions in Music recording, playing an incredible interpretation of it, and then go to Tyners interpretation. Imagine how Bill Evans would play it. Then you have to stop this CD after 2 minutes. Its just terrible. Large parts he plays in fortissimo, with his usual style. I can't believe how bad it is. The same is true for Crescent and all the other pieces.
Or listen to "After the rain". That is pure pop-kitsch at worst, with accords and harmonics I would expect on a MTV-music award show, but not on a Jazz-CD. Even Norah Jones is pure experimentation against it!
The question then remains: Why was he part of one of the greatest Jazz-quartets? I went back to all Coltrane CD's including him. I can only say he was at the right place at the right time. His playing really does fit to Coltrane, all the fury, the virtuosity, the aggresive improvisation over one scale, but without Coltrane, he is just bad and totally lost. And indeed, the worst Coltrane pieces are those where Tyner has an extended solo, such as in "Afro-Blue" on "One up, one down". There you hear all his strict limitations in terms of harmony and developing an interesting solo.
Deserves 10 stars.......2005-02-14
I just caught Tyner's more recent trio with Eric Harland and Charnett Moffett performing in LA and they were playing as if they were of one mind. Harland's drumming is terrific as well. After seeing them and then listening to this I for one will never miss an opportunity to hear McCoy Tyner in a trio setting.
Buy this CD if you don't have it. You will be glad you did.
A Truly Rewarding Set.......2004-03-14
Good, just shy of great.......2003-12-30
McCoy Tyner does a great job of adapting Coltrane's sometimes off-the-wall playing into his own style of "controlled agression" piano playing (term not copywrited yet by yours truly). While Tyner has mellowed a bit in the past couple of decades, his playing is still as potent as ever. And what better way to showcase his talent then by adapting Coltrane sax classics into his own style?
I think this disc falls just a shade short of being brilliant. It's good for what it is. Coltrane covers, but just a little bit away from being truly inspired and jaw dropping.
If you are a Coltrane fan, or a Tyner fan, or both, you will enjoy this release.
McCoy Tyner's Best?!.......2002-07-04
Average customer rating:
|
Live at the Village Vanguard
Thad Jones & Mel Lewis Manufacturer: Blue Note Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0009IW9SE Release Date: 2005-06-07 |
Tracks:
- The Little Pixie
- A-That's Freedom
- Bachafillen
- Don't Git Sassy
- Willow Tree
- Samba Con Getchu
- Quietude
- The Second Race
- Lover Man
Album Description
The Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Orchestra was little more than a year old when this album was recorded live at the Village Vanguard, which was the band's Monday night home for every week of its existence. Jones almost single-handedly brought the big band into the modern age with this origanization. Swung hard by Mel Lewis's drums, the band sailed through the complex charges of Jones and Bob Brookmeyer with panache. Soloists include Brookmeyer, Jones, Richard Williams, Jerome Richardson and Joe Farrell. Three bonus tracks have added to the original LP, which has been remixed and mastered in 24-bit.Customer Reviews:
Smokin' Live 1967 Big Band .......2006-01-01
We have here the presence of Thad Jones on coronet and his co-leader Mel Lewis on drums with a band of about 20 including trombones,sax,flute,clarinet,piano,bass and guitar playing some extraordinary music in total elegance.
The songs performed here are fast in tempo,medium in tempo,total swing,stomp,even a Fats Waller song and a Latin Jazz Romp..there are also 3 bonus tracks adding another 20 minutes of playing time, a nice cover of Lover Man and 2 Thad Jones originals which were not part of the original LP all here in 24 bit remastered glory.
Big Band Greatness.......2005-07-03
I saw the band several times at the Village Vanguard, where it played on Monday nights. It was simply thrilling.
Average customer rating:
|
Live at the Village Vanguard
Chucho Valdes Manufacturer: Blue Note Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004S9P0 Release Date: 2000-04-11 |
Tracks:
- Anabis
- Son XXI (Para Pia)
- Punto Cubano
- My Funny Valentine
- To Bud Powell
- Drume Negrita
- Como Traigo La Yuca
- Ponle La Clave
- Encore - Lorraine's Habanera
Amazon.com
Put the force of McCoy Tyner, the superhuman keyboard agility of Art Tatum, and the delicacy of Erroll Garner into a 6-foot-4 Cuban-born frame, and you'll get Jesus "Chucho" Valdes, one of the greatest piano players on the planet. For three decades, Valdes led the Cuban superband Irakere, with Paquito D'Rivera and Arturo Sandoval. But in the last few years, Valdes has been spotlighting his pianistic prowess in small combos such as the quartet he led during a spirited stint at the legendary Village Vanguard in 1999. Backed by a young group of Cuban musicians--drummer Raul Pineda Roque, percussionist Roberto Vizcaino Guillot, and bassist Franciso Rubio Pampin--Valdes turns the piano into a hurricane of melody, harmony, and rhythm. Valdes's masterful manipulations of African American jazz and Afro-Cuban rhythms ring through on the supersonic tempo of "Anabis," the frenetic bebop licks on the tribute "To Bud Powell," and the Thelonious Monk-like block chords on the midtempo "Son XXI (Para Pia)." As an arranger, Valdes ingeniously reworks old Cuban standards such as "The Peanut Vendor" and "Que Bueno Baila Usted" into his own Caribbean-charged compositions, "Punto Cubano" and "Como Traigo La Yuca." Another island gem, "Drume Negrita," is redone with a funky swing capped by the vibrant vocals of the leader's sister, Mayra Caridad Valdes. The climax of this stirring set is "Ponle La Clave," Valdes's atmospheric African drum celebration that percussively points to the motherland that birthed Cuba's folkloric fusions. Valdes's tender "Encore-- Lorraine's Habanera," named for the Village Vanguard's owner--gently brings the eager and amazed audience back to Earth. --Eugene Holley Jr.Customer Reviews:
Awesome CD from a non-jazz fan............2005-11-12
I know absolutely nothing about Chucho but apparently he is one of the "heavy hitters" of jazz. Most of songs are piano driven and there is a great mix of slow smooth songs and frantic piano playing. Some of the songs sound like salsa and none are ever boring which is usually the problem for me with jazz. There is some singing but it's mostly instrumental.
I would recommend this CD to the non-jazz fan looking for something different. This CD is great anywhere and also makes good background music. It's the type of thing you might hear and enjoy (but not recognize) in a coffee house or bookstore.
Bottom Line: A good intro and some serious genre transcending jazz.
Upbeat and exciting.......2001-11-06
A Latin Jazz Giant.......2001-07-01
Chucho at his best ..........2000-09-05
Traditional Cuban music formats are the basis for Valdes' inventive compositions, arrangements and selections, but straying from them, as the group often does here, does not distract. Conversely, they take the listener to uncharted Cuban musical waters.
The disc, chock-full of incredible musicianship, plays over an hour and three minutes. "Punto Cubano" is grandly nostalgic and Valdes' piano playing stands out on this track. "Ponle La Clave" is probably the most aggressive piece in the set - very driving, uptempo and percussion-heavy. Drummer Raúl Pineda Roque and Roberto Vizcaino Guillot (congas and batá drums) are featured soloists on "Ponle". "Son XXI" and "Como Traigo La Yuca" are fine compositions (by Enrique Ubieta and Arsenio Rodriguez, respectively) and their interpretations are set apart by Chucho's impressive chops - the kind that demonstrates Valdes' virtuosity.
"Drume Negrita" features the piano master's sister, Mayra Caridad Valdes, on vocals; the swinging tune livens the set. The song contains a colorful break down where Mayra scats and improvises some quick one-liners:
"Ese Negro no me va a cojer, Ahi viene mi Congo tomando café ..."
Released to the public on April 11th, 2000, Live at the Village Vanguard is Valdes' fourth release for Blue Note. The quartet also includes Francisco Rubio Pampin on acoustic bass.
Chucho at his best ..........2000-09-05
Traditional Cuban music formats are the basis for Valdes' inventive compositions, arrangements and selections, but straying from them, as the group often does here, does not distract. Conversely, they take the listener to uncharted Cuban musical waters.
The disc, chock-full of incredible musicianship, plays over an hour and three minutes. "Punto Cubano" is grandly nostalgic and Valdes' piano playing stands out on this track. "Ponle La Clave" is probably the most aggressive piece in the set - very driving, uptempo and percussion-heavy. Drummer Raúl Pineda Roque and Roberto Vizcaino Guillot (congas and batá drums) are featured soloists on "Ponle". "Son XXI" and "Como Traigo La Yuca" are fine compositions (by Enrique Ubieta and Arsenio Rodriguez, respectively) and their interpretations are set apart by Chucho's impressive chops - the kind that demonstrates Valdes' virtuosity.
"Drume Negrita" features the piano master's sister, Mayra Caridad Valdes, on vocals; the swinging son livens the set. The song contains a colorful break down where Mayra scats and improvises some quick one-liners:
"Ese Negro no me va a cojer, Ahi viene mi Congo tomando café ..."
Released to the public on April 11th, Live at the Village Vanguard is Valdes' fourth release for Blue Note. The quartet also includes Francisco Rubio Pampin on acoustic bass.
Average customer rating:
|
Spirit Of The Moment: Live At The Village Vanguard
Joshua Redman Quartet Manufacturer: Warner Bros / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002MYR Release Date: 1995-08-29 |
Tracks:
- Jig-a-jug
- My One and Only Love
- Count Me Out
- Second Snow
- Remember
- Dialogue
- St. Thomas
Tracks:
- Herbs & Roots
- Wait No Longer
- Neverend
- Just In Time
- Mt. Zion
- Slapstick
- Lyric
Customer Reviews:
Energy, I Say!.......2004-07-02
I actually heard about this CD from a friend of mine, who mentioned Joshua's take on Sonny Rollins' "St. Thomas". After the stunning 4 minute introduction to the head of the tune, the band takes off.
The drummer, Brian Blade, several months ago held a clinic at a local jazz festival that my high school friends (who happen to be rhythm section players) and I played at. I was at a saxophone clinic at the time, but they said Brian was an amazing player, and this CD really shows his talent on the drums.
The uptempo C-minor blues, "Herbs $ Roots" is probably the most energetic recorded tune I have herd Joshua record to date (though I haven't heard ALL of his recordings yet). I did my best to read the solo transcription to it while it was playing.
In general, what a great, energetic CD with tons of amazing solos and transitions.
P.S. If you haven't been to the VV, I suggest you do so!
fun set.......2004-05-07
Mr. Redman at his best!!!!!!!1.......2004-01-06
A clash of Musical Revisions and Musical Genius..............2002-04-03
One more song I'd like to highlight is Second Snow. A very waltzy type of performance which adds gracefullness that can be like snow. It's soft & relaxed mood adds an atmospheric setting for me. His progression in the improvisation section also moves relaxed and layed back and as he gets further to the end of his solo, it becomes more complicated but not without a purpose, it follows through with a climatic end.
Bottom line, this is a valued CD to have in my collection and I'm sure for most people, you would value it too.
Grooves!!.......2001-10-26
Jazz Music: