Vijay Ayer, Stephan Crump and Marcus Gilmore play, unwittingly, for me on my birthday
Seriously, here they are in a great quality video at Le Poisson Rouge in New York on 7 January 2012.
Tag Archives: jazz
Let’s Get Lost – Chet Baker Documentary
Lets Get Lost – Chet Baker Documentary – YouTube.
Not my favourite musician – I don’t have any of Baker’s records – but this is a great piece of film-making, and well worth watching whether you’re a fan or not.
DKV with Fred Anderson
Ken Vandermark Tweeted about this video earlier.
Hamid Drake, Ken Vandermark, Kent Kessler and Fred Anderson at the Hideout Chicago 21 December 2008.
You have to smile at the sax conversation towards the end.
The Universal Mind of Bill Evans
After enjoying the Gil Evans Big Band video yesterday, I found this nugget.
I think this is the first time I’ve heard the pianist interviewed, and he has a lot of interesting stuff to say.
I’ll leave it to rickstolk, who posted the video on YouTube, to introduce the interview:
Please check my jazzblog at http://jazzpages.tumblr.com
From the jazzpages personal archives, I bring you the intriguing documentary ‘The Universal Mind Of Bill Evans’. Several years ago, Rhapsody released a 21-minute video called ‘Bill Evans On The Creative Process’, a badly edited reduction of a 1966 TV program introduced by Steve Allen, the first host of the now famous ‘Tonight Show’. This short film is a restoration of the original 45-minute telecast. Here is Evans, his hair slicked back, his terrible teeth uncapped, a cigarette waving in the air, in intense conversation with his composer brother Harry Evans (a professor of music at Louisiana State University) on the nature of creativity in jazz.
This documentary features in-depth discussion of Evans’ internal process of song interpretation, improvisation, and repertoire. Through demonstration on the piano, Bill uses the song ‘Star Eyes’ to illustrate his own conception of solo piano and how to interpret and expand upon the melody and underlying chord structure.
Onstage, Evans was famously reticent about speaking, but here he’s surprisingly, stirringly provocative.
Gil Evans Big Band
What a boggling baritone solo by Howard Johnson!
Thanks to the Jazz Music Blog for posting this earlier.
RIP Paul Motian. I’ll miss you so much
Since drummer Paul Motian died in New York earlier this week, there has been an enormous outpouring of tributes, emotion, grief and anecdotes all over the Internet.
Personally, he’s a musician I’ve seen live many times. I’m a fan; Motian is my favourite drummer and one of my favourite composers. A completely unique artist, who had a completely personal approach to time.
I’m not qualified to say much about the great man, so I’ll let you choose from the writings of those who are.
‘Woody ‘n’ you’ – not what it seems
In idle moments, I’ve been known to wonder who the Woody is in the old jazz standard Woody ‘n’ you.
Well, last week BBC Radio 3′s Jazz Library programme solved the mystery. It’s not a who, but a what. ‘It’s very rude!’, said the guest.
Oops! That puts a whole new face on it!
