Regarding the Schubert, is there a particular recording that rises above the others? — ThinkOfOne
JS Bach: Goldberg Variations - Jean Rondeau (harpsichord) — Tom Storm
I'll listen to any version of this and other pieces as I like multiple interpretations - even 'wrong' ones — Tom Storm
I remember listening to the first movement of Barbirolli's slow Mahler 6th from 1967 and thinking this is way too slow - I love it! — Tom Storm
Hopefully there'll be folks who have jazz and/or classical as their primary interest. — ThinkOfOne
Next, "phrase" is also a word used in music theory: a phrase is built from lower level stuff, too, like, say, motifs, but I'm not that knowledgable here. In any case, if you riff of this term, you might consider a phrase a compositional unit that somehow completes a rhythm. A phrase might co-incide with a line, with half a line, with a couplet... depending on the poem. You can then compare the rhythmic units with units of meaning: Do they co-incide? Do they overlap? And so on.
— Dawnstorm
I'd be interested to hear how well the music, song and singer interpret the poem and the phrasing.
Any ideas? — Amity
And I do love Elvin Jones's drumming — Jamal
If you haven't heard it listen to Out of This World, the opening track of Coltrane's self-titled release on Impulse! — Srap Tasmaner
Couple things about Elvin Jones: he told some interviewer that part of the secret of his style, the polyrhythmic thing, is that he always hits something on the beat, just not always the same thing. Also, when Mingus was forming a group in the late fifties, the only drummer he wanted was Elvin Jones, but Elvin was playing with someone else at the moment, so Mingus taught saxophonist Danny Richmond how to play drums, and Danny was his drummer for the rest of his life.
I think it might be the liner notes to the Coltrane I recommended where Trane says of Elvin, "Sometimes he's too much even for me." — Srap Tasmaner
Coltrane's last couple years, I don't do — Srap Tasmaner
Understanding and loving the many varieties of free jazz (and fusion, for that matter) remains on my to-do list. — Srap Tasmaner
If you've listened to some other earlyish Ornette but not to Free Jazz, just spin it. There's just more players, but it's very listenable. I only finally got around to it in the past year, and it's nothing to be afraid of. — Srap Tasmaner
(It used to be said there were two routes into free jazz (my music theory is almost non-existent, so grain of salt here): Ornette just passes right by the theory of harmony and frees melody from it; Cecil layers in more, augmenting traditional harmony, broadening it. Free Jazz the record is definitely still on Ornette's end of the spectrum.) — Srap Tasmaner
Don Pullen — Srap Tasmaner
Duke Ellington — Jamal
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