Guys, so many great links.
Heres a pretty cool cat
http://www.supercartoons.net/cartoon/846/pizzicato-pussycat.html
Heres a pretty cool cat
http://www.supercartoons.net/cartoon/846/pizzicato-pussycat.html
Jazz for aficionados
Guys, so many great links. Heres a pretty cool cat http://www.supercartoons.net/cartoon/846/pizzicato-pussycat.html |
As good as that is jafant, I think it's been posted on this thread too many times, but I'll submit "What's New" anyway, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQvIvb1S1EM |
Pryso, listened to the Previn "Wes Side Story". Fantastic! What an amazing musician he is and I sometimes forget what a great piano player he is as I usually think of him and know his work, first and foremost, as a conductor and composer. One of the most impressive resumes out there. Fitting that he should take on the music of Leonard Bernstein, another musician who was extremely successful as composer/conductor (although less so as pianist). I really like what what he did with that music in a piano trio setting. The trio sounds fantastic and swings like crazy. Very different in attitude from the Oscar Peterson recording, however. I like both recordings very much, but if a choice had to be made, I would say the Peterson gets closer to the intended feeling of the original music. While Bernstein's WSS is remarkable for being able to so successfully blend the elements of Classical, Jazz and pop, it is ultimately music written for musical theater and, as such, has a certain stylistic tradition to live up to. Not a negative at all, but that stylistic tradition includes, as is to be expected, a certain amount of....theatricality; combined with a typically very upbeat quality. For me, and all other considerations aside, the Peterson gets closer to that feeling. The Previn, as great as it is, is a little "cool" by comparison and without as much of the up-beat and wide-eyed quality that characterizes a lot of music for the theater. Both are great! Thanks for mentioning that recording. |
frogman, you're welcome, and thanks for the additional comments. You conveyed many of my own impressions, including a little preference for Peterson's emotion, while still appreciating Previn's approach. Also orpheus, I'll come back to listing recommendations I took away from my dad's music. I tried twice yesterday but lost what I'd written before completing it so gave up in frustration. :^( |