mixtapes for weathers and moods / music for good days and bad days


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A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Jane Bunnett. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Jane Bunnett. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2019. április 4., csütörtök

04-04-2019 JAZZ:MiX # 33 jazz tracks on the the JAZZ_line 1995-2006

Dave Douglas
04-04-2019 JAZZ:MiX # 33 jazz tracks on the the JAZZ_line 1995-2006 Dave Douglas, Diana Krall, Zachary Breaux, Jane Bunnett and The Spirits of Havana, Paul Motian & the Electric Bebop Band, Matthew Shipp Quartet, Brad Mehldau, Howard Alden, Jeremy Pelt, Donny McCaslin, Jenny Scheinman, Medeski Scofield Martin and Wood

J A Z Z   M U S I C



LISTEN THE PLAYLIST ON DEEZER.COM
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JAZZ_line  The player always plays the latest playlist tracks. / A lejátszó mindig a legújabb playlist számait játssza.
1995-2006


Cutting-edge trumpeter who seems equally at home in the avant garde jazz world and the pop milieu. Dave Douglas arguably became the most original trumpeter/composer of his generation. Douglas' stylistic range is broad yet unaffected; his music is not a pastiche, but rather a personal aesthetic that reflects a wide variety of interests. He explicitly cites such diverse influences as Igor Stravinsky, Stevie Wonder, and John Coltrane. As a composer, Douglas adapts and synthesizes unusual forms and creates his own out of disparate elements. As a trumpeter, he possesses a comprehensive jazz technique; certainly one hears the ghost of Lester Bowie in Douglas' expressive manipulations of timbre and pitch, but more pronounced is the integration of distinctive compositional and improvisational conceptions that ultimately defines his work.
Dave Douglas
Mirrors (Dave Douglas) 3:03
Going, Going (Dave Douglas) 5:47
Who Knows? (Thelonious Monk)
from Five 1995
Trumpeter Dave Douglas' unusual string group (which also includes violinist Mark Feldman, cellist Erik Friedlander, bassist Drew Gross and drummer Michael Sarin) is reminiscent in some ways of Ornette Coleman's free-jazz quartet despite not playing any of Ornette's originals and having a very different instrumentation. All of the musicians function as equals, the interaction is often intuitive, and the improvising on eight Douglas originals (including tunes dedicated to Steve Lacy, Wayne Shorter, Mark Dresser, Woody Shaw, John Cage and John Zorn), Thelonious Monk's "Who Knows," and Rahsaan Roland Kirk's "The Inflated Tear" is on a high level. Well worth exploring.


Contemporary jazz singer and pianist who took the pop world by storm in the 1990s, often echoing early swinging simplicity in her work. At the outset of her career in the 1990s, Diana Krall appeared to be a throwback to a different, classier era -- specifically, the mid-20th century, when the Great American Songbook experienced a revival in the hands of singers such as Nat King Cole. Krall's 1996 breakthrough, All for You: A Dedication to the Nat King Cole Trio, deliberately paid tribute to this period, but Krall didn't focus merely on singing the song in an old-fashioned way: as the subtitle of All for You suggested, Krall placed equal emphasis on the piano playing...
Diana Krall 
I'm an Errand Girl for Rhythm (Nat King Cole) 2:56
You Call It Madness (Russ Columbo / Con Conrad / Gladys Dubois / Paul Gregory) 4:36
Hit That Jive Jack (John Alston / Alex Alstone / Skeets Tolbert) 4:16
from All For You (A Dedication To The Nat King Cole Trio) 1996
Pianist/vocalist Diana Krall pays tribute to the Nat King Cole Trio on her Impulse! set. In general, the medium and up-tempo tunes work best, particularly such hot ditties as "I'm an Errand Girl for Rhythm," "Frim Fram Sauce," and "Hit That Jive Jack." Krall does not attempt to directly copy Cole much (either pianistically or vocally), although his influence is obviously felt on some of the songs. The slow ballads are actually as reminiscent of Shirley Horn as Cole, particularly the somber "I'm Through With Love" and "If I Had You." Guitarist Russell Malone gets some solo space on many of the songs and joins in on the group vocal of "Hit That Jive Jack," although it is surprising that he had no other opportunities to interact vocally with Krall; a duet could have been delightful. Bassist Paul Keller is fine in support, pianist Benny Green backs Krall's vocal on "If I Had You," and percussionist Steve Kroon is added on one song. Overall, this is a tasteful effort that succeeds.


Influenced by George Benson and Wes Montgomery, Zachary Breaux was a flexible guitarist who could handle soul-jazz, post-bop, and hard bop as well as more commercial pop-jazz and NAC music.
Zachary Breaux 
Breakfast at the Epiphany (Zachary Breaux) 0:16
Cafe Reggio (Isaac Hayes) 6:06
The Thrill Is Gone (Arthur Benson / Dale Pettite) 5:10
All Blues (Miles Davis) 6:33
from Uptown Groove 1997
Guitarist Zachary Breaux, who tragically died just a few months after recording this CD (his debut), was a potentially great guitarist with a style coming from George Benson. In fact, his solos are generally more memorable than the purposely commercial material on this set, which largely consists of melodic, jazzy funk jams, usually with rather basic electronic rhythms... Among the other guest musicians are flutist Hubert Laws, bassist Brian Bromberg and pianist Renee Rosnes.

2019. február 20., szerda

20-02-2019 # JAZZ:MiX # 33 jazz tracks on the the JAZZ_line 1989-1998

Carla Bley
20-02-2019 # JAZZ:MiX # 33 jazz tracks on the the JAZZ_line 1989-1998 WATT Works Family - CARLA BLEY, MICHAEL MANTLER, STEVE SWALLOW, KAREN MANTLER, STEVE WEISBERG, John Scofield, Steve Coleman and Five Elements, Al Di Meola, Tom Harrell, Patricia Barber, Dave Douglas, Diana Krall, Zachary Breaux, Jane Bunnett and The Spirits of Havana

J A Z Z   M U S I C



LISTEN THE PLAYLIST ON DEEZER.COM
http://www.deezer.com/playlist/1681171971
JAZZ_line  The player always plays the latest playlist tracks. / A lejátszó mindig a legújabb playlist számait játssza.
1989-1998




CARLA BLEY, MICHAEL MANTLER, STEVE SWALLOW, KAREN MANTLER, STEVE WEISBERG
Walking Batteriewoman (Carla Bley) 3:57
Steve Weisberg - I Can't Stand Another Night Alone (In Bed With You) (Clifton Chenier / Steve Weisberg) 5:37
Michael Mantler - Alien, Pt. 2 (Michael Mantler) 3:56
from The WATT Works Family Album / Rec. 1973 - 1989




A dazzling electric guitarist with a steely tone and fluid lines to earmark his distinctive post-bop style. Known for his distinctive, slightly distorted sound, jazz guitarist John Scofield is a masterful jazz improviser who has straddled the lines between straight-ahead post-bop, fusion, funk, and soul-jazz. One of the "big three" of late 20th century jazz guitarists (along with Pat Metheny and Bill Frisell), Scofield's influence grew in the '90s and continued into the 21st century.
John Scofield
Wabash III (John Scofield) 6:22
So Sue Me (John Scofield) 6:03
Flower Power (John Scofield) 5:01
from  Time on My Hands 1990
John Scofield has turned the corner from journeyman jazz guitarist to become one of the most inventive and witty players on the contemporary scene. This date, his first for the Blue Note label, builds on a discography following several recordings for the Gramavision label, and also progresses this contemporary jazz music into an individualism that can only bode well for his future efforts. Teamed with the rising-star saxophonist Joe Lovano and the bulletproof rhythm team of bassist Charlie Haden and drummer Jack DeJohnette, Scofield is emerging as a player of distinction on the electric guitar, and a composer whose mirthful ideas add spark and vigor to his newfound musical setting. In this co-production with Peter Erskine, Sco has found his melodic stride in making music that is bright and clever without being overly intellectual, retaining a soulful quality enriched by the deep-rooted, bluesy tenor sax of Lovano...


Alto saxophonist, composer, producer, and MacArthur Fellow who founded the influential cross-genre M-Base movement and leads several bands. According to many musicians who came of age between the 1980s and the early 21st century, the influence of M-Base founder, composer, and alto saxophonist Steve Coleman cannot be overstated. His technical virtuosity and engagement with musical traditions and styles from around the world are expanding the possibilities of spontaneous composition.
Steve Coleman and Five Elements
Twister (Steve Coleman) 7:48
Beyond All We Know (Steve Coleman) 4:10
Black Phonemics (Steve Coleman) 4:01
Magneto (Steve Coleman) 2:52
from  Black Science 1991
The mixture of complex funk rhythms and inside/outside soloing performed by the "M-Base" stylists, although similar to Ornette Coleman's free funk, is quite different from any other earlier idiom. Altoist Steve Coleman's CD is recommended as a good example of his music. The improvisations are dynamic, unpredictable, and quite original and the ensemble (which includes pianist James Weidman, guitarist David Gilmore, and three guest vocals by Cassandra Wilson) is tight. Coleman, who wrote all but one of the originals, is the dominant force behind this often-disturbing but generally stimulating music.