To be totally contentious :)...
Although I like many of the recordings mentioned in the previous posts I find MANY of them boring, repetitve, and, to be frank, out of date. What was cutting edge 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago is no longer. This is not to say I don't like that music. My SACD of Stan Getz, Jobim, and Gilberto gets lots of late night airplay, as well as recordings by Miles, Mingus, Coltrane, Red Garland, Wynton Kelly..etc., etc., etc..
However...! Here are a few more comtemporary suggestions:
Dave Douglas "Freak In" And "The Infinite"
Laurent de Wilde (killer!) Stories
Brad Meldhau (any recording)
Tomasz Stanko Soul of Things
e.s.t. Somewhere Else Before
Jacky Terrason Smile and A Paris...
Jon Abercrombie (almost any recording) Tactics...best live performance I've ever heard, with Pat Martino and Joey Defrancesco Live At Yoshi's a close second
Lonnie Plaxico Melange
Charles Mc Bride Vertical Vision
Dan Wall Of The Wall (he plays Hammond Organ for John Abercrombie)
Anything by a Canadian group called Metalwood
And check out the DVD Audio recording of Medeski Martin and Woods Uninvisible. Also check out John Scofield.
IMO, although much of the older stuff is revealing of jazz's history, and possessed of much good playing it is no longer cutting edge and innovative. It is certainly the wellspring and body of work which must be mastered by anyone hoping to "play jazz" but I believe that the essence of jazz does not lay in the past, but in the present (or future), and very much in the hands of young technically accomplished musicians who mine tradition for technique but who are also fired up by more current musical trends.
BTW I offer these observations and suggestions in the spirit of friendly controversy. I mean no offense to the "trad jazz" fans.
Doug
PS anyone know the origins of the word "jazz"?
Although I like many of the recordings mentioned in the previous posts I find MANY of them boring, repetitve, and, to be frank, out of date. What was cutting edge 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago is no longer. This is not to say I don't like that music. My SACD of Stan Getz, Jobim, and Gilberto gets lots of late night airplay, as well as recordings by Miles, Mingus, Coltrane, Red Garland, Wynton Kelly..etc., etc., etc..
However...! Here are a few more comtemporary suggestions:
Dave Douglas "Freak In" And "The Infinite"
Laurent de Wilde (killer!) Stories
Brad Meldhau (any recording)
Tomasz Stanko Soul of Things
e.s.t. Somewhere Else Before
Jacky Terrason Smile and A Paris...
Jon Abercrombie (almost any recording) Tactics...best live performance I've ever heard, with Pat Martino and Joey Defrancesco Live At Yoshi's a close second
Lonnie Plaxico Melange
Charles Mc Bride Vertical Vision
Dan Wall Of The Wall (he plays Hammond Organ for John Abercrombie)
Anything by a Canadian group called Metalwood
And check out the DVD Audio recording of Medeski Martin and Woods Uninvisible. Also check out John Scofield.
IMO, although much of the older stuff is revealing of jazz's history, and possessed of much good playing it is no longer cutting edge and innovative. It is certainly the wellspring and body of work which must be mastered by anyone hoping to "play jazz" but I believe that the essence of jazz does not lay in the past, but in the present (or future), and very much in the hands of young technically accomplished musicians who mine tradition for technique but who are also fired up by more current musical trends.
BTW I offer these observations and suggestions in the spirit of friendly controversy. I mean no offense to the "trad jazz" fans.
Doug
PS anyone know the origins of the word "jazz"?