The Great Jazz Trio At The Village Vanguard Rar
- The Great Jazz Trio At The Village Vanguard Rarity
- The Great Jazz Trio At The Village Vanguard Rarities
- Great Jazz Trio At The Village Vanguard
If you're familiar with, you know that we've dedicated over two decades to supporting jazz as an art form, and more importantly, the creative musicians who make it. Our enduring commitment has made All About Jazz one of the most culturally important websites of its kind in the world reaching hundreds of thousands of readers every month.
However, to expand our offerings and develop new means to foster jazz discovery we need your help. You can become a sustaining member for a modest and in return, we'll immediately hide those pesky Google ads PLUS deliver exclusive content and provide access to for a full year! This combination will not only improve your AAJ experience, it will allow us to continue to rigorously build on the great work we first started in 1995. With Test of Time continuing its archival reissue series of '70s Inner City and East Wind label recordings previously only available as expensive Japanese imports, this is a great time to be thinking about taking out a second mortgage on the home. Previous releases, including titles by, and have been uniformly strong, with Test of Time's DSD Mastering Process bringing out all the subtleties of the original masters, making them arguably the definitive issues. Amongst the strongest of the first batch of releases was, culled from two evening performances at the legendary New York City club in February of 1977 by arguably the best, but sadly short-lived incarnation of pianist Hank Jones' longstanding Great Jazz Trio featuring bassist Ron Carter and drummer Tony Williams. Out of the six hours recorded, sufficient material was considered strong enough to result in not one, not two, but three albumsthe final instalment, At the Village Vanguard Again, will be released on August 23, 2005.
The material demonstrates just how consistently inventive this trio was, and these two evenings were especially magical. Carter and Williams had a shared history as part of Miles Davis' more outward-reaching second quintet in the mid-'60s, so they had just the right combination of traditionalism and outside-the-box spontaneity to make this setconsisting of one Charlie Parker tune, one standard, a Davis tune, and a Williams originala potent blend of reverence and liberated musical thinking.

Contoh program penjualan visual basic 6.0. While Jones' more mainstream approach keeps things closer to the centre, he's also open-minded enough to respond to Williams' more directed interplay on the medium-tempo swing of the album closer, Williams' 'Lawra. Carter's deeply resonant tone, insistent sense of groove, and impeccable way of combining unassailable time with harmonic responses to Jones' lyrical yet often unpredictable choices, transform even the more conventional bebop of Parker's 'Confirmation, making it relevant and timeless. While Miles never recorded 'Nardis himself, his composition has been covered by dozens of artists from Anthony Braxton to Ralph Towner; here it rivals 'Lawra as the high point of the set. Carter's solo, where Williams' unfailing ears result in the two finding remarkable and almost endlessly varied nexus points, is the perfect confluence of rhythm and melody. Williams demonstrates the kind of light and delicately-nuanced touch and thematic mindset that, while antithetical to his more propulsive fusion work, is always impressive.
The Great Jazz Trio At The Village Vanguard Rarity
Like the first volume, Vol. 2 clocks in at under forty minutes. While Test of Time's intention is to release the original recordings 'as is, one wonders why they didn't simply collect all three volumes and release them as a two-CD set.

Still, that's a minor quibble; both the first At the Village Vanguard and Vol. 2 are nicely self-contained, each with its own arc. On the strength of both recordings, it's good news indeed that the release of At the Village Vanguard Again is only a month away. I love jazz because.jazz encompasses all. Jazz is freedom.
It is the ultimate expressive musical conversation. I was first exposed to jazz as an infant. I grew up in a family of musicians. I first fell in love with jazz when listening to Ella Fitzgerald’s scat solo on “How High The Moon”. I met Dianne Reeves, Chaka Khan, Patti Labelle and more.

The Great Jazz Trio At The Village Vanguard Rarities
The best show I ever attended was.I can’t pick a best. But, I can say that seeing Dianne Reeves live changed my life.
Great Jazz Trio At The Village Vanguard
The first jazz record I bought was Nancy Wilson and Cannonball Adderley. My advice to new listeners; Listen to it ALL. Listen to instrumentalist, vocalists, big bands, vocal groups. By Member since: 2018.