Anyone ever heard of Nina Simone? Here's one for you all, "My Baby Just Cares for Me"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eYSbUOoq4Vg
Jazz
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Re: Jazz
VideoGameCritic wrote:Two LPS I picked up recently:
Miles Davis ESP
Bill Evan Portrait of an Artist
To learn more about this stuff I bought a used book off ebay:
The Penguin Guide To Jazz Vol 4
Man, this thing is HUGE. 1745 pages!! It's like a cinder block. Has short reviews on just about every Jazz album ever made, ordered by artist. I think this is more a reference than anything else.
A huge collection of Short reviews? Now why does that sound familiar? Lol
- VideoGameCritic
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Re: Jazz
Agreed! I've had similar experiences!
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Re: Jazz
VideoGameCritic wrote:Two LPS I picked up recently:
Miles Davis ESP
Bill Evan Portrait of an Artist
To learn more about this stuff I bought a used book off ebay:
The Penguin Guide To Jazz Vol 4
Man, this thing is HUGE. 1745 pages!! It's like a cinder block. Has short reviews on just about every Jazz album ever made, ordered by artist. I think this is more a reference than anything else.
Here's the website for the All Music Guide, a similiar reference I used to buy along with Penguin's...and the AMG site really does have reviews (often more than short capsules) of just about every album ever:
https://www.allmusic.com/?cmpredirect
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Re: Jazz
If you find that you like E.S.P., I recommend Miles Smiles in the strongest possible terms. It may take a few listens to get used to it, but it's simply spectacular -- not just flashy, but drop-dead beautiful, and even funny. Some days I think it's one of the top 5 jazz albums ever made.
And as I mentioned earlier, Nefertiti is also gorgeous, especially the first two tracks. The title track is striking and unusual, as they just play the melody over and over again: no solos, no anything. Then the next track, "Fall", is one of the most beautiful things Miles ever recorded.
Some people find the Second Great Quintet to be too cerebral, which has never made sense to me: I think their music is incredibly visceral, muscular, and sensitive. It's also unpredictable, which is what I think people see as "cerebral", but it just means that it takes time to get used to a world that's not governed by the same old blues clichés. It doesn't try to sound like some smoky nightclub in a movie; it just is itself.
And as I mentioned earlier, Nefertiti is also gorgeous, especially the first two tracks. The title track is striking and unusual, as they just play the melody over and over again: no solos, no anything. Then the next track, "Fall", is one of the most beautiful things Miles ever recorded.
Some people find the Second Great Quintet to be too cerebral, which has never made sense to me: I think their music is incredibly visceral, muscular, and sensitive. It's also unpredictable, which is what I think people see as "cerebral", but it just means that it takes time to get used to a world that's not governed by the same old blues clichés. It doesn't try to sound like some smoky nightclub in a movie; it just is itself.