jazz help, please
jazz help, please
am currently building a jazz library, starting with miles and coltrane
please advise as to other jazzists that would fit in with this (so far) small group
many thanks
please advise as to other jazzists that would fit in with this (so far) small group
many thanks
- Doreen Peri
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- Zlatko Waterman
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- Doreen Peri
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At Long Last Love - Etta James
You've Changed - Etta James
You've Changed - Eva Cassidy - for comparison... an angelic voice... god I love her... what a loss... she died young
Good Morning, Heartache - Billie Holiday.... YES!
You're My Everything - Ahmad Jamal
Blues on the Ceiling - Fred Neil - my folk hero, but very jazzy
Your Red Wagon - Mose Allison
Sex Machine - Tommy Castro (ok more rock blues than jazz)
The Devil's Real - Chris Smither (folk but jazz, too)
I Want a Little Sugar in my Bowl - Nina Simone
You've Changed - Etta James
You've Changed - Eva Cassidy - for comparison... an angelic voice... god I love her... what a loss... she died young
Good Morning, Heartache - Billie Holiday.... YES!
You're My Everything - Ahmad Jamal
Blues on the Ceiling - Fred Neil - my folk hero, but very jazzy
Your Red Wagon - Mose Allison
Sex Machine - Tommy Castro (ok more rock blues than jazz)
The Devil's Real - Chris Smither (folk but jazz, too)
I Want a Little Sugar in my Bowl - Nina Simone
- Zlatko Waterman
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Knip:
The Gershwin and Cole Porter Songbooks are a great place to start. The great jazz singer Carmen McRae produced a whole album about 1957 of such tunes ( in fact, many albums) which is one of my most coveted jazz recordings, and I have about 300 jazz cds:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/de ... ce&s=music
Recordings of American songwriters from the fifties just don't get any better than this. Though recorded in 1957, the fidelity is still very good, and Carmen is terrific!
I've never heard a more soulful and elegant version of "My Romance."
I forgot to add Joshua Redman and Brad Mehldau to the list of younger jazz players.
Wynton Marsalis' series of recordings of standard tunes with his own group is also very fine.
You might want to buy the series of cds from Ken Burns' film on jazz. The film is also a must-see on DVD. Louis Armstrong is elaborately featured in Burns' film. Narrated and explained by Wynton Marsalis.
Ellis Marsalis, the patriarch of the enormously talented Marsalis jazz family, is a fine jazz pianist who has made several good recordings with his group.
Among Miles recordings, try for "The 58 Sessions", a first-rate recording from the fifties featuring one of the greatest jazz groups ever assembled: Cannonball Adderly, Miles, Coltrane and a young Bill Evans on piano. Just a great, great recording of some fifties standards.
Two of my favorite jazz guitarists are Jim Hall and Joe Pass.Their small ensemble albums are the place to start.
Diana Krall's nifty Nat King Cole tribute album:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/de ... ce&s=music
"All For You."
This record is sexy, virtuosic, soulful and done in impeccable taste: it's an extended version of Cole's 1940's work, when he worked as a jazz singer and pianist and before he was ruined by super-stardom.
I have listened to all of Miss Krall's subsequent recordings, and in none yet has she achieved this peak of delight-- a great debut album.
I'm very fond of the ill-starred saxophonist ( in and out of prison for drug possession and use) Art Pepper. His live album in Japan, "Landscape" is some of the slickest and most tasteful sax playing I've heard. The great ( though somewhat obscure) George Cables plays piano on this date.
"Yesterdays, yesterdays,
Days I knew as happy, sweet sequestered days . . ."
( Kern/Harbach)
"I just sit and wonder
If love isn't just
One big blunder?"
Now who has written lyrics like those in fifty years?
Zlatko
The Gershwin and Cole Porter Songbooks are a great place to start. The great jazz singer Carmen McRae produced a whole album about 1957 of such tunes ( in fact, many albums) which is one of my most coveted jazz recordings, and I have about 300 jazz cds:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/de ... ce&s=music
Recordings of American songwriters from the fifties just don't get any better than this. Though recorded in 1957, the fidelity is still very good, and Carmen is terrific!
I've never heard a more soulful and elegant version of "My Romance."
I forgot to add Joshua Redman and Brad Mehldau to the list of younger jazz players.
Wynton Marsalis' series of recordings of standard tunes with his own group is also very fine.
You might want to buy the series of cds from Ken Burns' film on jazz. The film is also a must-see on DVD. Louis Armstrong is elaborately featured in Burns' film. Narrated and explained by Wynton Marsalis.
Ellis Marsalis, the patriarch of the enormously talented Marsalis jazz family, is a fine jazz pianist who has made several good recordings with his group.
Among Miles recordings, try for "The 58 Sessions", a first-rate recording from the fifties featuring one of the greatest jazz groups ever assembled: Cannonball Adderly, Miles, Coltrane and a young Bill Evans on piano. Just a great, great recording of some fifties standards.
Two of my favorite jazz guitarists are Jim Hall and Joe Pass.Their small ensemble albums are the place to start.
Diana Krall's nifty Nat King Cole tribute album:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/de ... ce&s=music
"All For You."
This record is sexy, virtuosic, soulful and done in impeccable taste: it's an extended version of Cole's 1940's work, when he worked as a jazz singer and pianist and before he was ruined by super-stardom.
I have listened to all of Miss Krall's subsequent recordings, and in none yet has she achieved this peak of delight-- a great debut album.
I'm very fond of the ill-starred saxophonist ( in and out of prison for drug possession and use) Art Pepper. His live album in Japan, "Landscape" is some of the slickest and most tasteful sax playing I've heard. The great ( though somewhat obscure) George Cables plays piano on this date.
"Yesterdays, yesterdays,
Days I knew as happy, sweet sequestered days . . ."
( Kern/Harbach)
"I just sit and wonder
If love isn't just
One big blunder?"
Now who has written lyrics like those in fifty years?
Zlatko
- Marksman45
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- Marksman45
- Posts: 452
- Joined: September 15th, 2004, 11:07 pm
- Location: last Tuesday
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you already mentioned that you started with Miles......but to me, THE greatest 'classic' jazz album is Kind of Blue. i can put that album on ANYTIME, on repeat, and just get lost...forever. as far as albums from start to finish, that one can't be beat.
there are almost too many artists/albums/songs that you could just start with....and then you have to catch up the next 30-40 years. keeping up with jazz has always been frustrating for me...b/c there are so many sub-genres of it.
there are almost too many artists/albums/songs that you could just start with....and then you have to catch up the next 30-40 years. keeping up with jazz has always been frustrating for me...b/c there are so many sub-genres of it.
"she was a mink handjob in sarcophagus heels..."
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