Maceo PARKER - My First Name Is Maceo 2004 (AVI)
Blues
In this documentary featuring exclusive interviews and footage, director Markus Gruber presents a thorough look at funk saxophonist Maceo Parker. As part of James Brown's band, the skilled sax player often outshone the frontman, and when Brown became unfortunately incarcerated in the late 1980s, Maceo decided the time was right to form his own group. Featuring legends such as trombonist Fred Wesley and tenor saxophonist Pee Wee Ellis, the group continues to produce the fluid, expressive music for which Maceo has become known. This program features footage from a 1994 tour, and showcases exclusive footage and interviews, including talks with Maceo's brother and other musicians who have known him well.
**
Bruno Speight- Guitar
James "Son" Thomas- Drums
Fred Wesley- Trombone, Vocals
Jerry Preston- Bass
Pee Wee Ellis- Tenor Sax, Vocals
RebirthBrass Band, Guest Appearance
Maceo Parker- Alto Sax, Vocals
Will Boulware- Organ (Hammond)
**
01.Keep on Marching
02.Make It Funky
03.Gimme Some More
04.About Musical Language - Introducing Pee Wee Ellis & Kim Mayzelle
05.Wait a Minute! - Introducing George Clinton
06.C Jam Funk
07.Children's World
08.Maceo Back at Home
09.New Orleans Street Life - Introducing the Rebirth Brass Band
10.Walking Home Together
11.Shake Everything You've Got
12.Give the Drummer Some (Introducing Melvin Parker)(Multimedia Track)
13.Funk Is About What You Don't Play
14.Jamming With Pedro Abrunhosa in Portugal
15.Let's Get It On
16.A Family Type of Things - Introducing Fred Wesley and Jabo Starks
17.House Party
18.Cold Sweat
**
NoPassword
*
DLinks
*
1 2 3 4
*
Showing posts with label Movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Movies. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Norah JONES - Live in New Orleans 2003 (Dvd Rip)

Norah JONES - Live in New Orleans 2003 (Dvd Rip)
Jazz
(NJ, USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)
Norah Jones recently swept up the Grammys, winning all five awards she was up for including Record & Album of the year. All were well deserved and on the heels of that success, she picked the right time to release her first DVD. It's from a performance from July, 2002 at The House of Blues in New Orleans and it captures the essence of her music. The show is cool and laid back, and a throwback to vintage stylings as is the DVD's direction. The camera work lingers on Ms. Jones and her band for long moments, allowing the viewer to soak in each performer's image. We get long close-ups and not the usual herky-jerky, fast cuts of most concert films. The concert contains almost every song from her lone album, Come Away With Me as well as some choice covers including a standout version of The Band's "Bessie Smith". For fans of Ms. Jones, the DVD is great companion piece to her award winning album and an excellent concert film.
By Thomas Magnum.
**
NOTE: There are two extras on this DVD that aren't mentioned on the Amazon.com discription - an encore of "Tennessee Waltz", and the music video for "Come Away With Me"
Norah Jones is one of those great music success stories - blessed with talent (and looks), seriously approach to her art, and knowing of her strong points. All of these factors, and more, come together in this live show.
Recorded at the House Of Blues in October 2002, Norah and "The Very Handsome Band" don't stray too far from what worked so successfully on her incredible debut. Most of the songs from "Come Away With Me" are presented, along with 4 tunes added for this show.
This is a very quiet show, which allows the focus to remain on Norah's gorgeous singing and wonderful piano playing. Favorites like "Don't Know Why", "Nightingale" and "One Flight Down" sound great in a live setting (as if there would be any doubt). If you are a fan of the album, you'll truly enjoy this show.
Of the four new tunes, Norah is at her vocal best on "Bessie Smith", a wonderful blues tune with great drum work by Andrew Burger. "Something Is Calling You" is a beautiful song as well, with an excellent bass line. And the version of "Tennessee Waltz" which Norah uses for an encore sounds much sadder than many versions of this song, but works wonderfully.
This is truly step 2 in the making of a major star - with a new album (supposedly) coming this fall, this DVD makes a nice in-between step for those of us that have been captured by Norah's talent. You won't have a moment's disappointment watching this show, but definitely catch her live this summer if you have a chance.
By Karl Miller.
**
Norah Jones- Vocals, Piano, Wurlizter
Adam Levy- Guitar, Backing Vocals
Lee Alexander- Bass
Andrew Borger- Drums
Daru- backing Vocals
**
Cold Cold Heart
Nightingale
One Flight Down
Seven Years
Feelin' the Same Way
Come Love
Something Is Calling You
Come Away with Me
What Am I to You?
Painter Song
Lonestar
I've Got to See You Again
Bessie Smith
Don't Know Why
**
NoPassword
*
DLinks
*
1 2 3
*
Monday, February 8, 2010
John Lee HOOKER - That's My Story 2001 (DVD Rip)
John Lee HOOKER - That's My Story 2001 (DVD Rip)
Blues
"The world's greatest blues singer"? That's arguable, but there's no doubt that the late John Lee Hooker (1917-2001) was in a class by himself, a genuine original whose music--raw, primitively simple, scary even, powered by his deep moan of a voice--was the very embodiment of the Delta blues style. Big names like Bonnie Raitt, Eric Clapton, Carlos Santana, and many more line up to pay tribute to the man in this absorbing 90-minute documentary; there are also plenty of interviews with family, friends, business associates, and the grizzled, laconic bluesman himself, along with some decent performance footage (as is usual in such projects, we get no complete songs). But this 2000 film's best moments come courtesy of writer-director Joerg Bundschuh's beautifully photographed contemporary footage, with no accompaniment except the hypnotic groove and profound soul of John Lee Hooker's music.
By Sam Graham.
**
John Lee Hooker tells the tale himself, with help of his family, closest friends, and musical colleagues including Eric Clapton, Carlos Santana, Bonnie Raitt, Robert Cray, and John Mayall. That s My Story takes audiences inside the life and times of this Blues legend. Also known as the Godfather of Blues , John Lee Hooker s music is played in this film, showing rare and captivating live performance footage, archive recordings from the very beginning of his career to video clips from the peak of his success, including the Grammy Award-winning duet with Bonnie Raitt I'm In The Mood.
**
If you keep holding your tears,while you watching this movie,means;you ain´t got no fuckin´ clue what "Blues" means.
themonk.
**
01. Introduction [4:24]
02. Doc Hook & Archie Lee [5:30]
03. The Empire [6:52]
04. Roots [7:31]
05. Road to Memphis [6:59]
06. Ladies Man [7:27]
07. Discovered [8:20]
08. Exploited [9:41]
09. The Source [10:52]
10. Nobody Knows [10:05]
11. Jammin' With the Boys [8:07]
12. End Credits [2:08]
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*
1 2 3 4
*
Blues
"The world's greatest blues singer"? That's arguable, but there's no doubt that the late John Lee Hooker (1917-2001) was in a class by himself, a genuine original whose music--raw, primitively simple, scary even, powered by his deep moan of a voice--was the very embodiment of the Delta blues style. Big names like Bonnie Raitt, Eric Clapton, Carlos Santana, and many more line up to pay tribute to the man in this absorbing 90-minute documentary; there are also plenty of interviews with family, friends, business associates, and the grizzled, laconic bluesman himself, along with some decent performance footage (as is usual in such projects, we get no complete songs). But this 2000 film's best moments come courtesy of writer-director Joerg Bundschuh's beautifully photographed contemporary footage, with no accompaniment except the hypnotic groove and profound soul of John Lee Hooker's music.
By Sam Graham.
**
John Lee Hooker tells the tale himself, with help of his family, closest friends, and musical colleagues including Eric Clapton, Carlos Santana, Bonnie Raitt, Robert Cray, and John Mayall. That s My Story takes audiences inside the life and times of this Blues legend. Also known as the Godfather of Blues , John Lee Hooker s music is played in this film, showing rare and captivating live performance footage, archive recordings from the very beginning of his career to video clips from the peak of his success, including the Grammy Award-winning duet with Bonnie Raitt I'm In The Mood.
**
If you keep holding your tears,while you watching this movie,means;you ain´t got no fuckin´ clue what "Blues" means.
themonk.
**
01. Introduction [4:24]
02. Doc Hook & Archie Lee [5:30]
03. The Empire [6:52]
04. Roots [7:31]
05. Road to Memphis [6:59]
06. Ladies Man [7:27]
07. Discovered [8:20]
08. Exploited [9:41]
09. The Source [10:52]
10. Nobody Knows [10:05]
11. Jammin' With the Boys [8:07]
12. End Credits [2:08]
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*
1 2 3 4
*
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Magic SLIM & The TEARDROPS - Anything Can Happen 2005 ((DVD-Rip)
Magic SLIM & The TEARDROPS - Anything Can Happen 2005 ((DVD-Rip)
Blues
This live recording of the Chicago blues band, taped in 2005 at the Sierra Nevada Brewery, showcases Slim's slashing, vibrato-drenched guitar, mountain-moving vocals and presents an authentic South Side, back-alley excursion into the true blues.
Magic Slim is known as the personification of a rollicking, electrified blues style, born of a cross-pollination of Mississippi and Chicago influences. A musician for most of his life, Slim's history is quintessential blues: born in the Deep South, he lost a finger in a cotton gin accident and was forced to switch from piano to guitar. He began playing house parties on the weekends at age 11, and after moving to Chicago before he was old enough to be in the bars in which he was performing, his Teardrops have become recognized as the last true Chicago blues band. Recalling Howlin' Wolf with his gruff vocals and no-nonsense, unapologetic delivery, Slim's imposing stature and improvisational tendencies make for a raw blues experience and an unforgettable stage show. Filmed here in 2005 at the Sierra Nevada Brewery, Slim's authentic south-side sound features his trademark vibrato and earthy, irresistible vocals, clearly showing why this group became one of the most popular touring blues bands around.
**
The Teardrops weathered a potentially devastating change when longtime second guitarist John Primer cut his own major-label debut for Code Blue, but with Slim and bass-wielding brother Nick Holt still on board, it's doubtful the quartet's overall sound will change dramatically in Primer's absence. In 1996, Slim signed with Blind Pig and has cut some of the most-celebrated albums of his career, including Scufflin' in 1996, Black Tornado in 1998, Snakebite in 2000, and Blue Magic in 2002. A live recording taped in 2005 at the Sierra Nevada Brewery was released that same year on both DVD and CD as Anything Can Happen. Tin Pan Alley, a set of recordings made between 1992 and 1998 in Chicago and Europe, was released in 2006 by Austria's Wolf Records. Midnight Blues appeared in 2008.
By Bill Dahl & Al Campbell, All Music Guide.
**
Magic Slim- (Vocals, Guitar)
Michael Dotson- (Guitar, Background Vocals)
Chris Biedron- (Bass)
Vernal Taylor- (Drums, Background Vocals)
**
01. I'm a Bluesman
02.The Man You Need
03.Goin' to Mississippi
04.Please Don't Dog Me
05.Mind Your Own Business
06.I ain't Looking For No Love
07.You Got to Pay
08.I Need Lovin'
09.Shake It
10.Crazy Woman
11.I Don't Believe You Baby
12.Black Tornado
13.Final
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*
1 2 3 4
*
Blues
This live recording of the Chicago blues band, taped in 2005 at the Sierra Nevada Brewery, showcases Slim's slashing, vibrato-drenched guitar, mountain-moving vocals and presents an authentic South Side, back-alley excursion into the true blues.
Magic Slim is known as the personification of a rollicking, electrified blues style, born of a cross-pollination of Mississippi and Chicago influences. A musician for most of his life, Slim's history is quintessential blues: born in the Deep South, he lost a finger in a cotton gin accident and was forced to switch from piano to guitar. He began playing house parties on the weekends at age 11, and after moving to Chicago before he was old enough to be in the bars in which he was performing, his Teardrops have become recognized as the last true Chicago blues band. Recalling Howlin' Wolf with his gruff vocals and no-nonsense, unapologetic delivery, Slim's imposing stature and improvisational tendencies make for a raw blues experience and an unforgettable stage show. Filmed here in 2005 at the Sierra Nevada Brewery, Slim's authentic south-side sound features his trademark vibrato and earthy, irresistible vocals, clearly showing why this group became one of the most popular touring blues bands around.
**
The Teardrops weathered a potentially devastating change when longtime second guitarist John Primer cut his own major-label debut for Code Blue, but with Slim and bass-wielding brother Nick Holt still on board, it's doubtful the quartet's overall sound will change dramatically in Primer's absence. In 1996, Slim signed with Blind Pig and has cut some of the most-celebrated albums of his career, including Scufflin' in 1996, Black Tornado in 1998, Snakebite in 2000, and Blue Magic in 2002. A live recording taped in 2005 at the Sierra Nevada Brewery was released that same year on both DVD and CD as Anything Can Happen. Tin Pan Alley, a set of recordings made between 1992 and 1998 in Chicago and Europe, was released in 2006 by Austria's Wolf Records. Midnight Blues appeared in 2008.
By Bill Dahl & Al Campbell, All Music Guide.
**
Magic Slim- (Vocals, Guitar)
Michael Dotson- (Guitar, Background Vocals)
Chris Biedron- (Bass)
Vernal Taylor- (Drums, Background Vocals)
**
01. I'm a Bluesman
02.The Man You Need
03.Goin' to Mississippi
04.Please Don't Dog Me
05.Mind Your Own Business
06.I ain't Looking For No Love
07.You Got to Pay
08.I Need Lovin'
09.Shake It
10.Crazy Woman
11.I Don't Believe You Baby
12.Black Tornado
13.Final
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*
1 2 3 4
*
Friday, January 29, 2010
Jimi HENDRIX - (1967-1970) Dvd
Jimi HENDRIX - (1967-1970) Dvd
Blues
Covering the years 1967 through 1970, the final installment of the three-part documentary series Jimi Hendrix: Movie allows viewers a glimpse into the culmination of Hendrix's remarkable musical career. The counterculture era was peaking, producing the perfect storm for Hendrix's unique music and lifestyle to flourish. But just as Hendrix's creative powers both on the stage and in the studio reached their apex, disaster struck and he was gone. Now, exclusive interviews reveal the remarkable details behind the Hendrix's untimely death, as well as the curious events surrounding it. As the spiritual message behind Hendrix's music is revealed, fans are invited to celebrate his enormous, yet tragically short-lived, musical legacy.
By Jason Buchanan.
**
Featuring rare Hendrix performances from film and television archives around the world, this is the definitive review of the music of Jimi Hendrix on record, on stage and on film.
Also included are rare archive interviews with Noel Redding and Hendrix himself along with the penetrating insights of leading music journalists and musicologists, making this the most comprehensive independent critical review of Jimi Hendrix ever undertaken.
Disc 2 features complete live television performances from 1969 and rare photographs
**
NoPassword
*
DLinks
*
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
*
Blues
Covering the years 1967 through 1970, the final installment of the three-part documentary series Jimi Hendrix: Movie allows viewers a glimpse into the culmination of Hendrix's remarkable musical career. The counterculture era was peaking, producing the perfect storm for Hendrix's unique music and lifestyle to flourish. But just as Hendrix's creative powers both on the stage and in the studio reached their apex, disaster struck and he was gone. Now, exclusive interviews reveal the remarkable details behind the Hendrix's untimely death, as well as the curious events surrounding it. As the spiritual message behind Hendrix's music is revealed, fans are invited to celebrate his enormous, yet tragically short-lived, musical legacy.
By Jason Buchanan.
**
Featuring rare Hendrix performances from film and television archives around the world, this is the definitive review of the music of Jimi Hendrix on record, on stage and on film.
Also included are rare archive interviews with Noel Redding and Hendrix himself along with the penetrating insights of leading music journalists and musicologists, making this the most comprehensive independent critical review of Jimi Hendrix ever undertaken.
Disc 2 features complete live television performances from 1969 and rare photographs
**
NoPassword
*
DLinks
*
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
*
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Sarah VAUGHAN - Live in '58 & '64
Sarah VAUGHAN - Live in '58 & '64
Holland/Sweden
Jazz
Sarah Vaughan arguably was the most phenomenal singer of her century. Musicians loved her. Most were in awe of her. All respected what they almost unanimously agreed was her innate musicality. “She was born with a gift,” insisted towering blues and ballad singer Joe Williams.
“She sings like a horn,” John Birks “Dizzy” Gillespie praised. “She can sing notes that other people can’t even hear.”
Unlike many of her contemporary divas, she was reared the only child in a stable, religious, strict and loving home in Newark, New Jersey. Her father, Asbury “Jake” Vaughan disapproved of show business. Her mother, who sang with Sarah in the Mt. Zion Baptist Church Choir, was more understanding. Sarah absorbed essential musical grounding through piano and organ lessons from the ages of seven to fifteen. At twelve, she became one of Mt. Zion’s regular organists.
The Swedish television program on this DVD was filmed following a month-long engagement at Cité Varieté in downtown Stockholm, according to the Swedish newspaper Estrad and Göran Wallén, now a concert impresario in that city.
Johnnie Garry, Sarah’s road manager since they met during her 1946 gig at Barney Josephson’s fabled Café Society Downtown, was coordinating the European itinerary. Johnnie delighted in everything about his job. Sarah not only depended upon his efficiency, she relied on his judgment so completely that she accepted his edict that her stage wardrobe must be exclusively white. “She had her choice of what she would wear,” he said, “but we convinced her about white.” This facilitated his creating dramatic visual effects as she sang.
“In those days, it wasn’t computer lighting,” he relates. “You had levels you could hold if she wanted to slow down. You could never know what Sarah was going to do—except you couldn’t write cues...If she sang something up-tempo, we’d brighten it up a little bit. On ‘Mean To Me,’ for example, we’d focus around her with some little medium red and blue and a little straw. We’d use the same pink spotlight on her face but we could fade out on her face if that was the mood. Her white wardrobe allowed us to project a pink face with a blue gown if that expressed what she was singing. Sarah had to trust you. She didn’t like people who couldn’t think for themselves.
For this DVD release, Quincy took time from his third globe-circling in three-and-a-half months to call from Dubai, where he was working for the Quincy Jones Listen Up Foundation. His organization is concerned with urgent world health issues and connects underprivileged youth with technology, education, culture and music internationally.
“This DVD is so important. Today’s kids must be exposed to their cultural heritage, and Sarah...we go w-a-a-a-a-a-y back...I must have met her when I had my big band in New York in 1953 or ’54...They were our idols—Miles, Dizzy, Bird, Sarah.”
Back in the States, within three months, Sarah recorded another of her many collaborations with the Count Basie band.
About that date, Benny Powell reminisces, “Sarah was a wonderful person, so easy to be around. I loved doing dates with her. She made everything so comfortable. That’s why her performances then are still so good now. She set up an atmosphere of just pure joy and a kind of freedom so when you got to Sarah Vaughan’s record dates, she was so very well prepared, we never did many takes. Her artistry inspired everybody to be as good as they could possibly be.”
On the first of the three television programs in this collection, this broadcast on Swedish TV, thirty-four-year-old Sarah Vaughan is in her ingénue mode, somewhat shyly but bravely announcing what she will sing. Sweetly demure in a non-Garry-approved dress, she offers a new reading of “Sometimes I’m Happy”, the Leo Robin-Clifford Grey-Vincent Youmans song she first recorded on October 25, 1955. Certain numbers appealed to her so strongly, suggesting tantalizing new paths, that she not only kept them in her live repertoire, but she also called them repeatedly at recording sessions—this one on six occasions.
“Lover Man”, as she explains, holds perennial significance, transporting her to her debut with Parker and Gillespie. Co-composer Roger “Ram” Ramirez (with Jimmy Davis and Jimmy Sherman), upon hearing that first recording of his tune, has been quoted that Diz and Bird “needed a creative singer like Sass to make them sound appealing.” Here, she is very much the leader, subtly supported with just essential chords by Bright and Davis, and Morgan’s delicate brushwork.
“September in the Rain” is relatively new to her repertoire but obviously energizing to the trio. Davis’s grin is as expressive as his pizzicato. Her At Mr. Kelly’s plug is for the live album she made with Davis less than a year earlier at the Chicago club. The Al Dubin-Harry Warren standard apparently did not meet her criteria for permanence. She recorded it only once.
“Misty” is serendipitously Sarah’s. “Erroll Garner caught me getting on the plane,” Quincy Jones relates. “Johnny Burke had just written lyrics to Erroll’s ‘Misty,’ and Erroll said, ‘Stick this in your pocket because I like the lyric—Look at me, I’m as happy as a kitten up a tree…’ and I just stuck it in my pocket and showed it to Sarah when I got to Paris, and we just did it. She loved it immediately. We both did. That was 1958, and we had the first record on ‘Misty’. On the same date, Vaughan And Violins, Sarah sang my ‘The Midnight Sun Will Never Set’. I had written that with Henri Salvador for the Harry Arnold band in Sweden and [alto saxophonist] Arne Domnérus. Sarah heard it at their Stockholm concert and asked me to get a lyric for her so Dorcas Cochran and I wrote words especially for Sass. We made ‘Misty’ again with her trio for Sassy Swings The Tivoli at Copenhagen in 1963. ‘I Feel Pretty’, ‘Lover Man’, ‘Sometimes I’m Happy’, ‘Tenderly’, ‘Honeysuckle Rose’ and ‘Bill Bailey, Won’t You Please Come Home’ are on that record, too, so it’s great that I can see her sing them all again on her Jazz Icons DVD.” Here, Sarah thanks her audience in Swedish for their applause as she approaches “Misty”.
By Patricia Willard.
**
Live In Sweden 1958
Sarah Vaughan- (Vocal)
Richard Davis- (Bass)
Ronnell Bright- (Piano)
Art Morgan- (Drums)
Sometimes I’m Happy
Lover Man
September In The Rain
Mean To Me
Tenderly
If This Isn’t Love
*
Live In Holland 1958
Sarah Vaughan- (Vocal)
Richard Davis- (Bass)
Ronnell Bright- (Piano)
Art Morgan- (Drums)
Over The Rainbow
They All Laughed
Lover Man
Cherokee
Sometimes I’m Happy
*
Live In Sewden 1964
Sarah Vaughan- (Vocal)
Buster Williams- (Bass)
Kirk Stuart- (Piano)
George Hughes- (Drums)
I Feel Pretty
The More I See You
Baubles, Bangles And Beads
I Got Rhythm
Misty
Honeysuckle Rose
Maria
Bill Bailey, Won’t You Please Come Home
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
*
Holland/Sweden
Jazz
Sarah Vaughan arguably was the most phenomenal singer of her century. Musicians loved her. Most were in awe of her. All respected what they almost unanimously agreed was her innate musicality. “She was born with a gift,” insisted towering blues and ballad singer Joe Williams.
“She sings like a horn,” John Birks “Dizzy” Gillespie praised. “She can sing notes that other people can’t even hear.”
Unlike many of her contemporary divas, she was reared the only child in a stable, religious, strict and loving home in Newark, New Jersey. Her father, Asbury “Jake” Vaughan disapproved of show business. Her mother, who sang with Sarah in the Mt. Zion Baptist Church Choir, was more understanding. Sarah absorbed essential musical grounding through piano and organ lessons from the ages of seven to fifteen. At twelve, she became one of Mt. Zion’s regular organists.
The Swedish television program on this DVD was filmed following a month-long engagement at Cité Varieté in downtown Stockholm, according to the Swedish newspaper Estrad and Göran Wallén, now a concert impresario in that city.
Johnnie Garry, Sarah’s road manager since they met during her 1946 gig at Barney Josephson’s fabled Café Society Downtown, was coordinating the European itinerary. Johnnie delighted in everything about his job. Sarah not only depended upon his efficiency, she relied on his judgment so completely that she accepted his edict that her stage wardrobe must be exclusively white. “She had her choice of what she would wear,” he said, “but we convinced her about white.” This facilitated his creating dramatic visual effects as she sang.
“In those days, it wasn’t computer lighting,” he relates. “You had levels you could hold if she wanted to slow down. You could never know what Sarah was going to do—except you couldn’t write cues...If she sang something up-tempo, we’d brighten it up a little bit. On ‘Mean To Me,’ for example, we’d focus around her with some little medium red and blue and a little straw. We’d use the same pink spotlight on her face but we could fade out on her face if that was the mood. Her white wardrobe allowed us to project a pink face with a blue gown if that expressed what she was singing. Sarah had to trust you. She didn’t like people who couldn’t think for themselves.
For this DVD release, Quincy took time from his third globe-circling in three-and-a-half months to call from Dubai, where he was working for the Quincy Jones Listen Up Foundation. His organization is concerned with urgent world health issues and connects underprivileged youth with technology, education, culture and music internationally.
“This DVD is so important. Today’s kids must be exposed to their cultural heritage, and Sarah...we go w-a-a-a-a-a-y back...I must have met her when I had my big band in New York in 1953 or ’54...They were our idols—Miles, Dizzy, Bird, Sarah.”
Back in the States, within three months, Sarah recorded another of her many collaborations with the Count Basie band.
About that date, Benny Powell reminisces, “Sarah was a wonderful person, so easy to be around. I loved doing dates with her. She made everything so comfortable. That’s why her performances then are still so good now. She set up an atmosphere of just pure joy and a kind of freedom so when you got to Sarah Vaughan’s record dates, she was so very well prepared, we never did many takes. Her artistry inspired everybody to be as good as they could possibly be.”
On the first of the three television programs in this collection, this broadcast on Swedish TV, thirty-four-year-old Sarah Vaughan is in her ingénue mode, somewhat shyly but bravely announcing what she will sing. Sweetly demure in a non-Garry-approved dress, she offers a new reading of “Sometimes I’m Happy”, the Leo Robin-Clifford Grey-Vincent Youmans song she first recorded on October 25, 1955. Certain numbers appealed to her so strongly, suggesting tantalizing new paths, that she not only kept them in her live repertoire, but she also called them repeatedly at recording sessions—this one on six occasions.
“Lover Man”, as she explains, holds perennial significance, transporting her to her debut with Parker and Gillespie. Co-composer Roger “Ram” Ramirez (with Jimmy Davis and Jimmy Sherman), upon hearing that first recording of his tune, has been quoted that Diz and Bird “needed a creative singer like Sass to make them sound appealing.” Here, she is very much the leader, subtly supported with just essential chords by Bright and Davis, and Morgan’s delicate brushwork.
“September in the Rain” is relatively new to her repertoire but obviously energizing to the trio. Davis’s grin is as expressive as his pizzicato. Her At Mr. Kelly’s plug is for the live album she made with Davis less than a year earlier at the Chicago club. The Al Dubin-Harry Warren standard apparently did not meet her criteria for permanence. She recorded it only once.
“Misty” is serendipitously Sarah’s. “Erroll Garner caught me getting on the plane,” Quincy Jones relates. “Johnny Burke had just written lyrics to Erroll’s ‘Misty,’ and Erroll said, ‘Stick this in your pocket because I like the lyric—Look at me, I’m as happy as a kitten up a tree…’ and I just stuck it in my pocket and showed it to Sarah when I got to Paris, and we just did it. She loved it immediately. We both did. That was 1958, and we had the first record on ‘Misty’. On the same date, Vaughan And Violins, Sarah sang my ‘The Midnight Sun Will Never Set’. I had written that with Henri Salvador for the Harry Arnold band in Sweden and [alto saxophonist] Arne Domnérus. Sarah heard it at their Stockholm concert and asked me to get a lyric for her so Dorcas Cochran and I wrote words especially for Sass. We made ‘Misty’ again with her trio for Sassy Swings The Tivoli at Copenhagen in 1963. ‘I Feel Pretty’, ‘Lover Man’, ‘Sometimes I’m Happy’, ‘Tenderly’, ‘Honeysuckle Rose’ and ‘Bill Bailey, Won’t You Please Come Home’ are on that record, too, so it’s great that I can see her sing them all again on her Jazz Icons DVD.” Here, Sarah thanks her audience in Swedish for their applause as she approaches “Misty”.
By Patricia Willard.
**
Live In Sweden 1958
Sarah Vaughan- (Vocal)
Richard Davis- (Bass)
Ronnell Bright- (Piano)
Art Morgan- (Drums)
Sometimes I’m Happy
Lover Man
September In The Rain
Mean To Me
Tenderly
If This Isn’t Love
*
Live In Holland 1958
Sarah Vaughan- (Vocal)
Richard Davis- (Bass)
Ronnell Bright- (Piano)
Art Morgan- (Drums)
Over The Rainbow
They All Laughed
Lover Man
Cherokee
Sometimes I’m Happy
*
Live In Sewden 1964
Sarah Vaughan- (Vocal)
Buster Williams- (Bass)
Kirk Stuart- (Piano)
George Hughes- (Drums)
I Feel Pretty
The More I See You
Baubles, Bangles And Beads
I Got Rhythm
Misty
Honeysuckle Rose
Maria
Bill Bailey, Won’t You Please Come Home
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
*
Thursday, December 31, 2009
Tina TURNER - Live in Amsterdam, Wildest Dreams Tour - DTS (Avi) 1996
Tina TURNER - Live in Amsterdam, Wildest Dreams Tour - DTS (Avi) 1996
(Not My Rip)
Blues
Wonderfully directed, Wildest Dreams Tour makes a viewer feel practically omnipresent at Tina Turner's 1996, three-night stand in the Amsterdam Arena. With camera angles seemingly coming from everywhere, the massive scope of Turner's show is put into a proper, and enjoyable, visual context, along with the star's own artful way of reaching 50,000 fans at a shot with fierce energy but an unmistakably nuanced performance. Turner's secret weapon: her voice, with its whiplash gospel, survivor's pride, and endless capacity for ecstasy. It doesn't matter if she's dancing as if her life depended on it or launching tiny ripples of erotic warmth with the barest of gestures: she still flaunts for this Dutch crowd her share of Jerry Lee Lewis's profane fire. Starting in fourth gear with "Whatever You Want," Turner takes a detour through the too-precious "Do What You Do" before time-traveling to the Phil Spector-produced "River Deep Mountain High" (featuring the star singing along with her younger self in a 1960s film clip). "In Your Wildest Dreams" is a lulling bath of sexual longing, and "GoldenEye" is pure, Bond-ian fun. The 21 tracks are heavy with past hits, none of which disappoint: "Proud Mary," "What's Love Got to Do with It." The final performance, "Something Beautiful Remains," is a hard-won epiphany.
By Tom Keogh.
**
01. Whatever You Want
02. Do What You Do
03. River Deep Mountain High
04. Missing You
05. In Your Wildest Dreams
06. Goldeneye
07. Private Dancer
08. We Don't Need Another Hero
09. Let's Stay Together
10. I Can't Stand The Rain
11. Undercover Agent For The Blues
12. Steamy Windows
13. Givin' It Up For Your Love
14. Better Be Good To Me
15. Addicted To Love
16. The Best
17. What's Love Got To Do With It
18. Proud Mary
19. Nutbush City Limits
20. On Silent Wings
21. Something Beautiful Remains (Bonus Track)
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*
1 2 3 4
*
(Not My Rip)
Blues
Wonderfully directed, Wildest Dreams Tour makes a viewer feel practically omnipresent at Tina Turner's 1996, three-night stand in the Amsterdam Arena. With camera angles seemingly coming from everywhere, the massive scope of Turner's show is put into a proper, and enjoyable, visual context, along with the star's own artful way of reaching 50,000 fans at a shot with fierce energy but an unmistakably nuanced performance. Turner's secret weapon: her voice, with its whiplash gospel, survivor's pride, and endless capacity for ecstasy. It doesn't matter if she's dancing as if her life depended on it or launching tiny ripples of erotic warmth with the barest of gestures: she still flaunts for this Dutch crowd her share of Jerry Lee Lewis's profane fire. Starting in fourth gear with "Whatever You Want," Turner takes a detour through the too-precious "Do What You Do" before time-traveling to the Phil Spector-produced "River Deep Mountain High" (featuring the star singing along with her younger self in a 1960s film clip). "In Your Wildest Dreams" is a lulling bath of sexual longing, and "GoldenEye" is pure, Bond-ian fun. The 21 tracks are heavy with past hits, none of which disappoint: "Proud Mary," "What's Love Got to Do with It." The final performance, "Something Beautiful Remains," is a hard-won epiphany.
By Tom Keogh.
**
01. Whatever You Want
02. Do What You Do
03. River Deep Mountain High
04. Missing You
05. In Your Wildest Dreams
06. Goldeneye
07. Private Dancer
08. We Don't Need Another Hero
09. Let's Stay Together
10. I Can't Stand The Rain
11. Undercover Agent For The Blues
12. Steamy Windows
13. Givin' It Up For Your Love
14. Better Be Good To Me
15. Addicted To Love
16. The Best
17. What's Love Got To Do With It
18. Proud Mary
19. Nutbush City Limits
20. On Silent Wings
21. Something Beautiful Remains (Bonus Track)
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*
1 2 3 4
*
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Eric Clapton - Nothing but the Blues (DvdRip)
Eric Clapton - Nothing but the Blues (DvdRip)
Clapton's 1994 concert at the Fillmore San Francisco - November 8 and 9, 1994
Blues
This is just breathtaking, and any Clapton/blues fan should try and get a hold of a copy. His playing is incendiary, especially on 'Early in the morning', 'Groaning the blues', 'it hurts me too', and 'Ain't Nobody's Business', which starts off with just the piano and vocal, and Clapton finishes off with an amazing solo, just drenched in sweat.
**
01.Introduction
02. Motherless Child (Traditional)
03. Malted Milk (Robert Johnson)
04. How Long (Leroy Carr)
05. Kidman (Big Maceo)
06. County Jail (Alfred Fields)
07. Fourty-Four (Howlin' Wolf)
08. Blues Leave Me Alone (James Lane)
09. Standin' Round Crying (Mckinley Morganfield)
10. Hoochie Coochie Man (Willie Dixon)
11. It Hurts Me Too (Elmore James)
12. Blues Before Sunrise (Leroy Carr)
13. Third Degree (Eddie BoydWillie Dixon)
14. Reconsider Baby (Lowell Fulsom)
15. Sinner's Prayer (Lowell GlennLowell Fulsom)
16. I Can't Judge Nobody (Smoky Floyd)
17. Someday After A While (Freddy KingSonny Thompson)
18. Tore Down (Sonny Thompson)
19. Have You Ever Loved A Woman (Billy Myles)
20. Crosscut Saw (R.G. Ford)
21. Five Long Years (Eddie Boyd)
22. Crossroads(Robert Johnson
23. Groaning The Blues (Willie Dixon)
24. Ain't Nobody's Business If I Do
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*
1 2 3 4 5
*
Clapton's 1994 concert at the Fillmore San Francisco - November 8 and 9, 1994
Blues
This is just breathtaking, and any Clapton/blues fan should try and get a hold of a copy. His playing is incendiary, especially on 'Early in the morning', 'Groaning the blues', 'it hurts me too', and 'Ain't Nobody's Business', which starts off with just the piano and vocal, and Clapton finishes off with an amazing solo, just drenched in sweat.
**
01.Introduction
02. Motherless Child (Traditional)
03. Malted Milk (Robert Johnson)
04. How Long (Leroy Carr)
05. Kidman (Big Maceo)
06. County Jail (Alfred Fields)
07. Fourty-Four (Howlin' Wolf)
08. Blues Leave Me Alone (James Lane)
09. Standin' Round Crying (Mckinley Morganfield)
10. Hoochie Coochie Man (Willie Dixon)
11. It Hurts Me Too (Elmore James)
12. Blues Before Sunrise (Leroy Carr)
13. Third Degree (Eddie BoydWillie Dixon)
14. Reconsider Baby (Lowell Fulsom)
15. Sinner's Prayer (Lowell GlennLowell Fulsom)
16. I Can't Judge Nobody (Smoky Floyd)
17. Someday After A While (Freddy KingSonny Thompson)
18. Tore Down (Sonny Thompson)
19. Have You Ever Loved A Woman (Billy Myles)
20. Crosscut Saw (R.G. Ford)
21. Five Long Years (Eddie Boyd)
22. Crossroads(Robert Johnson
23. Groaning The Blues (Willie Dixon)
24. Ain't Nobody's Business If I Do
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*
1 2 3 4 5
*
Monday, December 21, 2009
It Might Get Loud (Dvd Rip)
It Might Get Loud (Dvd Rip)
Blues
Jack White (White Stripes), Jimmy Page (Led Zeppelin) and The Edge (U2) getting together to talk about playing the guitar and their different paths to fame. The film functions more as a three way biography of the trio but still has enough cross over to make sure that no one is over looked. In addition to the back stories the film also shows an amazing sit down/jam session between the trio that includes them playing their favorite records, teaching each other song parts and many truly genuine moments of pure joy.
Three Men, Three ways to Rock.
While all three are famous in their own right, the film could easily devolve into a look at who has more lifetime accomplishments. Instead director David Guggenheim does a fantastic job of showing the similarities and contrasts of the players themselves and mostly ignoring their work with bands. This set up allows the viewer great access into what motivates each of them and how they came to make the sounds they are now famous for.
Jack White shines in this set up. While by no means the most famous or accomplished in the room his swagger and commentary will keep the film engaging. That confidence coupled with some really great quotes and a lot of references to classic blues bands give his side of the film a fantastic grounding. Those who are not familiar with White's quick wit and opinions may be put off, but for fans of his work this is a great opportunity to understand him better.
On the other hand the Edge seems a little put out by the whole experience. This may come from him being Bono's side man for so long, but he comes across as genuinely uncomfortable in a lot of the group scenes. His story is every bit as compelling as the other two's, but either due to everyone’s familiarity with it or, some sort of apathy on his end, it falls a little short.
By Josh Rhoten.
**
The joining of guitar legends Jack White, Jimmy Page and The Edge, is a pretty cool concept and a brilliant entry point into this metaphorical examination of the effect of this one instrument on music and the creativity of its artists. Music aficionados will certainly appreciate the rock significance of the event, though I’m not sure complete Zeppelin/White Stripes/U2 virgins will fully engage with this admittedly fan-centric subject matter.
In a large high ceiling studio in Hollywood, Oscar-winning documentarian Davis Guggenheim (‘An Inconvenient Truth’) and producer Thomas Tull (‘The Dark Knight’) set up an intimate meeting room for these legendary musicians. They represent three generations of rock royalty – Jimmy Page, the leader of the legendary hard rock outfit Led Zeppelin, The Edge, the compassionate and often soft-spoken guitarist from U2 and Jack White, the Detroit-born leader of the White Stripes, and now Nashville-based chameleon of punk and the blues.
What happens if you put three great guitarists in a room with some guitars, some amps and a few record players? It’s a no brainer that a pretty cool discussion will arise about their creative sensibilities, their influences and funny anecdotes will result.
Some of the more interesting stories which emerge include Jimmy Pages’ return to the country home where Led Zeppelin’s fourth album was recorded. It appears to be the first time he’s returned to the place since they recorded those great songs and the emotional reaction on his face is genuine and we feel it too. The Edge describes poignantly the effect of early punk on his career and the growing violence in Northern Ireland as inspiration for some of their best work. I’m always absorbed watching great artists uses their tools to build their masterpieces. And so it’s the Edge’s deconstruction of his technical process which is the most fascinating.
Jack White comes off as the elusive pupil to Page and the Edge. Though his desire to scour the history of music for inspiration is genuine, he seems the least down to earth, portraying some kind of Bob Dylan-like caricature of an artist than his real self. Or maybe he really is just a crazy weird-artist who pretends to mentor an 8 year old version of himself. There’s no doubt he’s got talent and the mere sight of him constructing an electric guitar from a coke bottle, a string and a plank of wood is fascinating and headshakingly creative.
Guggenheim admirably avoids the A&E Biography template of career charting documentaries. Each one gets to demonstrate one of their songs being played to the others on stage. We learn of each of their humble beginnings and each of their historical influences and creative sensibilities. Even though the narrative throughlines are kept in tact, and evened out between the three guitarists, Guggenheim keeps an improvised and unpredictable feel, anchored by the unrehearsed spontaneity of the three artists.
For good or bad, it’s a wholly celebratory affair, each one taking turns acknowledging the greatness of the other, and nodding their heads without a whimper of conflict or question. But really, conflict is overrated.
By Alan Bacchus.
**
Three generations of rock guitarists come together for It Might Get Loud, a 2009 documentary directed by Davis Guggenheim (An Inconvenient Truth). These are not just your garden-variety guitar gods: Jimmy Page, in his mid-'60s at the time of the film, founded Led Zeppelin, who dominated the 1970s following the breakup of the Beatles. As a member of U2, 48-year-old David Evans, better known as the Edge, created one of the most distinctive and influential sounds of the past quarter century. And 34-year-old Jack White (of the White Stripes, the Raconteurs, and the Dead Weather) was described by one music publication as "the most significant rock 'n' roll figure of the past ten years." Guggenheim, who followed the three around for the better part of a year, takes us into their individual lives, past and present. There are shots of Page as a young London session musician, with the Yardbirds and Zeppelin, at Headley Grange (the estate where much of the fourth Zep album was made), and at home with his record collection. The Edge takes us to the Dublin classroom where U2 first rehearsed, as well as to the practice room he uses now (never a virtuoso soloist, he developed a style based on texture and a mind-boggling array of effects); and White, whose insistence on authenticity is admirable but perhaps a tad self-conscious, constructs a "guitar" from a plank of wood, a piece of wire, and a Coke bottle (he also plays a recording by the primitive bluesman Son House, featuring just voice and handclaps, that White says is still his biggest inspiration). The three also converge on a Hollywood sound stage, where they chat and a do a little jamming on Zep's "In My Time of Dying" (with all three playing slide guitar) and the Band's "The Weight." It's hard to say if the film's appeal will extend beyond guitar freaks and fans of these particular bands, but at the very least, It Might Get Loud offers some interesting insight into the soul and inspiration behind some of pop's best and most popular music.
By Sam Graham.
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*
1 2 3 4
*
Blues
Jack White (White Stripes), Jimmy Page (Led Zeppelin) and The Edge (U2) getting together to talk about playing the guitar and their different paths to fame. The film functions more as a three way biography of the trio but still has enough cross over to make sure that no one is over looked. In addition to the back stories the film also shows an amazing sit down/jam session between the trio that includes them playing their favorite records, teaching each other song parts and many truly genuine moments of pure joy.
Three Men, Three ways to Rock.
While all three are famous in their own right, the film could easily devolve into a look at who has more lifetime accomplishments. Instead director David Guggenheim does a fantastic job of showing the similarities and contrasts of the players themselves and mostly ignoring their work with bands. This set up allows the viewer great access into what motivates each of them and how they came to make the sounds they are now famous for.
Jack White shines in this set up. While by no means the most famous or accomplished in the room his swagger and commentary will keep the film engaging. That confidence coupled with some really great quotes and a lot of references to classic blues bands give his side of the film a fantastic grounding. Those who are not familiar with White's quick wit and opinions may be put off, but for fans of his work this is a great opportunity to understand him better.
On the other hand the Edge seems a little put out by the whole experience. This may come from him being Bono's side man for so long, but he comes across as genuinely uncomfortable in a lot of the group scenes. His story is every bit as compelling as the other two's, but either due to everyone’s familiarity with it or, some sort of apathy on his end, it falls a little short.
By Josh Rhoten.
**
The joining of guitar legends Jack White, Jimmy Page and The Edge, is a pretty cool concept and a brilliant entry point into this metaphorical examination of the effect of this one instrument on music and the creativity of its artists. Music aficionados will certainly appreciate the rock significance of the event, though I’m not sure complete Zeppelin/White Stripes/U2 virgins will fully engage with this admittedly fan-centric subject matter.
In a large high ceiling studio in Hollywood, Oscar-winning documentarian Davis Guggenheim (‘An Inconvenient Truth’) and producer Thomas Tull (‘The Dark Knight’) set up an intimate meeting room for these legendary musicians. They represent three generations of rock royalty – Jimmy Page, the leader of the legendary hard rock outfit Led Zeppelin, The Edge, the compassionate and often soft-spoken guitarist from U2 and Jack White, the Detroit-born leader of the White Stripes, and now Nashville-based chameleon of punk and the blues.
What happens if you put three great guitarists in a room with some guitars, some amps and a few record players? It’s a no brainer that a pretty cool discussion will arise about their creative sensibilities, their influences and funny anecdotes will result.
Some of the more interesting stories which emerge include Jimmy Pages’ return to the country home where Led Zeppelin’s fourth album was recorded. It appears to be the first time he’s returned to the place since they recorded those great songs and the emotional reaction on his face is genuine and we feel it too. The Edge describes poignantly the effect of early punk on his career and the growing violence in Northern Ireland as inspiration for some of their best work. I’m always absorbed watching great artists uses their tools to build their masterpieces. And so it’s the Edge’s deconstruction of his technical process which is the most fascinating.
Jack White comes off as the elusive pupil to Page and the Edge. Though his desire to scour the history of music for inspiration is genuine, he seems the least down to earth, portraying some kind of Bob Dylan-like caricature of an artist than his real self. Or maybe he really is just a crazy weird-artist who pretends to mentor an 8 year old version of himself. There’s no doubt he’s got talent and the mere sight of him constructing an electric guitar from a coke bottle, a string and a plank of wood is fascinating and headshakingly creative.
Guggenheim admirably avoids the A&E Biography template of career charting documentaries. Each one gets to demonstrate one of their songs being played to the others on stage. We learn of each of their humble beginnings and each of their historical influences and creative sensibilities. Even though the narrative throughlines are kept in tact, and evened out between the three guitarists, Guggenheim keeps an improvised and unpredictable feel, anchored by the unrehearsed spontaneity of the three artists.
For good or bad, it’s a wholly celebratory affair, each one taking turns acknowledging the greatness of the other, and nodding their heads without a whimper of conflict or question. But really, conflict is overrated.
By Alan Bacchus.
**
Three generations of rock guitarists come together for It Might Get Loud, a 2009 documentary directed by Davis Guggenheim (An Inconvenient Truth). These are not just your garden-variety guitar gods: Jimmy Page, in his mid-'60s at the time of the film, founded Led Zeppelin, who dominated the 1970s following the breakup of the Beatles. As a member of U2, 48-year-old David Evans, better known as the Edge, created one of the most distinctive and influential sounds of the past quarter century. And 34-year-old Jack White (of the White Stripes, the Raconteurs, and the Dead Weather) was described by one music publication as "the most significant rock 'n' roll figure of the past ten years." Guggenheim, who followed the three around for the better part of a year, takes us into their individual lives, past and present. There are shots of Page as a young London session musician, with the Yardbirds and Zeppelin, at Headley Grange (the estate where much of the fourth Zep album was made), and at home with his record collection. The Edge takes us to the Dublin classroom where U2 first rehearsed, as well as to the practice room he uses now (never a virtuoso soloist, he developed a style based on texture and a mind-boggling array of effects); and White, whose insistence on authenticity is admirable but perhaps a tad self-conscious, constructs a "guitar" from a plank of wood, a piece of wire, and a Coke bottle (he also plays a recording by the primitive bluesman Son House, featuring just voice and handclaps, that White says is still his biggest inspiration). The three also converge on a Hollywood sound stage, where they chat and a do a little jamming on Zep's "In My Time of Dying" (with all three playing slide guitar) and the Band's "The Weight." It's hard to say if the film's appeal will extend beyond guitar freaks and fans of these particular bands, but at the very least, It Might Get Loud offers some interesting insight into the soul and inspiration behind some of pop's best and most popular music.
By Sam Graham.
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*
1 2 3 4
*
Sunday, December 20, 2009
The Allman Brothers - Live at Beacon Theatre 2003 (DvD Rip)
The Allman Brothers - Live at Beacon Theatre 2003 (DvD Rip)
Blues
The Allman Brothers' strong, occasionally startling set on this DVD may soften those intransigent purists who won't accept the band without its original (and now fired) guitarist, Dickey Betts. The group's classic dual-guitar sound is capably covered by returning member Warren Haynes and rising star Derek Trucks (young nephew of Allmans' drummer Butch Trucks), who sounds as if he's lived and breathed the late Duane Allman's playbook since he left the cradle. Derek's barbed riffs feed the textured funk of "Statesboro Blues" and get some mileage out of filler like "Come and Go Blues," but the blissful-looking fellow's supreme moment comes when he joins Haynes in a blisteringly beautiful attack on gospel stunner "Soul Shine." Some of the material here borders on the pedestrian, but vocalist-keyboardist Gregg Allman's grizzled mastery of the blues can still lead this legendary band through some epic mysteries.
By Tom Keogh.
**
The first ABB DVD since 1994. Filmed and recorded live at the Beacon Theatre March 25-26, 2003. The Allman Brothers' strong, occasionally startling set on this DVD may soften those intransigent purists who won't accept the band without its original (and now fired) guitarist, Dickey Betts. The group's classic dual-guitar sound is capably covered by returning member Warren Haynes and rising star Derek Trucks (young nephew of Allmans' drummer Butch Trucks), who sounds as if he's lived and breathed the late Duane Allman's playbook since he left the cradle. Derek's barbed riffs feed the textured funk of Statesboro Blues and get some mileage out of filler like Come and Go Blues, but the blissful-looking fellow's supreme moment comes when he joins Haynes in a blisteringly beautiful attack on gospel stunner Soul Shine. Some of the material here borders on the pedestrian, but vocalist-keyboardist Gregg Allman's grizzled mastery of the blues can still lead this legendary band through some epic mysteries.
**
An excellent live concert release from one of the original jam bands. Here The Allman Brothers Band present an uncut 2 Hour and 48 minute concert recorded in March 2003 at The Beacon Theater in New York. Although a few Allman Brothers classics like Ramblin Man, Jessica, In Memory of Elizabeth Reed, and Revival are not here they are included on other video releases and what is included here is excellent and worthy of 5 stars. The 5.1 sound and video quality are excellent and the band is as tight as they have ever been. This version of the Allman Brothers Band (Founding members Gregg Allman, Jaimoe, and Butch Trucks, along with longtime band members Warren Haynes, Marc Quinones, and Oteil Burbridge, and more recent addition Derek Trucks doing a good job filling Dickie Betts' shoes) seem to be really enjoying themselves on stage and it comes through in the quality of the music.
Besides the concert, the double DVD release also includes approximately 1 hour and 15 minutes of interviews and behind the scenes footage. There is a also a very good dressing room performance of Old Friend by Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks along with a photo gallery and discography.
By Bill Thompson.
**
Gregg Allman- Organ, Piano, Guitar, Vocals
Butch Trucks- Drums, Tympani
Jai Johanny Jaimoe Johanson- Drums, Percussion
Warren Haynes- Guitar, Slide Guitar, Vocals
Marc Quinones- Drums, Percussion, Background Vocals
Oteil Burbridge- Bass, Vocals
Derek Trucks- Guitar, Slide Guitar
**
01. Ain't Wastin' Time No More
02. Black Hearted Woman
03. Statesboro Blues
04. Woman Across The River
05. A Change Is Gonna Come
06. Maydell
07. Come & Go Blues
08. Rockin' Horse
09. Desdemona
10. Don't Keep Me Wondering
11. Midnight Rider
12. Soulshine
13. High Cost Of Low Living
14. Leave My Blues At Home
15. Old Before My Time
16. The Same Thing
17. Melissa
18. Instrumental Illness
19. Worried Down With The Blues
20. Dreams
21. Whippin' Post
22. One Way Out
**
NoPassword
*
DLinks
*
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
*
Blues
The Allman Brothers' strong, occasionally startling set on this DVD may soften those intransigent purists who won't accept the band without its original (and now fired) guitarist, Dickey Betts. The group's classic dual-guitar sound is capably covered by returning member Warren Haynes and rising star Derek Trucks (young nephew of Allmans' drummer Butch Trucks), who sounds as if he's lived and breathed the late Duane Allman's playbook since he left the cradle. Derek's barbed riffs feed the textured funk of "Statesboro Blues" and get some mileage out of filler like "Come and Go Blues," but the blissful-looking fellow's supreme moment comes when he joins Haynes in a blisteringly beautiful attack on gospel stunner "Soul Shine." Some of the material here borders on the pedestrian, but vocalist-keyboardist Gregg Allman's grizzled mastery of the blues can still lead this legendary band through some epic mysteries.
By Tom Keogh.
**
The first ABB DVD since 1994. Filmed and recorded live at the Beacon Theatre March 25-26, 2003. The Allman Brothers' strong, occasionally startling set on this DVD may soften those intransigent purists who won't accept the band without its original (and now fired) guitarist, Dickey Betts. The group's classic dual-guitar sound is capably covered by returning member Warren Haynes and rising star Derek Trucks (young nephew of Allmans' drummer Butch Trucks), who sounds as if he's lived and breathed the late Duane Allman's playbook since he left the cradle. Derek's barbed riffs feed the textured funk of Statesboro Blues and get some mileage out of filler like Come and Go Blues, but the blissful-looking fellow's supreme moment comes when he joins Haynes in a blisteringly beautiful attack on gospel stunner Soul Shine. Some of the material here borders on the pedestrian, but vocalist-keyboardist Gregg Allman's grizzled mastery of the blues can still lead this legendary band through some epic mysteries.
**
An excellent live concert release from one of the original jam bands. Here The Allman Brothers Band present an uncut 2 Hour and 48 minute concert recorded in March 2003 at The Beacon Theater in New York. Although a few Allman Brothers classics like Ramblin Man, Jessica, In Memory of Elizabeth Reed, and Revival are not here they are included on other video releases and what is included here is excellent and worthy of 5 stars. The 5.1 sound and video quality are excellent and the band is as tight as they have ever been. This version of the Allman Brothers Band (Founding members Gregg Allman, Jaimoe, and Butch Trucks, along with longtime band members Warren Haynes, Marc Quinones, and Oteil Burbridge, and more recent addition Derek Trucks doing a good job filling Dickie Betts' shoes) seem to be really enjoying themselves on stage and it comes through in the quality of the music.
Besides the concert, the double DVD release also includes approximately 1 hour and 15 minutes of interviews and behind the scenes footage. There is a also a very good dressing room performance of Old Friend by Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks along with a photo gallery and discography.
By Bill Thompson.
**
Gregg Allman- Organ, Piano, Guitar, Vocals
Butch Trucks- Drums, Tympani
Jai Johanny Jaimoe Johanson- Drums, Percussion
Warren Haynes- Guitar, Slide Guitar, Vocals
Marc Quinones- Drums, Percussion, Background Vocals
Oteil Burbridge- Bass, Vocals
Derek Trucks- Guitar, Slide Guitar
**
01. Ain't Wastin' Time No More
02. Black Hearted Woman
03. Statesboro Blues
04. Woman Across The River
05. A Change Is Gonna Come
06. Maydell
07. Come & Go Blues
08. Rockin' Horse
09. Desdemona
10. Don't Keep Me Wondering
11. Midnight Rider
12. Soulshine
13. High Cost Of Low Living
14. Leave My Blues At Home
15. Old Before My Time
16. The Same Thing
17. Melissa
18. Instrumental Illness
19. Worried Down With The Blues
20. Dreams
21. Whippin' Post
22. One Way Out
**
NoPassword
*
DLinks
*
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
*
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
B.B. KING - Live by Request 2003 (Avi)
B.B. KING - Live by Request 2003 (Avi)
Blues
Filmed in New York City, this concert from blues maestro B.B. King shows exactly why he is so revered in the blues and rock world. Talented guitarist Jeff Beck joins King for three songs, providing the perfect counterpart to the legendary singer. Originally aired on the A&E Network on A&E's Live By Request, B.B. King and special guest Jeff Beck electrify New York City with all-time favorites.
**
The great bluesmen are almost all gone now, which is reason enough to celebrate this performance by B.B. King. King's guitar playing and singing no longer burn with the fire he displayed on, say, the immortal Live at the Regal album (after all, he was nearly 78 when this 83-minute show was recorded in New York for A&E in June 2003), but the man hasn't lost his touch--and neither has Jeff Beck, who joins him for three tunes. Beck, who continues to play with remarkable invention and dexterity, may even upstage the master--but he's doing it with licks he learned from B.B. himself. The repertoire, as expected when folks (including Willie Nelson and Tony Bennett) are calling up and asking for their favorites, is filled with King classics ("The Thrill Is Gone," "Sweet Little Angel," "Let the Good Times Roll"), as well as a couple from his '03 album, Reflections.
By Sam Graham.
**
01. Let The Good Times Roll
02. Sweet Little Angel
03. Bad Case of Love
04. Night Life
05. Neighborhood Affair
06. Exactly Like You
07. Guess Who
08. The Thrill Is Gone
09. Rock Me Baby
10. Key To The Highway
11. When Love Comes To Town
12. Caldonia
13. I'll Survive
14. Payin' The Cost To Be The Boss
**
NoPassword
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*
Blues
Filmed in New York City, this concert from blues maestro B.B. King shows exactly why he is so revered in the blues and rock world. Talented guitarist Jeff Beck joins King for three songs, providing the perfect counterpart to the legendary singer. Originally aired on the A&E Network on A&E's Live By Request, B.B. King and special guest Jeff Beck electrify New York City with all-time favorites.
**
The great bluesmen are almost all gone now, which is reason enough to celebrate this performance by B.B. King. King's guitar playing and singing no longer burn with the fire he displayed on, say, the immortal Live at the Regal album (after all, he was nearly 78 when this 83-minute show was recorded in New York for A&E in June 2003), but the man hasn't lost his touch--and neither has Jeff Beck, who joins him for three tunes. Beck, who continues to play with remarkable invention and dexterity, may even upstage the master--but he's doing it with licks he learned from B.B. himself. The repertoire, as expected when folks (including Willie Nelson and Tony Bennett) are calling up and asking for their favorites, is filled with King classics ("The Thrill Is Gone," "Sweet Little Angel," "Let the Good Times Roll"), as well as a couple from his '03 album, Reflections.
By Sam Graham.
**
01. Let The Good Times Roll
02. Sweet Little Angel
03. Bad Case of Love
04. Night Life
05. Neighborhood Affair
06. Exactly Like You
07. Guess Who
08. The Thrill Is Gone
09. Rock Me Baby
10. Key To The Highway
11. When Love Comes To Town
12. Caldonia
13. I'll Survive
14. Payin' The Cost To Be The Boss
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*
1 2 3 4 5
*
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Louis ARMSTRONG And FRIENDS 1962 (DVD Rip)
Louis ARMSTRONG And FRIENDS 1962 (DVD Rip)
BobbyY HACKET Sextet
Eddie CONDON All Stars
New York,1962
Jazz
The Louis Armstrong All Stars: Louis Armstrong(tp,vcl),Trummy Young(tb),Joe Darensbourg(cl),Danny Barselona(d),Jewel Brown(vcl).
BobbyY HACKET Sextet: Bobby Hackett(co),Urbie Green(tb),Bob Wilber(cl),Dave McKenna(p),Nabil Totah(b),Morey Feld(d)
Eddie CONDON All Stars: Wild Davison (co),Cutty Cutshall(tb),Peanuts Hucko(cl),J.Varro(p),Eddie Condon(g),Joe Williams(b),Buzzy Drootin(d)
**
01. When It`s Sleepy Time Down South - 3:24
02. C`est Si Bon 3:30
03. Someday 4:47
04. Jerry 4:32
05. Nobody Knows The Trouble I`ve Seen 2:34
06. When The Saints 4:38
07. Bill Bailey 3:51
08. Struttin` With Some Barbecue 2:35
09. When The Saints 3:45
10. Royal Garden Blues 3:56
11. Blue And Brokenhearted 3:34
12. Big Ben Blues 4:37
13. Stealin` Apples 3:47
14. Little Ben Blues 4:44
15. Muskrat Ramble 3:00
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*
1 2 3
*
BobbyY HACKET Sextet
Eddie CONDON All Stars
New York,1962
Jazz
The Louis Armstrong All Stars: Louis Armstrong(tp,vcl),Trummy Young(tb),Joe Darensbourg(cl),Danny Barselona(d),Jewel Brown(vcl).
BobbyY HACKET Sextet: Bobby Hackett(co),Urbie Green(tb),Bob Wilber(cl),Dave McKenna(p),Nabil Totah(b),Morey Feld(d)
Eddie CONDON All Stars: Wild Davison (co),Cutty Cutshall(tb),Peanuts Hucko(cl),J.Varro(p),Eddie Condon(g),Joe Williams(b),Buzzy Drootin(d)
**
01. When It`s Sleepy Time Down South - 3:24
02. C`est Si Bon 3:30
03. Someday 4:47
04. Jerry 4:32
05. Nobody Knows The Trouble I`ve Seen 2:34
06. When The Saints 4:38
07. Bill Bailey 3:51
08. Struttin` With Some Barbecue 2:35
09. When The Saints 3:45
10. Royal Garden Blues 3:56
11. Blue And Brokenhearted 3:34
12. Big Ben Blues 4:37
13. Stealin` Apples 3:47
14. Little Ben Blues 4:44
15. Muskrat Ramble 3:00
**
NoPassword
*
DLink
*
1 2 3
*
Monday, November 16, 2009
John MAYALL & The Bluesbrakers - 70th Birthday Concert 2003 (AVI)
John MAYALL & The Bluesbrakers - 70th Birthday Concert 2003 (AVI)
Blues
Not all that many blues musicians (or any other kind, for that matter) live to 70, so British bandleader John Mayall had good reason to celebrate when he reached that milestone in 2003--and celebrate he did, with the admirable, 137-minute John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers: 70th Birthday Concert to show for it. Mayall, a capable if not exactly stellar singer and multi-instrumentalist, is best known for the many fine players who passed through his band over the years, and Eric Clapton, the most renowned of the lot, is on hand here, as is former Mayall/Rolling Stones guitarist Mick Taylor. Clapton sings several tunes in addition to playing his trademark stinging solos on "Hideaway" and "All Your Love" (two of the tunes most responsible for the "Clapton is God" graffiti seen around London in the '60s), while Taylor is mostly impressive as well. But arguably the best guitarist on the Liverpool stage this night is current Bluesbreaker Buddy Whittington, who more than holds his own in the company of his more esteemed predecessors (check out Whittington's superb solos, informed by both Buddy Guy and jazz, on "Blues for the Lost Days" and the 17-minute "Have You Heard"). Indeed, this may well be Mayall's best and most versatile band ever--no mean feat for a guy now in his fifth decade on the scene. A Mayall interview is the disc's sole bonus feature.
By Sam Graham.
**
Well like most Blues fans my age, I got the Bluesbreakers LP in 1966 and played it to death. I spent countless hours playing along with Eric Clapton on "All Your Love" and "Hideaway". They were great days. John Mayall has done so much to promote the blues world-wide, he can't get enough credit. Well, also like most people, after his time with Mick Taylor ("Crusade") I stopped buying his records.
This concert in Liverpool is very entertaining. It has a great song selection and the sound is good. Mayall brings out the old Bluesbreakers Eric Clapton and Mick Taylor (Why no Peter Green?) and they do a pretty good job. Taylor has a great tone and is as stone faced as ever. He is a matter-of-fact guitarist and plays well, especially on the Albert King number "Oh, Pretty Woman" -written by WDIA DJ AC Williams. Eric comes out and does a good job as well. He has been criticized for years as one who has stopped trying to be flash and has become more of a B.B. King-type of Blues player. He does "Hideaway" and "Have You Heard" and "All Your Love" from the original LP of so long ago. He uses his flashy Fender custom shop 2002 strat, too!
The previous reviews have raved about Buddy Whittington (another Texan guitar player!) with his special Mesa Boogie amps and tone BUT. as a guitar player for 40 years I think the flash technique (volume control, pick harmonics of the 1970s rock scene), with very little soul or bending (no 1 Blues technique!!!) is ok, but not great for pure blues. Actually Buddy should get a job with Steely Dan or a Steely Dan tribute band. He is a great player, but seems to be one who bases his skill on speed and technique rather than feeling, which is what the Blues is, "playing in between the notes". However, I do like Buddy's reliance on one guitar- a two-tone sunburst vintage 1950s stratocaster.
John Mayall's vocals in is old age have improved (that is always controversial- I don't think him a really horrible singer). However, his harp playing is more like a blues Bob Dylan (Butterfield used to make fun of it!). It is pretty cool the way he plays simple harp and piano at the same time! But he should stick to organizing and arranging. All in all this is an historical concert and is very entertaining. It is a a great addition to one's DVD library.
The highlights are "All Your Love", "Have You Heard", "Oh, Pretty Woman" and "Hideaway". John does a good job, but it is curious that with his lack of real talent on the harmonica he would do a tune about Little Walter as well as one of Little Walter's own songs.
The sound overall is good and this is a very entertaining and well presented concert. Blues lovers both young and old will appreciate it. The price is reasonable and the lenght is good. The bonus interview is also interesting and one can see the follow-up complete interview on the DVD John Mayall "Godfather of the Blues".
By Perry Celestino.
**
01.Set List
02.Southside Story
03.Kids Got The Blues
04.Dirty Water
05.Somebody's Acting Like A Child
06.Blues For The Lost Days
07.Walking On Sunset
08.Oh, Pretty Woman
09.No Big Hurry
10.Please Mr. Lofton
11.Hideaway
12.All Your Love
13.Have You Heard
14.Hoochie Coochie Man
15.I'm Tore Down
16.It Ain't Right
17.Talk To Your Daughter
**
NoPassword
*
DLinks
*
1 2 3 4
*
Blues
Not all that many blues musicians (or any other kind, for that matter) live to 70, so British bandleader John Mayall had good reason to celebrate when he reached that milestone in 2003--and celebrate he did, with the admirable, 137-minute John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers: 70th Birthday Concert to show for it. Mayall, a capable if not exactly stellar singer and multi-instrumentalist, is best known for the many fine players who passed through his band over the years, and Eric Clapton, the most renowned of the lot, is on hand here, as is former Mayall/Rolling Stones guitarist Mick Taylor. Clapton sings several tunes in addition to playing his trademark stinging solos on "Hideaway" and "All Your Love" (two of the tunes most responsible for the "Clapton is God" graffiti seen around London in the '60s), while Taylor is mostly impressive as well. But arguably the best guitarist on the Liverpool stage this night is current Bluesbreaker Buddy Whittington, who more than holds his own in the company of his more esteemed predecessors (check out Whittington's superb solos, informed by both Buddy Guy and jazz, on "Blues for the Lost Days" and the 17-minute "Have You Heard"). Indeed, this may well be Mayall's best and most versatile band ever--no mean feat for a guy now in his fifth decade on the scene. A Mayall interview is the disc's sole bonus feature.
By Sam Graham.
**
Well like most Blues fans my age, I got the Bluesbreakers LP in 1966 and played it to death. I spent countless hours playing along with Eric Clapton on "All Your Love" and "Hideaway". They were great days. John Mayall has done so much to promote the blues world-wide, he can't get enough credit. Well, also like most people, after his time with Mick Taylor ("Crusade") I stopped buying his records.
This concert in Liverpool is very entertaining. It has a great song selection and the sound is good. Mayall brings out the old Bluesbreakers Eric Clapton and Mick Taylor (Why no Peter Green?) and they do a pretty good job. Taylor has a great tone and is as stone faced as ever. He is a matter-of-fact guitarist and plays well, especially on the Albert King number "Oh, Pretty Woman" -written by WDIA DJ AC Williams. Eric comes out and does a good job as well. He has been criticized for years as one who has stopped trying to be flash and has become more of a B.B. King-type of Blues player. He does "Hideaway" and "Have You Heard" and "All Your Love" from the original LP of so long ago. He uses his flashy Fender custom shop 2002 strat, too!
The previous reviews have raved about Buddy Whittington (another Texan guitar player!) with his special Mesa Boogie amps and tone BUT. as a guitar player for 40 years I think the flash technique (volume control, pick harmonics of the 1970s rock scene), with very little soul or bending (no 1 Blues technique!!!) is ok, but not great for pure blues. Actually Buddy should get a job with Steely Dan or a Steely Dan tribute band. He is a great player, but seems to be one who bases his skill on speed and technique rather than feeling, which is what the Blues is, "playing in between the notes". However, I do like Buddy's reliance on one guitar- a two-tone sunburst vintage 1950s stratocaster.
John Mayall's vocals in is old age have improved (that is always controversial- I don't think him a really horrible singer). However, his harp playing is more like a blues Bob Dylan (Butterfield used to make fun of it!). It is pretty cool the way he plays simple harp and piano at the same time! But he should stick to organizing and arranging. All in all this is an historical concert and is very entertaining. It is a a great addition to one's DVD library.
The highlights are "All Your Love", "Have You Heard", "Oh, Pretty Woman" and "Hideaway". John does a good job, but it is curious that with his lack of real talent on the harmonica he would do a tune about Little Walter as well as one of Little Walter's own songs.
The sound overall is good and this is a very entertaining and well presented concert. Blues lovers both young and old will appreciate it. The price is reasonable and the lenght is good. The bonus interview is also interesting and one can see the follow-up complete interview on the DVD John Mayall "Godfather of the Blues".
By Perry Celestino.
**
01.Set List
02.Southside Story
03.Kids Got The Blues
04.Dirty Water
05.Somebody's Acting Like A Child
06.Blues For The Lost Days
07.Walking On Sunset
08.Oh, Pretty Woman
09.No Big Hurry
10.Please Mr. Lofton
11.Hideaway
12.All Your Love
13.Have You Heard
14.Hoochie Coochie Man
15.I'm Tore Down
16.It Ain't Right
17.Talk To Your Daughter
**
NoPassword
*
DLinks
*
1 2 3 4
*
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Pat Metheny Trio - Live At Umbria Jazz 1999 (AVI)
Saturday, November 14, 2009
Oscar PETERSON - Norman Granz Jazz in Montreux Presents Oscar Peterson Solo '75 (2004) AVI
Oscar PETERSON - Norman Granz Jazz in Montreux Presents Oscar Peterson Solo '75 (2004) AVI
Jazz
The Montreux Jazz Festival of 1975 was something special. All concerts recorded that year by the JATP group and individual artists show this.
Basie was in great shape, Ella too, Milt Jackson did maybe his best concert ever (together with Oscar Peterson)"Jackson".
Oscar Peterson was recorded in several ways, but only his stunning "Cubano Chant" from this solo recital, made it to the records (2-lp Montreux Collection). Years and years later part of this outstanding concert was released on a rare Japanese Laserdisc and finally we have this concert on DVD (still not on cd, why not?)
But there are some strange things about this production.
First let me tell me you that some of the reviews are completely wrong here. The fine DVD of Oscar with the two greatest bassists ever: Ray Brown and Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen was recorded in 1977, so TWO YEARS LATER, and all reviews speaking of that concert, should move to that concert, both on cd and dvd.
This release however has also some problems.
Although I love the releases of this label: Eagle Vision, I just can not understand why these people just forget to mention several tracks (and maybe the best of the entire concert) on the sleeve.
Missing are: Cubano Chant (one of the very best solo jazz performances ever), If I had you (just great) and the showstopper, that left everyone breathless: EIGHT BAR BOOGIE!
I hate jazzpolls and I think it is stupid to compaire artists.
But I can understand why Norman Granz said of Oscar in this years and in this shape, that he surpassed Art Tatum.
But Tatum was a complete different pianist. Okay he had that stunning pianotechnic too, but Oscar was not only "fast fingers in flight" he was swing, he was blues, he was ballads, and he was certainly the best and loyal accompanist in jazz.
He was in fact the most complete pianist ever. (including the classical pianists) The great Duke Ellington told him to play solo: "Do it without the eggs and the onions." So Oscar did in the 70ths several incredible solo concerts and this is a well hidden treasure that was finally released on DVD.
How many supelatives can one use to describe this superb concert?
There are just not enough stars and words for this kind of genius and perfection.
This music is so great, so breathtaking, that I can only tell you: LISTEN, LISTEN !
Let it take you, admire the artist that is sadly no longer with us.
There will never, ever be another one like him: OSCAR PETERSON.
By Arnold van Kampen.
**
Inarguably one of the most important figures in 20th-century American music, jazz impresario Norman Granz introduced live jazz to mainstream audiences with his Jazz at the Philharmonic concert series. This ... Full Descriptionprogram celebrates Granz' pioneering legacy with a concert by legendary jazz pianist Oscar Peterson at the prestigious Montreux Jazz Festival in 1977, performing first as a solo artist and then with bassists Niels Pedersen and Ray Brown as the Oscar Peterson Trio.
**
01.Wished on the Moon
02.Mirage
03.The More I See You
04.Indiana
05.At Long Last Love
06.Medley
07.Take the A Train
08.Don’t Get Around Much
09.In a Sentimental Mood
10.I’m Beginning to See the Light
11.Satin Doll
12.Lady of the Lavender Mist
13.Caravan
**
NoPassword
*
DLinks
*
1 2 3
*
Jazz
The Montreux Jazz Festival of 1975 was something special. All concerts recorded that year by the JATP group and individual artists show this.
Basie was in great shape, Ella too, Milt Jackson did maybe his best concert ever (together with Oscar Peterson)"Jackson".
Oscar Peterson was recorded in several ways, but only his stunning "Cubano Chant" from this solo recital, made it to the records (2-lp Montreux Collection). Years and years later part of this outstanding concert was released on a rare Japanese Laserdisc and finally we have this concert on DVD (still not on cd, why not?)
But there are some strange things about this production.
First let me tell me you that some of the reviews are completely wrong here. The fine DVD of Oscar with the two greatest bassists ever: Ray Brown and Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen was recorded in 1977, so TWO YEARS LATER, and all reviews speaking of that concert, should move to that concert, both on cd and dvd.
This release however has also some problems.
Although I love the releases of this label: Eagle Vision, I just can not understand why these people just forget to mention several tracks (and maybe the best of the entire concert) on the sleeve.
Missing are: Cubano Chant (one of the very best solo jazz performances ever), If I had you (just great) and the showstopper, that left everyone breathless: EIGHT BAR BOOGIE!
I hate jazzpolls and I think it is stupid to compaire artists.
But I can understand why Norman Granz said of Oscar in this years and in this shape, that he surpassed Art Tatum.
But Tatum was a complete different pianist. Okay he had that stunning pianotechnic too, but Oscar was not only "fast fingers in flight" he was swing, he was blues, he was ballads, and he was certainly the best and loyal accompanist in jazz.
He was in fact the most complete pianist ever. (including the classical pianists) The great Duke Ellington told him to play solo: "Do it without the eggs and the onions." So Oscar did in the 70ths several incredible solo concerts and this is a well hidden treasure that was finally released on DVD.
How many supelatives can one use to describe this superb concert?
There are just not enough stars and words for this kind of genius and perfection.
This music is so great, so breathtaking, that I can only tell you: LISTEN, LISTEN !
Let it take you, admire the artist that is sadly no longer with us.
There will never, ever be another one like him: OSCAR PETERSON.
By Arnold van Kampen.
**
Inarguably one of the most important figures in 20th-century American music, jazz impresario Norman Granz introduced live jazz to mainstream audiences with his Jazz at the Philharmonic concert series. This ... Full Descriptionprogram celebrates Granz' pioneering legacy with a concert by legendary jazz pianist Oscar Peterson at the prestigious Montreux Jazz Festival in 1977, performing first as a solo artist and then with bassists Niels Pedersen and Ray Brown as the Oscar Peterson Trio.
**
01.Wished on the Moon
02.Mirage
03.The More I See You
04.Indiana
05.At Long Last Love
06.Medley
07.Take the A Train
08.Don’t Get Around Much
09.In a Sentimental Mood
10.I’m Beginning to See the Light
11.Satin Doll
12.Lady of the Lavender Mist
13.Caravan
**
NoPassword
*
DLinks
*
1 2 3
*
John COLTRANE - The World According to John COLTRANE 1993 (Avi)
John COLTRANE - The World According to John COLTRANE 1993 (Avi)
Jazz
John Coltrane is easily one of the key innovators, visionaries, and virtuosos of American Jazz. Coltrane's spiritually influenced and challenging music not only turned the jazz world upside down in the 1960s, but directly impacted all modern music for decades to follow. It is this relationship between music and spirituality that is the core of John Coltrane: The World According to John Coltrane. Produced with his wife's cooperation, The World According to John Coltrane is truly a heartfelt documentary on his work and influence on the music community. The bulk of the 60-minute documentary focuses on Coltrane's eastern spirituality/musical direction in the 1960s as told through the voices of friends, fellow musicians, and admirers. Perhaps the most impressive aspects of this documentary are its live footage clips. Listening to Coltrane is extremely powerful, but watching him pour his heart and soul into his sax is absolutely awe-inspiring. These clips will leave you yearning to see the entire performances, unedited. Unfortunately, this is the DVD's one fault; no extras of the performances in their entirety. Oh well. A fan can dream. --Rob Bracco
From the Back Cover
John Coltrane was the most innovative and influential jazz saxophonist of the 1960s. The World According to John Coltrane shows he was that, and more--much more. The World According to John Coltrane traces John Coltrane's musical growth from his roots in the black church and rhythm and blues through his forty years of life and beyond, culminating in a musical meeting between Art Ensemble of Chicago saxophonist Roscoe Mitchell and dervish musicians in Morocco's Western Sahara desert filmed in 1990.
The film also includes extensive performance footage of Coltrane some of which has never before been seen or heard. Blistering concert performances of "My Favorite Things" and "Naima," filmed in Europe, are among the film's discoveries. Of great interest to Coltrane scholars will be the recording of John Coltrane while in the Navy (1947) playing the alto saxophone (on Charlie Parker's "Koko")--by far the earliest recording of the saxophonist that has yet surfaced.
The World According to John Coltrane is the first documentary on John Coltrane to be made with the full cooperation of Alice Coltrane. The relationship between his music and his study of Eastern spirituality is clarified by both Alice and La Monte Young. While the former clearly emphasizes her late husband's motivations and the relationship of his spiritual search to the ferment of the sixties, Young offers insights into Eastern musical theory and Western psycho acoustics that provide solid basis for understanding the hypnotic quality so often noted in Coltrane's music.
The World According to John Coltrane is a multifaceted portrait of John Coltrane's music and spirit, and of the dimension of his impact, that ignores both conventional music categories and the conventions of the standard music documentary.
Today we live in a world of sound that is very much a world according to John Coltrane.
Special Guest Artist: Roscoe Mitchell. Alos Rashied Ali, Tommy Flanagan, Jimmy Heath, Wayne Shorter, La Monte Young, Alice Coltrane, and members of the Aissaqua Brotherhood. Contains rare archival clips from the Ralph J. Gleason Jazz Casual Collection.
**
Features "A Love Supreme," "Blue Monk," "Things To Come," "My Favorite Things," "Eight Miles High" and many more! Features include instant song access, full montion interactive menus and a DVD-ROM web link.
An in depth look at Johnny Coltrane ... Full Descriptionand his music, enabling viewers to feel the impact of live, uninterrupted performances of "My Favorite Things" and more, along with Coltrane and Miles Davis together on "So What." First in a new BMG series.
The program traces the innovative, unbelievably influential jazz master John Coltrane's musical growth from his roots in the black church and in rhythm and blues through his forty years of life and beyond. Through rare live footage, this segment of the MASTERS OF AMERICAN MUSIC series paints an in-depth portrait of a man behind a myth.
CD Universe.
**
Saxophonist, composer, and bandleader John Coltrane has been almost as popular in death as he was during his lifetime. The prolific jazzman passed away at 40, but left a legacy of influential musical work. The World According to John Coltrane is one of the few documentaries to feature the background of this famous player. Directed by Robert Palmer, the hour-long release delves into Coltrane's beginnings starting with his childhood in North Carolina. It also showcases some live performances including the songs "My Favorite Things," "So What," and "Naima." Narration is provided by close friends and peers like Roscoe Mitchell and La Monte Young. Having recorded with masters Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk, and Ornette Coleman, Coltrane held his own and even surpassed the popularity of many of his contemporaries.
By Sarah Ing, All Movie Guide.
**
NoPassword
*
DLinks;
*
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Jazz
John Coltrane is easily one of the key innovators, visionaries, and virtuosos of American Jazz. Coltrane's spiritually influenced and challenging music not only turned the jazz world upside down in the 1960s, but directly impacted all modern music for decades to follow. It is this relationship between music and spirituality that is the core of John Coltrane: The World According to John Coltrane. Produced with his wife's cooperation, The World According to John Coltrane is truly a heartfelt documentary on his work and influence on the music community. The bulk of the 60-minute documentary focuses on Coltrane's eastern spirituality/musical direction in the 1960s as told through the voices of friends, fellow musicians, and admirers. Perhaps the most impressive aspects of this documentary are its live footage clips. Listening to Coltrane is extremely powerful, but watching him pour his heart and soul into his sax is absolutely awe-inspiring. These clips will leave you yearning to see the entire performances, unedited. Unfortunately, this is the DVD's one fault; no extras of the performances in their entirety. Oh well. A fan can dream. --Rob Bracco
From the Back Cover
John Coltrane was the most innovative and influential jazz saxophonist of the 1960s. The World According to John Coltrane shows he was that, and more--much more. The World According to John Coltrane traces John Coltrane's musical growth from his roots in the black church and rhythm and blues through his forty years of life and beyond, culminating in a musical meeting between Art Ensemble of Chicago saxophonist Roscoe Mitchell and dervish musicians in Morocco's Western Sahara desert filmed in 1990.
The film also includes extensive performance footage of Coltrane some of which has never before been seen or heard. Blistering concert performances of "My Favorite Things" and "Naima," filmed in Europe, are among the film's discoveries. Of great interest to Coltrane scholars will be the recording of John Coltrane while in the Navy (1947) playing the alto saxophone (on Charlie Parker's "Koko")--by far the earliest recording of the saxophonist that has yet surfaced.
The World According to John Coltrane is the first documentary on John Coltrane to be made with the full cooperation of Alice Coltrane. The relationship between his music and his study of Eastern spirituality is clarified by both Alice and La Monte Young. While the former clearly emphasizes her late husband's motivations and the relationship of his spiritual search to the ferment of the sixties, Young offers insights into Eastern musical theory and Western psycho acoustics that provide solid basis for understanding the hypnotic quality so often noted in Coltrane's music.
The World According to John Coltrane is a multifaceted portrait of John Coltrane's music and spirit, and of the dimension of his impact, that ignores both conventional music categories and the conventions of the standard music documentary.
Today we live in a world of sound that is very much a world according to John Coltrane.
Special Guest Artist: Roscoe Mitchell. Alos Rashied Ali, Tommy Flanagan, Jimmy Heath, Wayne Shorter, La Monte Young, Alice Coltrane, and members of the Aissaqua Brotherhood. Contains rare archival clips from the Ralph J. Gleason Jazz Casual Collection.
**
Features "A Love Supreme," "Blue Monk," "Things To Come," "My Favorite Things," "Eight Miles High" and many more! Features include instant song access, full montion interactive menus and a DVD-ROM web link.
An in depth look at Johnny Coltrane ... Full Descriptionand his music, enabling viewers to feel the impact of live, uninterrupted performances of "My Favorite Things" and more, along with Coltrane and Miles Davis together on "So What." First in a new BMG series.
The program traces the innovative, unbelievably influential jazz master John Coltrane's musical growth from his roots in the black church and in rhythm and blues through his forty years of life and beyond. Through rare live footage, this segment of the MASTERS OF AMERICAN MUSIC series paints an in-depth portrait of a man behind a myth.
CD Universe.
**
Saxophonist, composer, and bandleader John Coltrane has been almost as popular in death as he was during his lifetime. The prolific jazzman passed away at 40, but left a legacy of influential musical work. The World According to John Coltrane is one of the few documentaries to feature the background of this famous player. Directed by Robert Palmer, the hour-long release delves into Coltrane's beginnings starting with his childhood in North Carolina. It also showcases some live performances including the songs "My Favorite Things," "So What," and "Naima." Narration is provided by close friends and peers like Roscoe Mitchell and La Monte Young. Having recorded with masters Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk, and Ornette Coleman, Coltrane held his own and even surpassed the popularity of many of his contemporaries.
By Sarah Ing, All Movie Guide.
**
NoPassword
*
DLinks;
*
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Friday, November 13, 2009
Pat METHENY - More Travels 1992 (DVD)
Pat METHENY - More Travels 1992 (DVD)
The Pat Metheny Group filmed live in concert between July 29, and August 2, 1991
Jazz
Pat Methenhy best production ever, with the combination of amazing band, arty visuals and videos angles, excellent sound quality, Beautiful, progressing compositions. Fabulous solos. This music goes places. this performance is incredible (all 5 stars though).As a guitarist he plays rally astonishing, and as a composer, somehow his compositions could bring his listeners out far beyond imagination. His music can be soaring, sad, angry, and the expression of his face tells us all. With his life time co-writer Lyle Mays, Pat bring out a new definiton of Jazz itself. My favourites are "Have You Heard" and "First Circle", and Opening Solo at the beginning of the video.
At last a dvd copy to this product, Just get it.
By Zohar Daniel.
**
Pat Metheny- Guitars;
Lyle Mays- Keys;
Steve Rodby- Bass;
Paul Wertico- Drums;
Pedro Aznar- Guitar, Vocals, Percussion;
Armando Marcal- percussion.
**
01. Opening
02. Have You Heard
03. First Circle
04. Are You Going With Me
05. Letter From Home
06. Half Life Of bsolution
07. The Road To You
08. Third Wind
09. Letter From Home
**
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 covers
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The Pat Metheny Group filmed live in concert between July 29, and August 2, 1991
Jazz
Pat Methenhy best production ever, with the combination of amazing band, arty visuals and videos angles, excellent sound quality, Beautiful, progressing compositions. Fabulous solos. This music goes places. this performance is incredible (all 5 stars though).As a guitarist he plays rally astonishing, and as a composer, somehow his compositions could bring his listeners out far beyond imagination. His music can be soaring, sad, angry, and the expression of his face tells us all. With his life time co-writer Lyle Mays, Pat bring out a new definiton of Jazz itself. My favourites are "Have You Heard" and "First Circle", and Opening Solo at the beginning of the video.
At last a dvd copy to this product, Just get it.
By Zohar Daniel.
**
Pat Metheny- Guitars;
Lyle Mays- Keys;
Steve Rodby- Bass;
Paul Wertico- Drums;
Pedro Aznar- Guitar, Vocals, Percussion;
Armando Marcal- percussion.
**
01. Opening
02. Have You Heard
03. First Circle
04. Are You Going With Me
05. Letter From Home
06. Half Life Of bsolution
07. The Road To You
08. Third Wind
09. Letter From Home
**
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Paco de LUCIA And Group 2004 (AVI)
Paco de LUCIA And Group 2004 (AVI)
Jazz
For the time being, nobody has surpassed him and today's guitar-playing would be incomprehensible without him. He revolutionised the way of accompanying and of understanding flamenco guitar playing. With Camarón de la Isla, he formed the great artistic partnership in the final quarter of the twentieth century. He opened up the ears of the younger crowd to the flamenco guitar with the rumba Entre dos aguas (1973) which spent twenty weeks in the Spanish hit parade. Since the decade of the seventies, Paco de Lucía has contributed to the renewal of flamenco by integrating sounds and instruments from other forms of music like jazz, salsa or bossa nova into it. The record Friday night in San Francisco, recorded with John Mc Laughlin and Al Di Meola, sold over a million copies, a figure that was unimaginable for a flamenco artist.
He started playing the guitar with his father and with his elder brother Ramón when he was seven years old. He was only fourteen when he recorded his first record alongside his brother Pepe, in the duo Los Chiquitos de Algeciras, and they won the competition in Jerez de la Frontera in 1962. Both the brothers travelled around the world in José Greco's company, in which Paco came into contact with Sabicas, who encouraged him to stop following the tradition of Niño Ricardo to establish his own tradition.
In 1964 he made his first solo record, and his first success arrived in 1967 with La fabulosa guitarra de Paco de Lucía. He made several records with Camarón from 1969 to 1979, and it was with Almoraima (1976) that he definitively broke away from his roots to unveil his own consolidated personality. He started to think of setting up a flamenco band, after working with the band Dolores on one of his records, which he dedicated to Manuel de Falla (1978). Thus, a new period started that found its expression in the record Sólo quiero caminar (1983), with which the sextet that he formed with his brothers, Ramón de Algeciras and Pepe de Lucía, and with Jorge Pardo, Carles Benavent and Rubem Dantas, made its debut. Afterwards, they were joined by Manuel Soler, who danced. He also formed a flamenco trio with Juan Manuel Cañizares and his nephew José María Bandera. He re-established the septet later, and Cañizares was replaced by El Viejín, Manolo Soler was replaced by El Grilo, and Duquende took Pepe de Lucía's place. With this band he recorded Luzía in 1998, a tribute to his mother, who had died shortly before. This work also includes a rondeña that he dedicated to Camarón.
Paco de Lucía's ample recording history, which includes over twenty records without taking guest appearances into account, bore its latest fruit in 2004 with the record "Cositas Buenas". Moreover, with the record "Tú, ven a mí" by the young cantaora La Tana, which appeared in 2005, he appears to have recovered his facet as a producer, which he had abandoned in 1992 after "Potro de rabia y miel" by Camarón.
**
“ A recording of the concert by the guitarist with the accompaniment of his septet in the Gemeringer Jazztage in Germany in 1996. Paco's guitar plays alongside those of Cañizares and Ramón de Algeciras, joining the music of great jazz masters, with Joaquín Grilo dancing. The repertoire, which is very similar to that of 'Live in America', includes songs from 'Siroco' and 'Zyryab' and is finished off in a rumba style with 'Buana, buana, King Kong'. ”
**
Joaquín Grilo- Male Flamenco Dancer
Pepe de Lucía- Male Flamenco Singer
Cañizares- Guitar
Ramón de Algeciras- Guitar
Rubem Dantas- Percussion
Jorge Pardo- Saxophone
Carles Benavent- Bass
Paco de Lucía- Guitar
**
01. Mi Nino Curro
02. El Panuelo
03. Alcazar De Sevilla
04. Playa Del Carmen
05. Zyryab
06. Buana Buana King Kong
**
NoPassword
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DLinks
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
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Jazz
For the time being, nobody has surpassed him and today's guitar-playing would be incomprehensible without him. He revolutionised the way of accompanying and of understanding flamenco guitar playing. With Camarón de la Isla, he formed the great artistic partnership in the final quarter of the twentieth century. He opened up the ears of the younger crowd to the flamenco guitar with the rumba Entre dos aguas (1973) which spent twenty weeks in the Spanish hit parade. Since the decade of the seventies, Paco de Lucía has contributed to the renewal of flamenco by integrating sounds and instruments from other forms of music like jazz, salsa or bossa nova into it. The record Friday night in San Francisco, recorded with John Mc Laughlin and Al Di Meola, sold over a million copies, a figure that was unimaginable for a flamenco artist.
He started playing the guitar with his father and with his elder brother Ramón when he was seven years old. He was only fourteen when he recorded his first record alongside his brother Pepe, in the duo Los Chiquitos de Algeciras, and they won the competition in Jerez de la Frontera in 1962. Both the brothers travelled around the world in José Greco's company, in which Paco came into contact with Sabicas, who encouraged him to stop following the tradition of Niño Ricardo to establish his own tradition.
In 1964 he made his first solo record, and his first success arrived in 1967 with La fabulosa guitarra de Paco de Lucía. He made several records with Camarón from 1969 to 1979, and it was with Almoraima (1976) that he definitively broke away from his roots to unveil his own consolidated personality. He started to think of setting up a flamenco band, after working with the band Dolores on one of his records, which he dedicated to Manuel de Falla (1978). Thus, a new period started that found its expression in the record Sólo quiero caminar (1983), with which the sextet that he formed with his brothers, Ramón de Algeciras and Pepe de Lucía, and with Jorge Pardo, Carles Benavent and Rubem Dantas, made its debut. Afterwards, they were joined by Manuel Soler, who danced. He also formed a flamenco trio with Juan Manuel Cañizares and his nephew José María Bandera. He re-established the septet later, and Cañizares was replaced by El Viejín, Manolo Soler was replaced by El Grilo, and Duquende took Pepe de Lucía's place. With this band he recorded Luzía in 1998, a tribute to his mother, who had died shortly before. This work also includes a rondeña that he dedicated to Camarón.
Paco de Lucía's ample recording history, which includes over twenty records without taking guest appearances into account, bore its latest fruit in 2004 with the record "Cositas Buenas". Moreover, with the record "Tú, ven a mí" by the young cantaora La Tana, which appeared in 2005, he appears to have recovered his facet as a producer, which he had abandoned in 1992 after "Potro de rabia y miel" by Camarón.
**
“ A recording of the concert by the guitarist with the accompaniment of his septet in the Gemeringer Jazztage in Germany in 1996. Paco's guitar plays alongside those of Cañizares and Ramón de Algeciras, joining the music of great jazz masters, with Joaquín Grilo dancing. The repertoire, which is very similar to that of 'Live in America', includes songs from 'Siroco' and 'Zyryab' and is finished off in a rumba style with 'Buana, buana, King Kong'. ”
**
Joaquín Grilo- Male Flamenco Dancer
Pepe de Lucía- Male Flamenco Singer
Cañizares- Guitar
Ramón de Algeciras- Guitar
Rubem Dantas- Percussion
Jorge Pardo- Saxophone
Carles Benavent- Bass
Paco de Lucía- Guitar
**
01. Mi Nino Curro
02. El Panuelo
03. Alcazar De Sevilla
04. Playa Del Carmen
05. Zyryab
06. Buana Buana King Kong
**
NoPassword
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
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Duke ROBILLARD - Uptown Blues Jazz Rock and Swing Guitar 2006 (AVI)
Duke ROBILLARD - Uptown Blues Jazz Rock and Swing Guitar 2006 (AVI)
Blues
Take a tour of some great 1940's and 1950's American styles on "Uptown Blues, Jazz, Rock & Swing Guitar", as Duke Robillard shows you T-Bone Walker style, 9th chord extensions, blues-based swing, Chralie Christian style, passing tones, Les Paul style, scraping the strings, special rhythm licks, fast note flurries and rock 'n' roll style. Let Duke Robillard share his amazing skills with you in this classic Hot Licks session. "Uptown Blues, Jazz, Rock & Swing Guitar" features a new introduction by Woody Mann.
Jazz and blues guitarist Woody Mann learned from legendary Rev. Gary Davis and then played and recorded with Son House, Bukka White and John Fahey. He has performed throughout the world, recorded over a dozen CDs, and is an internationally renowned guitar teacher.
For the first time the legendary Hot Licks classic video titles are available on DVD, making it even easier to learn with top players... right in your own home!
You'll never miss a note! You see the music and the tablature on screen as it's being played! All right and left hand techniques are shown in close up and with helpful split-screen effects to make learning easy. Also features slow motion segments with standard pitch sound.
**
Duke Robillard brings his years of professional experience to the table in an effort to help aspiring guitarists learn the licks of smooth jazz and uptown blues. Robillard is an accomplished soloist as well as a contributing member of the Fabulous Thunderbirds, and those familiar with his music will definitely appreciate his association with Hot Licks Video. This tutorial video will help the guitar player that has the basics down but wants to expand into new territories. With a gentle teaching style, Robillard expounds the techniques of T-Bone Walker and his 9th chord extensions, how to make your axe sound like an organ, several Texas style guitar tricks, and chord substitutions. Like all other Hot Licks Video efforts, Duke Robillard: Uptown Blues, Jazz, Rock and Uptown Swing competently presents the how-tos of guitar playing.
By Ed Atkinson.
**
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
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Blues
Take a tour of some great 1940's and 1950's American styles on "Uptown Blues, Jazz, Rock & Swing Guitar", as Duke Robillard shows you T-Bone Walker style, 9th chord extensions, blues-based swing, Chralie Christian style, passing tones, Les Paul style, scraping the strings, special rhythm licks, fast note flurries and rock 'n' roll style. Let Duke Robillard share his amazing skills with you in this classic Hot Licks session. "Uptown Blues, Jazz, Rock & Swing Guitar" features a new introduction by Woody Mann.
Jazz and blues guitarist Woody Mann learned from legendary Rev. Gary Davis and then played and recorded with Son House, Bukka White and John Fahey. He has performed throughout the world, recorded over a dozen CDs, and is an internationally renowned guitar teacher.
For the first time the legendary Hot Licks classic video titles are available on DVD, making it even easier to learn with top players... right in your own home!
You'll never miss a note! You see the music and the tablature on screen as it's being played! All right and left hand techniques are shown in close up and with helpful split-screen effects to make learning easy. Also features slow motion segments with standard pitch sound.
**
Duke Robillard brings his years of professional experience to the table in an effort to help aspiring guitarists learn the licks of smooth jazz and uptown blues. Robillard is an accomplished soloist as well as a contributing member of the Fabulous Thunderbirds, and those familiar with his music will definitely appreciate his association with Hot Licks Video. This tutorial video will help the guitar player that has the basics down but wants to expand into new territories. With a gentle teaching style, Robillard expounds the techniques of T-Bone Walker and his 9th chord extensions, how to make your axe sound like an organ, several Texas style guitar tricks, and chord substitutions. Like all other Hot Licks Video efforts, Duke Robillard: Uptown Blues, Jazz, Rock and Uptown Swing competently presents the how-tos of guitar playing.
By Ed Atkinson.
**
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Friday, October 30, 2009
Freddie KING - The!!!!Beat 1966 (Avi)
Freddie KING - The!!!!Beat 1966 (Avi)
Blues
This DVD collection presents all of Freddie King's appearances from this unique series and concludes with 3 tunes performed in Sweden in 1973.
A major influence to such greats as Eric Clapton and Jerry Garcia, blues guitarist King is featured ... Full Descriptionhere playing on the show THE!!!!BEAT, a showcase for the strange collision of Southern blues and the mid 1960's "Mod" craze. Performing at the height of his talent, King displays his guitar genius with several amazingly rendered songs. In addition, a 1973 concert performance in Sweden is included.
**
Freddie King probably, unjustifiably so, has the lowest profile of the blues guitar greats known as the 3 Kings (Albert, BB & Freddie). A young Freddie King was a very influential guitarist in the early 60's. Eric Clapton for instance has said he bought his famous "Bluesbreaker" Les Paul guitar after seeing Freddie on a record cover with a Les Paul. And EC later did versions of Freddie's Hideaway, Have You Ever Loved A Woman and I'm Tore Down.
Whilst I think Amazon reviewer Robert Plemmons nails it with his review dated 3 February 2007, I'll nevertheless have a bash at a review too.
These performances on The!!!!Beat TV show in 1966 catch a youngish Freddie King not far removed from his early 60's hey day. The DVD is in colour, which surprised me, being sourced from a 60's TV music show, but then, colour TV happened in the States years before elsewhere.
Freddie is in a suit with processed hair (or pompadour as Robert Plemmons probably more accurately describes it) and is of course chubby & sweating. Freddie really wails on his red Gibson 345 guitar - and remember this is still 1966 - doing fairly tight & tidy versions of many of his early hits, some of which were instrumental.
Full track listing from 1966 is below, and you'll see that Funny Bone, San-Ho-Zay and Hideaway are performed on The!!!!Beat twice:
Funny Bone
Have You Ever Loved A Woman
San-Ho-Zay
I'm Tore Down
Hideaway
I Love The Woman
Papa's Got A Brand New Bag
See See Baby
Sitting On The Boatdock
Shuffle
She Put The Whammy On Me
San-Ho-Zay
Funny Bone
Hideaway
There is also a later show from Sweden in 1973 tacked on, which is similar to the Freddie King Live in Europe DVD performances from Montreux & elsewhere. These later European performances are longer looser jams and Freddie appears to be a bit tired or disinterested and seems to be going through the motions before a reticent Scandinavian crowd.
Track listing from Sweden, 1973:
Have You Ever Loved A Woman
Blues Band Shuffle
Big Leg Woman
But in 1966 on The!!!!Beat, Freddie is young, energetic & enthusiastic. He's also backed by some attractive young go-go dancers. The!!!!Beat's irrepressible Texan MC appears to have genuine affection for Freddie & his playing. The MC announces that (a young) Clarence Gatemouth Brown is the leader of The!!!!Beat backing band !
I have the other Freddie DVD's, Live at the Sugarbowl in 1972, Live in Dallas in 1973, and Live in Europe, and Freddie fans and blues guitar fans must also buy those titles; but The!!!!Beat is the best of the lot and if you could have only one Freddie DVD, this is the one which catches him most accurately.
By Peter E. Hefford.
**
NoPassword
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DLinks
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
*
Blues
This DVD collection presents all of Freddie King's appearances from this unique series and concludes with 3 tunes performed in Sweden in 1973.
A major influence to such greats as Eric Clapton and Jerry Garcia, blues guitarist King is featured ... Full Descriptionhere playing on the show THE!!!!BEAT, a showcase for the strange collision of Southern blues and the mid 1960's "Mod" craze. Performing at the height of his talent, King displays his guitar genius with several amazingly rendered songs. In addition, a 1973 concert performance in Sweden is included.
**
Freddie King probably, unjustifiably so, has the lowest profile of the blues guitar greats known as the 3 Kings (Albert, BB & Freddie). A young Freddie King was a very influential guitarist in the early 60's. Eric Clapton for instance has said he bought his famous "Bluesbreaker" Les Paul guitar after seeing Freddie on a record cover with a Les Paul. And EC later did versions of Freddie's Hideaway, Have You Ever Loved A Woman and I'm Tore Down.
Whilst I think Amazon reviewer Robert Plemmons nails it with his review dated 3 February 2007, I'll nevertheless have a bash at a review too.
These performances on The!!!!Beat TV show in 1966 catch a youngish Freddie King not far removed from his early 60's hey day. The DVD is in colour, which surprised me, being sourced from a 60's TV music show, but then, colour TV happened in the States years before elsewhere.
Freddie is in a suit with processed hair (or pompadour as Robert Plemmons probably more accurately describes it) and is of course chubby & sweating. Freddie really wails on his red Gibson 345 guitar - and remember this is still 1966 - doing fairly tight & tidy versions of many of his early hits, some of which were instrumental.
Full track listing from 1966 is below, and you'll see that Funny Bone, San-Ho-Zay and Hideaway are performed on The!!!!Beat twice:
Funny Bone
Have You Ever Loved A Woman
San-Ho-Zay
I'm Tore Down
Hideaway
I Love The Woman
Papa's Got A Brand New Bag
See See Baby
Sitting On The Boatdock
Shuffle
She Put The Whammy On Me
San-Ho-Zay
Funny Bone
Hideaway
There is also a later show from Sweden in 1973 tacked on, which is similar to the Freddie King Live in Europe DVD performances from Montreux & elsewhere. These later European performances are longer looser jams and Freddie appears to be a bit tired or disinterested and seems to be going through the motions before a reticent Scandinavian crowd.
Track listing from Sweden, 1973:
Have You Ever Loved A Woman
Blues Band Shuffle
Big Leg Woman
But in 1966 on The!!!!Beat, Freddie is young, energetic & enthusiastic. He's also backed by some attractive young go-go dancers. The!!!!Beat's irrepressible Texan MC appears to have genuine affection for Freddie & his playing. The MC announces that (a young) Clarence Gatemouth Brown is the leader of The!!!!Beat backing band !
I have the other Freddie DVD's, Live at the Sugarbowl in 1972, Live in Dallas in 1973, and Live in Europe, and Freddie fans and blues guitar fans must also buy those titles; but The!!!!Beat is the best of the lot and if you could have only one Freddie DVD, this is the one which catches him most accurately.
By Peter E. Hefford.
**
NoPassword
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DLinks
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
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