Styles: Jazz
Label: Jazz Door
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:48
Size: 114,3 MB
Art: Front
(3:22) 1. Wow
(2:50) 2. Crosscurrent
(2:47) 3. Yesterdays
(3:06) 4. Marionette
(3:01) 5. Sax Of A Kind
(2:29) 6. Intuition
(3:04) 7. Digression
(3:01) 8. Glad Am I
(2:44) 9. This Is Called Love
(2:45) 10. Blame Me
(2:42) 11. I Found My Baby
(7:43) 12. Remember
(5:44) 13. Indiana
(4:23) 14. I'm No Good Without You
Label: Jazz Door
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:48
Size: 114,3 MB
Art: Front
(3:22) 1. Wow
(2:50) 2. Crosscurrent
(2:47) 3. Yesterdays
(3:06) 4. Marionette
(3:01) 5. Sax Of A Kind
(2:29) 6. Intuition
(3:04) 7. Digression
(3:01) 8. Glad Am I
(2:44) 9. This Is Called Love
(2:45) 10. Blame Me
(2:42) 11. I Found My Baby
(7:43) 12. Remember
(5:44) 13. Indiana
(4:23) 14. I'm No Good Without You
The history of jazz is written as a recounting of the lives of its most famous (and presumably, most influential) artists. Reality is not so simple, however. Certainly the most important of the music's innovators are those whose names are known by all Armstrong, Parker, Young, Coltrane. Unfortunately, the jazz critic's tendency to inflate the major figures' status often comes at the expense of other musicians' reputations men and women who have made significant, even essential, contributions of their own, who are, for whatever reason, overlooked in the mad rush to canonize a select few. Lennie Tristano is one of those who have not yet received their critical due. In the mid-'40s, the Chicago-born pianist arrived on the scene with a concept that genuinely expanded the prevailing bop aesthetic. Tristano brought to the music of Charlie Parker and Bud Powell a harmonic language that adapted the practices of contemporary classical music; his use of polytonal effects in tunes like "Out on a Limb" was almost Stravinsky-esque, and his extensive use of counterpoint was (whether or not he was conscious of it at the time) in keeping with the trends being set in mid-century art music. Until relatively recently, it had seldom been acknowledged that Tristano had been the first to perform and record a type of music that came to be called "free jazz." In 1949 almost a decade before the making of Ornette Coleman's first records Tristano's group (which included Lee Konitz, Warne Marsh, and Billy Bauer) cut the first recorded example of freely improvised music in the history of jazz. The two cuts, "Intuition" and "Digression," were created spontaneously, without any pre-ordained reference to time, tonality, or melody. The resultant work was an outgrowth of Tristano's preoccupation with feeling and spontaneity in the creation of music. It influenced, among others, Charles Mingus, whose earliest records sound eerily similar to those of Tristano in terms of style and compositional technique. Mingus came by the influence honestly; he studied with the pianist for a period in the early '50s, as did many other well-known jazz musicians, such as Sal Mosca, Phil Woods, and the aforementioned Konitz and Marsh....More Bio https://itunes.apple.com/ca/artist/lennie-tristano/id47528618#fullText
Thanks for this Lennie Tristano album.
ReplyDelete- der bajazzo
Thank You Der Bajazzo!!!!
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