2014/02/19

Keith Jarrett Trio/Keith Jarrett Standards Trio: Tribute (2CD) (Recorded live 1989; ECM 1990)

Format: Flac +Cue+Scans (771 MB) / MP3 320 Kbps+Scans (441 MB)

The Keith Jarrett Standards Trio gets back down to business with two CDs' worth of familiar and perhaps not-so-familiar tunes, recorded in one evening in Cologne, Germany. There is a concept this time, for all the standards carry a dedication to some jazz man or woman who performed them -- and they are not predictable choices; Lee Konitz for "Lover Man," "It's Easy to Remember" for John Coltrane, "All of You" for Miles Davis, etc. Almost every number has a reflective solo piano introduction, with one of the notable exceptions being Jarrett's rolling, convoluted opening variations on "All the Things You Are" (Sonny Rollins). "Solar" (the Bill Evans tribute) has challenging, fractured interplay between JarrettJack DeJohnette and Gary Peacock, and it directly segues into Jarrett's own obsessive "Sun Prayer," which seems to lose its way after a fine start. The other Jarrett composition, "U Dance," a carefree folk-like tune with a rhumba rhythm, closes the concert with a tribute to no one in particular. While the Standards Trio rarely takes anything for granted, transforming everything in its path, the results are not quite as inventive here as on other releases, though Disc Two is clearly more interesting overall than Disc One. Warning to the wary: Keith Jarrett, singer, is in rare groaning form on "I Hear a Rhapsody" and "Solar." (Richard S. Ginell, ALLMUSIC)

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George Russell Sextet: Ezz-Thetics (1961, reissue 1992)




Format: FLAC (244 Mb)/ MP3 320 kb/s (98,5 Mb);  Scans
Recorded: 8 May 1961; Genre: Avant-garde, free jazz, post-bop; Lengh: 42"29; Label: Riverside Records.

This is a true classic. Composer/pianist George Russell gathered together a very versatile group of talents (trumpeterDon Ellis, trombonist Dave Baker, Eric Dolphy on alto and bass clarinet, bassist Steve Swallow, and drummer Joe Hunt) to explore three of his originals, "'Round Midnight" (which is given an extraordinary treatment by Dolphy), Miles Davis' "Nardis," and David Baker's "Honesty." The music is post-bop and although using ideas from avant-garde jazz, it does not fall into any simple category. The improvising is at a very high level and the frameworks (which include free and stop-time sections) really inspire the players. Highly recommended.
Scott Yanow (Allmusic)

Personnel
George Russell - piano, arranger
Don Ellis - trumpet
Dave Baker - trombone
Eric Dolphy - alto sax and bass clarinet
Steve Swallow - bass
Joe Hunt - drums

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2014/02/13

Tribal Tech / Illicit (1992)



Info: DR: 10 /Samplerate: 44100/ Bits: 16/ Bitrate: 781 kbps/ Codec: Flac; Mp3 (320)
Gary Willis (bass), Kirk Covington (drums), Scott Henderson (guitar) & Scott Kinsey (Keyboards) (1992)

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