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What JAZZ are you listening to?

What JAZZ are you listening to?

Culture

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Joe McPhee "Sweet Freedom - Now What?"
Lisle Ellis
Paul Plimley

Michael Moore "Bering"
Fred Hersch
Mark Helias

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Guus Janssen Septet (1984)

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&feature=related

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Originally posted by Starrman
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bKwQ_zeRwEs&feature=related
lol. That's just wrong.

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David Murray "Ballads for Bass Clarinet"

William Parker "In Order to Survive"

John Lindberg "A Tree Frog Tonality"

Sainkho Namchylak "Amulet"
Ned Rothenberg

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Joe Lovanao - Folk Art

Just picked up a great tcket to one of his upcoming shows as well...one of the best around today

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Misha Mengelberg "Who's Bridge", "No Idea"

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Billie Holiday "The Quintessential, Vol 3"

Thelonious Monk "Himself"

Ella Fitzgerald "The Harold Arlen Songbook Vol 1"

Thelonious Monk "Alone in San Francisco"

Coleman Hawkins "The Hawk Flies High"

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Ernst Reijseger "Colla Parte"

Joe Lovano "Sounds of Joy"

Ned Rothenberg "Power Lines"

Roscoe Mitchell "Sound"

Rova "Bingo"

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I just read John Coltrane his life and times in music. Really good read.

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I am reading that book now and I love it 🙂 I love Coltrane!

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Originally posted by Obscuridades
I am reading that book now and I love it 🙂 I love Coltrane!
With where he was heading and passing away so young, I wonder what musical worlds he could have created? He was studying more world sounds and instruments. But where do you go when you've eliminated chord and beat structures? Even Ornette had to come back to more satndard concepts..but Trane didn't sound very wiling to do that.

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Thelonious Monk "Monk Alone: The Complete Columbia Studio Recordings"

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Benny Goodman Sextet "Featuring Charlie Christian 1939-1941"

Ella Fitzgerald "Ella Swings Lightly"

Jason Moran "Presents the Bandwagon"

Ella Fitzgerald "Pure Ella"

Duke Ellington "And His Mother Called Him Bill"

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yes, but I remember that one time he said that at that moment he was happy doing that kind of music but later, who knows? and he wanted to be able to play using the same style of the classic quartet and apart from that to keep exploring with the avant-garde. I think he would have follow a spiritual way, like his wife did after he died. What do you think?

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