HeHeHe,Talk about tying it all together, Coltrane, Africa, and for ROK, 4 French horns and a tuba. Conducted by Eric Dolphy.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8J4YZwFa_1w
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8J4YZwFa_1w
Jazz for aficionados
HeHeHe,Talk about tying it all together, Coltrane, Africa, and for ROK, 4 French horns and a tuba. Conducted by Eric Dolphy. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8J4YZwFa_1w |
Acman3: There was a tuba on the Mingus Big Band CD I posted. I meant to mention it, but forgot. Guess they are more common than I thought. Now all we need is a full CD of solo Tuba! I could put it right next to my CDs of solo Harp and solo Bassoon! Thanks for post. I have that CD by Coltrane. Now I will listen to it. Cheers |
One of my favorite modern trumpeters, Dave Douglas. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DpK69hHcfKw&list=PLA989DAB13E7299B7 |
Acman3, you really tied it together. Trane was on a spiritual journey that he was beginning to express through his music. I believe Alice Coltrane, his wife, exemplified the destination Trane was trying to reach. Her music is filled with Trane's spirituality just before he died. Here we can hear it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L2HwbFLh5j0 Since leaving the music we've been into, and going to Alice Coltrane is like stepping out of hot water, and then getting into cold; you have to listen to more music in that groove in order to absorb it. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=smisXZ7KVpo Like it or not Rok, this is where Trane was headed, he took some way out trips on live sets; that's where he played music that was totally unfamiliar to fans of the "old Trane", that music was a preview of things to come. Enjoy the music. |