Where audiophiles click...

Jump to content


Photo
- - - - -

Your favourite Jazz tune.


  • Please log in to reply
15 replies to this topic

#1 soundfan

soundfan

    Member

  • Members
  • 4,320 posts
  • Country: AU
  • State: QLD

Posted 23 April 2012 - 01:37 PM

As the title states, I'm asking for member's favourite jazz tune. Rather than have members roll off tune after tune that they like, why not just name one (1).
If you can't name one, maybe don't bother responding. :) If I can do it, anyone can.

Mine is Flamenco Sketches from the Miles Davis: Kind Of Blue album.

Flamenco Sketches’ is a series of five scales, each to be played as long as the soloist wishes until he has completed the series. Totally improvised, which make the tune, and the album too for that matter, even more remarkable.

This sums it up better than I can write down.

Despite all the banging on about modal jazz and the fact that Flamenco Sketches is very clearly modal, it is nonetheless one of the most perfect pieces of jazz ever recorded, because it is purest improvisation. It's free soloing over an integrated and conducive backing where everything sounds 'together'. The furthest state removed from indulgent noodling and ego-exercises on a technical scale; this is emotional and affective music where the means and message merge to become art. It's gentle, contemplative and meditatively sparse yet reassuringly intimate; its emotional contour taking in warm comfort in one mode and the soul’s weathering of the storm in the next, before returning again to comfort in the late of the night. It is one of the great triumphs of the blues ballad form. It is the heart of music laid bare with grace and maturity.

And it’s Cannonball Adderley’s solo that I find particularly graceful. Coltrane takes the first solo, navigating comfortably over the three modes and introducing some of the measures Cannonball will expand. The biggest difference between the horn players is that Cannonball has this amazing faculty for lyrical rhythmic grace. His improvised phrasing is strongly suggestive of the human voice. He has a genius for that vocally-rhythmic degree between swing and funky. He bends notes up unexpectedly, he quips and pops little phrases; he sings languid one minute then uses plain bop-notes the next. And then he will sustain the most beautiful note: first clear and then with vibrato near the end of the breath. He is fabulously well-punctuated — one of the finest grammarians of rhythmic phrase and finesse in jazz. Coltrane seems more straight-ahead, the lateral line-man in comparison, his soul a different kind of energy. Cannonball is a sheer optimist, pacing his notes between the beats while staying perpetually fresh (I think he is the better complement to Miles’ spare musings — Miles also has an acute rhythmic sensibility not immediately apparent, a rhythm that unlocks melodically). He plants a bold note to clear the air of the last, he sews together heart, tact and intuitive melancholy in a broad sketch of runs and commas, and at 5:12 he performs an amazing, roof-opening octave run that is pure elegiac soul. It is no longer improvisation but pure emotion.

Why is it so humane-affective? Flamenco Sketches implies that at the pinnacle of pure music and art, you’re likely to find a deeply profound but optimistic sadness, a melancholy emotion of loss tenderly rendered but utterly expressive of soul. A truer kind of beauty. All this by virtue of improvisation.


Edited by soundfan, 23 April 2012 - 01:46 PM.

An audiophile uses music to appreciate his hi fi, a music lover uses hi fi to appreciate his music. I am a music lover. 


#2 Lil Caesar

Lil Caesar

    HiFi Centurion

  • Members
  • 722 posts
  • State: VIC

Posted 23 April 2012 - 03:04 PM

Autumn leaves, Adderley / Davis.

'Nuf said :)
Obsessed. With. Mono. Blocs.

#3 Conch Blowa

Conch Blowa

    Member

  • Members
  • 156 posts
  • State: WA

Posted 23 April 2012 - 04:31 PM

Bill Evans - Waltz For Debby


#4 soundfan

soundfan

    Member

  • Members
  • 4,320 posts
  • Country: AU
  • State: QLD

Posted 23 April 2012 - 04:54 PM

Both great tunes. :thumb:

An audiophile uses music to appreciate his hi fi, a music lover uses hi fi to appreciate his music. I am a music lover. 


#5 mikey d

mikey d

    Member

  • Members
  • 1,076 posts
  • State: NSW

Posted 23 April 2012 - 07:01 PM

My Favourite Things by John Coltrane Quartet. Doesn't matter which version, with or without Eric Dolphy. This wonderful Broadway tune was turned into a vehicle to display the genius of Trane & McCoy Tyner. I think that Trane reached the zenith of his musicality on this beautiful Rogers & Hammerstein melody. Just kills me every time I hear it.

#6 mikey d

mikey d

    Member

  • Members
  • 1,076 posts
  • State: NSW

Posted 23 April 2012 - 07:24 PM



I think it is possibly the fact that Coltrane's soprano sounds very Eastern & the fact that Trane could improvise for hours with those scales & never run out of inspiration.

#7 hired goon

hired goon

    A very impressive member

  • Members
  • 3,718 posts
  • Country: AU
  • State: QLD

Posted 25 April 2012 - 04:18 AM

G'day,

Fave jazz tune? A toughie ...

Maybe Tanya by Dexter Gordon, from One Flight Up:



Although I'll probably change my mind to somethin' else ...

--Geoff

Edited by hired goon, 25 April 2012 - 04:22 AM.

Insert pithy remark or brag about equipment list here

#8 Art Watson

Art Watson

    Member

  • Members
  • 53 posts
  • State: VIC

Posted 25 April 2012 - 02:17 PM

+1 for Coltrane's Favorite Things. A universe of emotional textures packed into one elastically extended tune...
Pro-Ject RPM6 (Grado Black) > RS Nighthawk f-117 > Cyrus 8vs2 (PSX-R) > PSB Synchrony One B
MacBook Pro > Audiophilleo2 > Metrum Octave DAC >

#9 buddyev

buddyev

    Member

  • Members
  • 375 posts
  • State: VIC

Posted 25 April 2012 - 05:43 PM

+1 for Flamenco Sketches.
How about Peace Piece by Bill Evans on Everybody Digs Bill Evans

Study: Rega P3 24, Ortofon 2m blue, Graham Slee Gram amp 2se, Rega Dac, Rega Apollo R cdp, Arcam A90 & P90 bi-amping, B&W CDM 7, Atlas Equator interconnects
Lounge: iMac, iTunes,  Apple TV, Eastern Electric MiniMax DAC, Arcam Delta 290, Orpheus Apollo, Quad 12l

 


#10 caddisgeek

caddisgeek

    Member

  • Members
  • 2,466 posts

Posted 25 April 2012 - 06:01 PM

If I have to name one, I'll go "Blue Train" by John Coletrane

#11 wolster

wolster

    Listening to music

  • Members
  • 4,878 posts
  • Country: AU
  • State: WA

Posted 25 April 2012 - 11:37 PM

Current favourite: Summertime - Oscar Peterson.


"Opera is when a guy gets stabbed in the back and, instead of bleeding, he sings." - Ed Gardner

#12 soundfan

soundfan

    Member

  • Members
  • 4,320 posts
  • Country: AU
  • State: QLD

Posted 26 April 2012 - 10:20 AM

G'day,

Fave jazz tune? A toughie ...

Maybe Tanya by Dexter Gordon, from One Flight Up:



Although I'll probably change my mind to somethin' else ...

--Geoff


Nice. I only have one Dexter Gordon album, and it's a 2lp Blue Note and Tanya takes up all of side 4.. Just played it. :)

An audiophile uses music to appreciate his hi fi, a music lover uses hi fi to appreciate his music. I am a music lover. 


#13 mr-happy-pants

mr-happy-pants

    Grumpy ol' fart!

  • Members
  • 2,916 posts
  • State: VIC

Posted 26 April 2012 - 10:59 AM

Dave Brubeck Quartet; Take five.

It's predictable to say it, but I do like it, a lot!

"You can't resort to lies and deceit in order to fight for the truth..." TJ

"A person should have a personality. You won't get one dicking around on a computer. It helps to go somewhere where there are other persons." Iggy Pop
"If you don't fight, you lose!" Redgum (the band ;) )
"Let fools be fools." (MrHP)


#14 THOMO

THOMO

    Member

  • Members
  • 1,404 posts
  • State: WA

Posted 27 April 2012 - 09:11 AM

http://youtu.be/RSlkH6nnt_w

Tim Hardin.
Not part of the jazz scene but the jazz influence is obvious in his songwriting.
AMPLIFICATION-Supratek Cabernet 300B preamp,Almarro 318B SET ,Gainclone 3876T,Accuphase E202,Accuphase P300.
SPEAKERS-Tannoy HPD 385 a in ply boxes,Gale 401a.Edgar horns. DIGITAL-Audio Gd 7SE Transport/3SE DAC.Sony 715
VINYL-Technics SP10 in custom lead filled curly jarrah THOMO plinth.Jelco 750 E 10.5inch tonearm.Ortofon MC10 Supreme MC cartridge,Denon ASU320 step-up,Yaqiin MS22B phono stage.

ABSURDITY-A statement of belief manifestly inconsistent with one's own opinion.....Ambrose Bierce

#15 mikey d

mikey d

    Member

  • Members
  • 1,076 posts
  • State: NSW

Posted 27 April 2012 - 08:09 PM

Ok, I'm cheating by adding my favourite jazz "vocal", which is God Bless The Child by Lady Day off Lady Sings The Blues. If this don't break your heart, you haven't got one.

It has become a jazz standard for singers & instrumentalists & one of my favourite instrumental versions is by Sonny Rollins. Sonny's reading is as gorgeous as he ever played.

#16 Metrik

Metrik

    Member

  • Members
  • 65 posts
  • Country: AU
  • State: VIC

Posted 10 May 2012 - 09:07 AM

It always changes. Currently I listen a lot to the McCoy Tyner Quartet's interpretation of Monk's "Ask me now" on the New York Reunion record (Chesky, 1991). Joe Henderson is just brilliant on this one. And being a Chesky record, it is very well recorded as well.