Who is your favorite Jazz musician and what is your favorite song?

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In summary, Jazz music is a genre of music that has always appealed to the author. His favorite musician and song is Herbie Hancock, and he also enjoys Weather Report, Heavy Weather, and Miles Davis albums. He has a broad and eclectic taste in music, and his favorite classical album is Beethoven's 9th Symphony.
  • #141
difalcojr said:
Not sure why. There were just so, so many jazz musicians in the 50's and 60's. Many, many great piano players and saxophone players. Wikipedia defines this sound as soul jazz.
Maybe the Japanese bands will start some tours soon where you live so you don't have to move. I think they would fill much more than a small nightclub or racetrack side stage.
BB King performed at Harrah's casino on a small, side stage during the daytime at a time in his life. He also filled the SF Fillmore Auditorium as often as he wanted.
Also, are the Japanese bands there also playing Dixieland jazz?
Or jazz with Latin beats like this one.
Dixieland jazz I have seen. There was a group call Orchestra De La Luz that moved to Latin America and was quite popular for a number of years. I've also seen 50's rock done very well. Very few tribute bands and they all seem to be for The Beatles. Superfly was very popular, doing 60's rock sort of like the Rolling Stones. I think they were great. Techo was invented by Germany and Japan and evolved into hiphop. The Yellow Magic Orchestra appeared on Soul Train.

Japanese taste goes for complicated music hot fast and tight. They can do ballads equally well but usually prefer not to. They avoid is anything that is simple and repetitive. You don't hear contemporary US music there at all.
 
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  • #142
 
  • #143
Elvin Jones -- Anthropology

 
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  • #144
Anthropology (Remastered 2002) · Dizzy Gillespie & his Orchestra ·

 
  • #145
Saori Yano Donna Lee

Bird Lives

 
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  • #146
 
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  • #148
Jazz covers so many moods too. Happy jazz.
 
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  • #149
pinball1970 said:
One of the reason I was hooked on USA TV & film as a kid, jazz music permeated children and adult TV, film sound tracks.
Found out it was Oliver Nelson who wrote the scores for Ironside, Columbo, The Six Million Dollar Man, and The Death of a Gunfighter. Here is his "Stolen Moments".
 
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  • #150
Here is some more big band jazz with Gearld Wilson.
 
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  • #151
Organ instrumental of Ray Charles' song.
 
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  • #152
Bobby Timmons wrote a lot of tunes and melodies in his short life too. Many others covered his songs.
 
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  • #153
Chris Potter plays Anthropology.

 
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  • #154
Someday My Prince Will Come by Yuka Yanagihara.

Not wild about the improv but she plays the theme beautifully.

 
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  • #155
Charlie Parker -- Cherokee. It was his favorite tune.

 
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  • #156
Did I already mention Candy Dulfer and 'Lily was here'?

 
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  • #157
Had to listen to the above music without looking at the video. To be able to listen to the music and not have my eyes distract my ears. :smile:
Jazz. Isn't it great it can be soft and dreamy like the above post or like so many other sounds? Limitless variety, seems. Did not know this band was the same one as in posts 126 and 127, covering classical there. Kenny Ball and his Jazzmen.

 
  • #158
Scott Hamilton -- Cherokee

 
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  • #159
drum solo at 4:20.
 
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  • #160
 
  • #161
I think this bass viol player is great.

 
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  • #162
difalcojr said:
drum solo at 4:20.

Drum solo here too. The greatest drummer introduced by one of the greatest vocalists of all time.

 
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  • #163
Fabulous solo on Donna Lee by guitarist Pat Martino.

Trumpeter Howard McGee played with Bird for a short time. You wonder why he didn't gain more fame.

 
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  • #164
Not many singers could do this

 
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  • #165
Check out the vibes

 
  • #166
Hopefully this will play. Just a short one but towards the end he breaks a stick so he somersaults it so he is not playing with the broken end, is not satisfied so he ditches it grabs another stick, somersaults that too and carries on!

 
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  • #167
This is from maybe twenty years ago. I went all the way to Seattle to see this band. I felt Hiromi should go solo, which she often does these days.

 
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  • #168
Cleo Laine -- Dunsinane Blues (After Macbeth)


Cleo Laine sings Shakespeare, 'The Compleat Works'​

 
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  • #169
  • #170
He's in a league of his own! Hard to see, for sure, he's moving so fast. Seems like he changes hand positions on the sticks a lot too. Chokes up on the bat like baseball.
 
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  • #171
Hornbein said:
This is from maybe twenty years ago. I went all the way to Seattle to see this band. I felt Hiromi should go solo, which she often does these days.



Yeah, she's quite something. I love this performance:

 
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  • #172
difalcojr said:
He's in a league of his own! Hard to see, for sure, he's moving so fast. Seems like he changes hand positions on the sticks a lot too. Chokes up on the bat like baseball.
I broke a stick during a warm up the other week and I wish I had it on camera. I actually thought about this video, 2-3 seconds, should I try and somersault it? 2-3 seconds? Tried to somersault it 3-4 seconds, reached for a new stick, (4 seconds) whilst the guys knew something weird was going on because I was missing things out!
What I was playing was far simpler than the Buddy track too!
Everything he did was instant and instinctive.
The pattern he does whilst reaching for the stick is a 3 over 4 pattern, it's not a triplet, it is quavers but a pattern of repeated bass drum the two on the snare. Not the easiest to do whilst reaching for a stick!
 
  • #173
I am a student here in this. Interesting. Looks like he twirls them like a baton a lot. Is it true that every drum solo he plays is different, never quite the same?
 
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  • #174
Arjan82 said:
Yeah, she's quite something. I love this performance:


She is absolutely incredible, I am only a few minutes in! Amazing talent.
 
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  • #175
difalcojr said:
I am a student here in this. Interesting. Looks like he twirls them like a baton a lot. Is it true that every drum solo he plays is different, never quite the same?
He had themes and overall structure but what was great about him, he was regarded as the best drummer on the planet by his peers early doors. In terms of technique and creativity no one could touch him, even in his twenties so by the 1940s.
He could have stayed that way but he didn't, he continually pushed himself like all the great artists do.
The rock funk stuff he was doing in the early 70s is just unbelievable.
He adapted, improved and substituted pure speed for interesting interplay between his hands and feet.
It makes me laugh when web posters say, "the next Buddy Rich, he can play this impossible lick from the 1965 solo!"
Ok, impressed. So this guy has great techniques and can reproduce that sound (kind of) for 5 seconds.
Buddy did that off the cuff as part of his overall solo, some days it was different but still impossible. Link all those impossible parts together and you are Buddy Rich?
No, you managed to IMITATE a solo via intense listening and practice.
BR did it on the spot, just that night.
 
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