viernes, 28 de agosto de 2009
Sonny Clark Trio
The Art of the Improvisers - Ornette Coleman
miércoles, 26 de agosto de 2009
lunes, 24 de agosto de 2009
Wayne Shorter - Speak No Evil
MURRAY HORWITZ, American Film Institute: Now, there's a composition into which any good jazz musician would love to sink his or her teeth. Hi, I'm Murray Horwitz, and that's the sound of jazz composition of the highest order, played by the very best instrumentalists. And that's why we're inducting composer and saxophonist Wayne Shorter's Speak No Evil into the NPR Basic Jazz Record Library.
HORWITZ: Wayne Shorter had already made his mark as a jazz composer by 1964, when this album was made. It was a little while after he had joined what became one of Miles Davis' greatest quintets. His compositions were to be one of the reasons for that greatness. But Speak No Evil is sort of a consolidation of Wayne Shorter's compositional excellence. It's so thorough and consistent and wide-ranging. It's almost a manifesto for his ideas. Those ideas were new 40 years ago, but they're still fresh today.
HORWITZ: I have to resist the temptation to use too many adjectives like "moody," "atmospheric" and "original," but Speak No Evil is all of those things. At the same time, it keeps a classic jazz flavor. It swings, and it's filled with the blues, wonderful improvisations and terrific ensemble playing. And what an ensemble! Bassist Ron Carter, drummer Elvin Jones, pianist Herbie Hancock, and trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, in addition to Wayne Shorter. How they play together!
HORWITZ: All in all, a classic and truly basic addition to your NPR Basic Jazz Record Library from five contemporary master musicians. It's called Wayne Shorter, Speak No Evil from Blue Note Records. For NPR Jazz, I'm Murray Horwitz.
Tracklist
1 Witch Hunt
(Rudy Van Gelder Edition) (1999 Digital Remaster) 8:09 8
2 Fee-Fi-Fo-Fum
(Rudy Van Gelder Edition) (1999 Digital Remaster) 5:52 11
3 Dance Cadaverous
(Rudy Van Gelder Edition) (1999 Digital Remaster) 6:44 9
4 Speak No Evil
(Rudy Van Gelder Edition) (1999 Digital Remaster) 8:21 7
5 Infant Eyes
(Rudy Van Gelder Edition) (1999 Digital Remaster) 6:52 8
6 Wild Flower
(Rudy Van Gelder Edition) (1999 Digital Remaster) 6:05 5
7 Dance Cadaverous (Alternate Take)
(Rudy Van Gelder Edition) (1999 Digital Remaster) 6:33 5
Wayne Shorter - tenor sax
Herbie Hancock - piano
Ron Carter - bass
Elvin Jones - drums
Freddie Hubbard - trumpet
Recorded December 24, 1964
Originally released on the album Speak No Evil BLP 4194
Link
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NEW AND OLD GOSPEL - Jackie McLean
Miles Davis: Dark Magus (1974)
Miles Davis: Dark Magus (1974)
Moja 25:23
Wili 25:02
Tatu 25:21
Nne 25:30
• Pete Cosey – guitar
• Miles Davis – organ, trumpet
• Al Foster – drums
• Dominique Gaumont – guitar
• Michael Henderson – bass
• Azar Lawrence – tenor saxophone
• Dave Liebman – flute, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone
• Reggie Lucas – guitar
• Teo Macero – producer
• James Mtume – percussion
THE SCENE: Considering his deification nowadays it’s hard to believe that Miles Davis was once considered washed up. In 1974 he was several years into his “electric phase”, a modern sound that got him booked into larger rock halls but did not reconnect him with the black audience. To fix that problem he added a major dose of funk to his songs, culminating in the recording of Dark Magus.
Miles stopped writing tunes at this time, preferring to bandlead through osmosis and letting the songs flow through the process. He wrapped his new sound around distinct African rhythms, a saxophone player and three, count ‘em, THREE guitarists with a fistful of fuzz pedals. The result was unlike anything else in the Davis canon.
Mean-spirited, brutal, demonic, it’s a harsh trip into psyche of a man at the end of his rope. Distorted guitars rage into the atmosphere, adding a raw heavy metal vibe. The songs don’t really start and stop as much as they transform into different amalgamations of riffs and beats. “Moja” features an oppressive dissonance anchored by a steady cowbell, but that cowbell helps lead the song through its twenty-four minutes of tonal displacement.
Mysterious and muscular, even his trumpet tone had changed from his early ultra-cool mode to an insistent mosquito honk, rattling off brittle bursts in “Tatu”.
Dark Magus was recorded live at Carnegie Hall, a stately room that usually features classical performers and public speakers. Why this was the place to unleash the shrill atonal keyboard mashing of “Wili” is anybody’s guess. Then again, Miles was on heavy diet of Percodan and cocaine at the time, so decision-making wasn’t his strong suit.
THE FALLOUT: Critics hated it. Fans hated it. His own label hated it. In his own autobiography Miles fails to mention it. Dark Magus was so heavy on his soul that he only recorded two more albums before retiring from performing altogether.