Jazz - For all the jazz lovers

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Welcome to [email protected], a lemmy community dedicated to all things jazz.

Anything jazz related, including fusion jazz and everything, are all welcome. Be sure to follow these rules.

Feel free to make any suggestions regarding this community and enjoy! Related Communities:

founded 1 year ago
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Third Page: Resonance by Sun-Mi Hong (sun-mihong.bandcamp.com)
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/jazz
 
 

I love drums-led combos and this one shines. The track called Home really caught my ear first but the whole set is worth a listen. Calming and patient, it spreads out in time.

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Great set, from a great trumpeter and quartet.

Bass – Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen
Drums – Norman Fearrington
Piano, Composed By – Duke Jordan
Trumpet – Chet Baker

Engineer [Assisting] – Tom West
Engineer [Recording] – Freddy Hansson, Thomas Brekling

And a bonus story from one of the YT comments (I'm not clear on who wrote this but it's still a nice read):

~ ~ ~

The first time I met Chet Baker, he was playing at a little neighborhood club called Strykers on 97th & Columbus Avenue on Manhattan's Upper West Side. He was coming back after years of an extended period of absence, having diligently devoted himself to re-learning to play trumpet with dentures, which everybody told him could not be done. But he persevered and prevailed, and this was one of his first comeback gigs. Awesome! I never heard any trumpet sound like that! I don't think it could ever be captured on a recording: So intimate tender innovative & personal...sometimes just whispering & breathing infinite silence space&timelessness into his trumpet...He just loved music & making music so deeeeeeeeeply & innately: just making the purest finest most beautiful sounds and blissful ethereal effects. Chet Baker was truly a great Maestro of the highest degree, a natural-born precocious musical genius like Mozart!

During the break I came up to Chet to thank & enthusiastically congratulate him. In my over-enthusiasm I started telling Chet how much I also dug & admired & had been imitating his singing for years, and automatically went into my little imitation of him singing “I Wish I Knew” till I caught myself & felt embarrassed & silly & said,“Oh no! Here I am doing my Chet Baker imitation for Chet Baker!” He just smiled & said “You don't look old enough to remember that record.” (1955 LP called “Chet Baker Sings& Plays")

He looked gaunt & emaciated, almost like a derelict. But his voice and manner were very polite mellow kind & refined, sensitive gentle very personable sweet good-natured & very likable, casual cultured & very well-bred. I asked him if he would sing during his second-set after the break. He thanked me for asking but apologized & explained why he really couldn't because he was working with just a bassist & drummer & no piano...

He excused himself when his band-mates summoned him to prepare for their second set. There were just a few other people at that very small dimly-lit cellar club that night. My date was a nice girl who had the same last name as me though we were otherwise unrelated, I barely remember her, but we were both blown-away by Chet!

When Chet came back from the break, he opened his set singing “Just Friends” Bless his heart! Still feels good that he honored my request & was singing just for me! His singing always kinda reminds me of Alfalfa from “Our Gang”

I still listen to Chet's music almost every day now, often listening to him continually all day long, and when I try listening to something else for a change, I find myself missing his familiar soothing sound which is so much an integral part of me, I find myself unable to listen to anything else & hafta sink right back into that sweet fine&mellow transcendent celestial atmosphere he creates so effortlessly & endlessly...

PS: I had given Chet my business card that night, and to my surprise & amazement—first thing in the morning--he called me! But that's another story for another time now...

~ ~ ~

That bit about Alfafa from Our Gang is just wrong - I've never thought that when listening to Mr. Baker sing. Chet was way better than that.

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Hi everybody,

I'm a mostly self-taught musician who mainly plays acoustic guitar. I've recently been learning certain versions of jazz standards for fun, girl from ipanema, autumn leaves, and I've been trying to pick up a few others, but I feel like I'm hitting a brick wall. I'm having trouble upgrading from mimicry to a more holistic understanding of the pieces. For example, if I were to play with someone else in another key, I'd have to fumble around a bit to transpose it mentally. I guess that may be caused by me learning only specific versions. Some questions:

  • Does anyone have tips for learning standards?
  • How can I locate the "purest" form of a standard, if that even makes sense? I feel like learning certain interpretations with their own flair isn't ideal.
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Great stuff, the album is also exquisite.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/jazz
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Here is a version of this great song that i recorded a while ago and then forgot about. Look on www.timlerch.com for a new lesson coming soon.

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Nice to see NPR still covers jazz.

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Interesting back story on Wiki:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manteca_(song)

Manteca!!

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I'm on a mission to get Johnny Smith some recognition as a great jazz guitar player.

Discogs link to the recording this is from (from 1956):

https://www.discogs.com/master/190206-Johnny-Smith-Quintet-Featuring-Stan-Getz-Moonlight-In-Vermont

There's a comment on that page which sums up this LP as "vanilla" but I disagree. Laid back, cool as a cucumber, but not plain.

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Aaron Diehl Revives Mary Lou Williams

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Interesting read (or listen) on the history of Jazz as propaganda in WWII.

Warning: Discusses German nazis

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Awesome album

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Smooth and very easy on the ears; Paul Desmond doing what he does best.

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One of the best versions of this song. Check this album out.

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Dave Brubeck on Take Five (www.youtube.com)
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/jazz
 
 

Very cool story.

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A very popular tune back in the day, this song has been performed by everyone from the Benny Goodman quartet, to Phil Woods Orchestra, and many more. But I like this version best.

I hope this gets your Saturday/ Sunday headed in the right direction.

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