music clip of the day

jazz/blues/rock/classical/gospel/more

Month: March, 2011

Friday, 3/11/11

Don’t try to tell me there’s anything incongruous—anything at all—in loving Beethoven and loving Chopin and loving Del Shannon.

Del Shannon, December 30, 1934-February 8, 1990

“Runaway” (with Burton Cummings [Guess Who], piano), 1982

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“I Go To Pieces,” 1988 (?)

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“Sea of Love,” 1982

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lagniappe

mail

One of the best ever [Ornette Coleman, 3/9/11].

I am so glad I am on this list!!

Thursday, 3/10/11

Happy (108th) Birthday, Bix!

God the poet, the master of metaphor, wanting to comment on what a big, open, unruly country this is, put the birthdays of Ornette Coleman, born in 1930 in Fort Worth, Texas, and Bix Beiderbecke, born in 1903 in Davenport, Iowa, back to back.

Bix Beiderbecke, cornet, with Frankie Trumbauer and His Orchestra
“I’m Coming, Virginia,” “Way Down Yonder In New Orleans,” 1927

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Speaking of Bix’s playing, Louis Armstrong said:

Those pretty notes went right through me.

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. . . “I’m Coming, Virginia” became the most beautiful thing in my life . . . The coherence of its long Bix solo still provides me with a measure of what popular art should be like: a generosity of effects on a simple frame. The melodic line is particularly ravishing at its points of transition: there are moments when even a silent pause is a perfect note, and always there is a piercing sadness to it, as if the natural tone of the cornet, the instrument of reveille, were the first sob before weeping.

—Clive James, London Times, 5/16/07

*****

radio

Yesterday, at WKCR-FM (broadcasting from Columbia University), it was all Ornette all day; today it’s Bix. (Listening to so much Ornette seems to have rearranged my brain cells—permanently, I hope.)

(Some of this was previously posted on Bix’s last birthday.)

Wednesday, 3/9/11

Happy (81st) Birthday, Ornette!

His sound—his whole approach (simple melodies, vocal phrasing, off-center intonation)—is drenched in the blues.

Ornette Coleman (alto saxophone) with The Roots
Live, London (Meltdown Festival), 2009

#1

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#2

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The tenor player at the end—that’s David Murray.

More Ornette? Here.

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radio

What am I listening to today?

That’s easy—WKCR-FM (broadcasting from Columbia University), where it’s all Ornette all day.

Tuesday, 3/8/11

Today, in celebration of Fat Tuesday, let’s go to New Orleans.

Rebirth Brass Band, Treme Sidewalk Steppers Parade
Live, New Orleans, 2/6/11

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More? Here. And here. And here.

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TBC Brass Band, Krewe de Vieux Parade
Live, New Orleans, 2/19/11

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A great brass band and a great mix have something in common. You can tell a great mix—as we used to say at Alligator Records—even from the next room. And you can tell a great brass band even from the next block.

Monday, 3/7/11

Looking for something loud and intense?

You’ll have to, I’m afraid, look elsewhere.

Sun Ra (piano) & Walt Dickerson (vibraphone), “Astro” (Visions, 1978)

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More Sun Ra? Here. And here.

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reading table

The world is half magic

—George Oppen (from “Twenty-Six Fragments”)

Sunday, 3/6/11

I wouldn’t mind dying if I knew my funeral would sound like this.

Vernard Johnson (alto saxophone), “Goin’ Up Yonder,” “Amazing Grace,” live (service for alto saxophonist Philip Slack [begins at 2:50]), 1/09 (from the forthcoming documentary Walk With Me)

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More? Here.

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lagniappe

radio

Greatest radio station on the planet? WFMU-FM, home of the wonderful Sinner’s Crossroads (“[s]cratchy vanity 45s, pilfered field recordings, muddy off-the-radio sounds, homemade congregational tapes and vintage commercial gospel throw-downs; a little preachin’, a little salvation, a little audio tomfoolery”), is a contender. They’re currently in the midst of their annual fundraiser, offering great DJ-crafted premiums. What better way to get rid of that extra dough that’s just taking up space?

*****

art beat

American Modern: Abbott, Evans, Bourke-White
Art Institute of Chicago (through 5/15/11)

Berenice Abbott, Church of God, New York (Harlem), 1936

Saturday, 3/5/11

replay: clips too good for just one day

The other night, after falling asleep, my older son Alex (now 22) had an unexpected visitor—this guy showed up and began to play.

Vijay Iyer Trio (VI, piano; Marcus Gilmore, drums; Stephan Crump, bass)

“Galang,” recording session (Historicity), New York (Systems Two Studios), 2009

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“Questions of Agency,” live, New York (The Stone), 2007

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Playing and Talking about Historicity, 2009

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Presto! Here is the great new jazz piano trio.

—Ben Ratliff,  New York Times (9/9/09)

(Originally posted 6/30/10.)

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take two (or is it one?)

Following up on Vijay Iyer’s take (6/30/10), here’s the original.

M.I.A., “Galang” (2005)

One of the things I love about M.I.A. is that she doesn’t let any of the usual stuff get in her way. Take her dancing, for instance: she’s, uh, not real good at it—at least not by the usual standards. Does that stop her? Nah.

(Originally posted 7/2/10.)


Friday, 3/4/11

four takes

Rainy Night In Georgia” (Tony Joe White, 1962)

Brook Benton, 1970 (Billboard Soul Singles #1, Hot 100 #4)

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Otis Rush, 1976 (rec. 1971)

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(This track’s a mixed bag: he muffs the first line [dropping “the night” after “spend”] and the low notes are a stretch [at least in this key]; but the choruses are terrific, as is the bridge.)

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Conway Twitty with Sam Moore, 1994

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Tony Joe White, TV broadcast (Netherlands), 2006 (?)

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Thursday, 3/3/11

You have no idea one moment what’s going to happen the next (assuming, that is, you’re not following the score).

This can be disorienting, or exhilarating, or both.

Milton Babbitt (1916-2011), Composition for Four Instruments (flute, clarinet, violin, cello; 1948)

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More? Here.

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musical thoughts

Babbit was not quite as difficult as he seemed. He may have been dealing in abstruse relationships among myriad elements, but his listeners didn’t have to digest too many at once. From Webern, Babbit learned the art of deriving a set from successive transformations of a group of just three notes (“trichord”), which becomes a microcosm of the series. With these tiny motives in play, the texture tends to be less complicated than in the average post-Schoenbergian work. Composition for Four Instruments gives the impression of economy, delicacy, and extreme clarity; flute, clarinet, violin, and cello play solos, duets, and trios, coming together as a quartet only in the final section, and even there the ensemble dissolves into softly questing solo voices at the end. Thick dissonances are rare; like Japanese drawings, Babbitt’s scores are full of empty space.

—Alex Ross, The Rest Is Noise (2007)

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There was only one.  There were no “simultaneities” in this particular musical equation. Milton Byron Babbitt stands alone.  He will never be popular. Nor will he cease to inspire.

Ethan Iverson (The Bad Plus)

Wednesday, 3/2/11

sorrowful, adj. showing or expressing sorrow; mournful; plaintive.
E.g., Roger Sessions’ Duo for Violin and Piano.

Roger Sessions (1896-1985), Duo for Violin and Piano (1942), excerpts
Carlos Bernales, violin, Chris Christopher, live, New York, 2/1/08

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#2

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#3

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