Like a football player breaking records in Canada, and people claiming he is the best at his position.
Also, iron always sharpens iron.
Jazz for aficionados
Dizzy's Big 4: I have that CD. They sure were in a hurry. But Dizzy always seemed to be in a rush. (too many notes?) :) Never did like the Tone of Dizzy's trumpet. But, he is one artist I think I need to look at again. You reach a point in buying Jazz, that you stop and ask yourself, "now, who did I miss". I think I missed a lot of Dizzy. Gotta go back. Thanks for the clips Cheers |
Killer bebop session and definitely a must-have record. One of the best and a testament to Stan Getz’ greatness; he could do it all. The story behind the title has nothing to do with any kind of distinction between musician and listener. Rather, it was to suggest a distinction between the real players (musicians) and the wannabes. Bebop was, to a great extent, a “test” of a jazz player’s “stuff”. With the blinding fast tempos and intricate melodies many bebop tunes posed a great challenge for players and not all of them could pull it off credibly. In fact, during jam sessions players would sometimes call tunes that were especially intricate and would count them off at really fast tempos in order to keep lesser players from joining the jam session. The title’s meaning is akin to that of this other record; one of my favorite jazz record titles as well as favorite record: Hank Mobley’s “No Room For Squares”: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL0C6579B036180F3A |