First heard Tom Harrell with Phil Woods. Some teachers who owned a CD store would play great music. Fantastic time.
https://vimeo.com/269293170
https://vimeo.com/269293170
Jazz for aficionados
First heard Tom Harrell with Phil Woods. Some teachers who owned a CD store would play great music. Fantastic time. https://vimeo.com/269293170 |
My first Tom Harrell disc. I bought it when it was released in 2012 and I like it a lot. Still filling out my Harrell collection. Any recommendations? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LU71pXt2Nyg |
Lot’s of fantastic links from you guys, thank you. You made me google about Bill Evans again. Seemed like very introspective man (agree with frogman) and musician. So was his music just like that, gentle, soft-spoken and in a way, shy but with complete absence of anything resembling compromise - which is quite stunning - to be able to reconcile the strong and the weak in the same phrase in a way to make it sound compact and matching. Imho, it looks like he definitely haven’t received the credit he deserved. Thank you pjw for the lessons from boxing. Now and then, like to observe of what is expected to be a "big boxing event". Last time that was a fight between Andy Ruiz and Anthony Joshua, that ended in a quite unexpected way. What the hell happened there? Curious to know... Boxing and jazz by Matthew Shipp "To an untrained ear jazz can sound crazy, to an untrained eye boxing can seem mad - as the ear and eye becomes trained one learns the complex patterns that underlie the boxing match or the jazz solo - the theater of Kinetic Gesture - a kaleidoscope of intelligent quicksilver action generates a structure of intense beauty. For the body becomes poetry in motion whether through a keyboard or in the ring - complex patterned action generates a poetic time and space - violent yet dancelike, uncivilized yet graceful, raw yet sophisticated." |