Alex, this was almost the standard for "Moonlight in Vermont"; a lot of DJ's used it as a theme song when they came on late night; it is sooo mellow .
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRNpc-hFkCs
Enjoy the music
Jazz for aficionados
Alex, this was almost the standard for "Moonlight in Vermont"; a lot of DJ's used it as a theme song when they came on late night; it is sooo mellow . https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRNpc-hFkCs Enjoy the music |
Alex, thanks for bringing Johnny Smith back to the discussion. What a nice player! Beautiful and unaffected guitar sound and feel. Jazzcourier points out his affinity for medium tempo tunes and ballads. Ballads are probably the biggest test of any player's true mettle not having the "crutch" of the opportunity to simply show off sheer and sometimes meaningless chops. Perhaps there is some significance to his choice of title for this tune: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=gobhuQ9BKWg However, this is not to say he couldn't tear it up when he wanted to: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=L4wbcMR3chk |
This guy can become habit forming. I read the title of the tune and thought "surely you jest'. Ended up grinning throughout the whole thing. great stuff. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tjpjGSr38d4 Cheers |
Rok, "Finger Poppin"; another classic Silver recording! "Cookin At The Continental" has always been one of my favorite Silver tunes and my favorite on the record. I believe this is the first recording by the classic Silver Quintet and those guys were in top form. Mitchell sounds amazing and "Cookin" has one of my favorite Silver solos of all time. Great stuff! Delta City Blues: What can be said about Michael Brecker that hasn’t been said a thousand times over? First of all, probably the greatest saxophone virtuoso (any genre, including classical) that ever lived. He was able to do things on the instrument that no one else could and with an ease that was hard to believe. Stylistically, obviously coming out of the Coltrane school, harmonic approach-wise and tone-wise. It is not too much of a stretch to say that he was the most influential saxophone player of his generation with scores of young saxophone players copying Breckerisms over the last four decades. Even the prominent younger tenor players who strive to stay "closer to the farm" (at least in their own minds) can be heard to show his influence; especially in how they inflect certain notes on the instrument. Amazing instrumentalist and, within his stylistic world, an amazing jazz player. He was also one of the most humble individuals you could ever meet. His recent death after a long illness was a great loss to the saxophone world. Thanks for that great clip. |
I had an opportunity to hear him live, almost 18 years ago, in my hometown. Funny thing was that the concert started hour after midnight, because there was another performer, before, on the same stage, in towns theatre. So, untill one concert started, finished, and the time that was needed to set up another performance, the time ran away, which was fine for everybody. Remember that he joked that after the concert he has a flight to catch and that he will go directly to airport, because the audience kept him on stage with constant demands for more encore. Found some old link with program http://mariomendes.tripod.com/ Could not find the link with actual performance, aldo the national tv recorded it, but here is the link with concert of Joe Zawinul Syndicate from next year. The quality is not the best, the music is fusion, but it can show glims of atmosphere and interview with Zawinull himself (around 5:50) if someone is interested. https://youtu.be/HPB1v5w9A5g Must add that I had the privilege to see Abbey Lincoln, Charlie Haden, Randy Weston, among others, that same year. It was quite an expirience.If somehow find those tapes, will post them |