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Disc a Day -- Jazz
Disc a Day -- Jazz
Vitaminic Capsule Releases
to be Administered Daily
Blues/R&B | Classic Rock |
Eclectica | Funk | Jazz | Modern Rock | New
Orleans | Reggae | World
| Duck Baker -- The Art of Fingerstyle Jazz Guitar
(Shanachie) |
| Continuing the
coverage of guitar on There1.com, witness some heady jazz statements from fingerstyle player and string
wizard Duck Baker. Baker's steady classical technique mixes
with styles imported from the piano (Spinning Song, an
tribute to Herbie Nichols followed this release) to produce
slim, strong, minimal lead lines. Imbued with a rare sense of style,
Baker leads a mature and elegant new direction, and he
does it smoothly to say the least on Gerschwin's
"Summertime". |
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| Marc Copland -- Stompin'
With Savoy (Savoy) |
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Marc
Copland's command of the piano and deep sourcing in the giants
of Jazz comes through in this sparkling Savoy recording. At a recent Kimball's
East appearance, Copland reinvigorated works by the masters:
Coltrane on Equinox, Herbie Hancock on "One Finger
Snap", and Wayne Shorter on "Footprints." Ten
minutes of drum intervention by Dennis Chambers on Cole Porter's
"Easy to Love" sparked the band to another level --
a rhythmically robust quintet sound. |
| John Coltrane -- The Believer
(Prestige) |
| John Coltrane makes a crucial
transition during these 1957-58 recordings, towards the spirit
of improvisation, leaving behind a period of experimentation with hard drugs. Coltrane's
playing becomes more concise without sacrificing its intensity,
as his technical limits were rapidly gave way -- leading to unexplored territory for the sax.
His playing closely follows his intuitive path and he locates
great accompaniment, including an unusual frontline of tuba
horns and tenor sax, with the admirable Ray Draper on his
composition of "Filidia." |
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| Ray Brown and Milt Jackson -- Much In Common
(Verve) |
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Milt "Bags" Jackson and Ray Brown
do have much in common. They arrived in New York City from the
mid-West just as bop was breaking out around 1945, and on this
excellent two-CD package you can marvel at their unique chemistry.
Sidemen on this set of three original LPs (Ray Brown
with the All Star Band featuring Cannonball Adderly, Ray
Brown-MiltJackson and Much In Common) include greats Kenny Burrell,
Yusef Lateef, Clark Terry, Oliver Nelson, Tootie Heath, Hank
Jones, and more. It is All Star stuff, got Bags in pocket. |
| Sun Ra--The Singles (Evidence) |
| On Singles you'll
find some different sides to Sun Ra, the cult favorite astro-dude.
He was the intergalactic spokesman for something larger who
burst onto the Chicago scene back in the late '30s with Fletcher
Henderson. By 1954, Ra began putting together singles for the
Saturn record label --extremely hard to get on vinyl (editions
were very limited)-- continuing unabated until 1988 when this collection wraps up.
These
tracks range from Delta Blues to Doo-Wop to Cosmic Jazz,
hitting
unknown intermodal territories. |
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| Clifford Brown--Complete Blue Note and
Pacific Jazz Recordings (Blue Note) |
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Clifford Brown's cool bop trumpet
heralded a new West Coast style in the early 50s. Witness "Lou's
Blues" with Art Blakey on drums, Horace Silver on piano, and
Lou Donaldson on alto sax. Tragically, Brown died at the age
of 26 in a car accident, but his artistry endures with this 4
CD set (packaged in a stylish book-like sleeve). Worthy music with
great sidemen, including Charlie Rouse, Philly Joe Jones,
Percy Heath, and Zoot Sims make this a must-have for any jazz
afficionado. |
| Courtney Pine--Modern Day Jazz Stories
(Verve) |
Courney Pine's diverse
saxaphone based grab bag of sound on "Modern Day" makes Britains premiere
hip-hop/jazz-fusion sax man. Pine crafts a Adderly/Ska-rooted, North London street style.
This melange catches the wind of the nascent English
drum and bass scene-- recordings mixed digitally DIY in garages
by djs. Hear about this approach to jazz tradition as a British
artist in There1's exclusive Pine Interview
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| Kansas City--Original Motion Picture
Soundtrack (Verve) |
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Nicholas Payton, James Zollar,
and Olu Dara get thick on a New Orleans street march version
of Basie and Durham's "Lafayette." Eric Liljestrand deftly
mixes in 'The Hey Hey' audience on this soundtrack for Robert
Altman's silver screen paean to the K.C. jazz scene of
the 1930s. Altman also released performance footage video of these
player as Jazz '34, probably better than the original flick for the music
lovers out there. |
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