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| General Music Discussion Can't fit it anywhere else? Got your own agenda or ideas? Discuss here... |
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#16 | |
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Join Date: May 2011
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I also dont beleive that we "all have different taste". there have been better years in jazz then others, but I still get your comment, but I do really think that your comment was :"mildly interesting but mostly silly."
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#17 | |
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for me, the best year is 59 and the best year in jazz is mostly from 54 to 64
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#18 |
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The pre `50s era does get some play from me but the poor recording quality of that time does`nt make it easy as listening to the hi fi era of the `50s on up
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#19 | |
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Marietta, GA
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I listen to "old stuff" all the time. From the 1920's to the present. Really. Don't get me wrong: I LOVE jazz from the mid-50's to mid-60's. It was an EXTREMELY fertile period. But I think there's so much other, equally wonderful stuff out there -- both before and after. And I think we're short-changing ourselves if we ignore it!
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#20 | |
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Join Date: Aug 2006
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I don't see what "political correctness" has to do with any of this. We're just having a discussion. The point is to have fun, right?
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#21 | |
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Yeah, another great year! I would add these to your list from 1985: Chet Baker - Strollin' Kenny Barron - Scratch John Carter - Castles of Ghana Freddie Hubbard & Woody Shaw - Double Take - why isn't this in print?!?! Abdullah Ibrahim - Water from an Ancient Well Marc Johnson - Bass Desires Lee Konitz Quartet - Ideal Scene Mel Lewis Orchestra - 20 Years at the Village Vanguard David Liebman & Richie Beirach - Double Edge James Newton - The African Flower Michel Petrucciani - Pianism Sphere - On Tour John Zorn - The Big Gundown: John Zorn Plays the Music of Ennio Morricone I'd particularly point to Castles of Ghana and Bass Desires as some of the "best" music of the decade. At the very least, both would make my short-list of all time favorite jazz records.
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#22 | |
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Ive listened to the window in the window from Wheeler yesterday and I really think this is a masterpieces, but really, are there really in the 80's, 90's and 00's anything remotly close to what coltrane, monk, miles, morgan, montgomery, green, bud were doing. What I hear from the 80's and up is not straight forward jazz and I dont like that, I find the jazz sounds corny and lack of focus. I should maybe explore this period. I sort of gave up on my exploration and when I listen to jazz, coltrane and monk and miles are pretty much the only guys I still listen. but just htose three, theres so much. Monk for me is the straight forward guy even if you dont agree, I dont know, from all his band from 54 to 62, for me this represent jazz at its most basic elements a bit like the atlanti period of coltrane. I cannot emphasize more on the atlantic coltrane jazz; how perfect are those record, how powerfull elvin is, I even like mccoy work. one could only listen to the atlantic record and pretend that he knows jazz. this coltrane period is beyond. whatever, back to the thread
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“Me only have one ambition, y'know. I only have one thing I really like to see happen. I like to see mankind live together - black, white, Chinese, everyone - that's all.” ― Bob Marley |
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#23 | |
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Anyway, my favorite years are probably 1964 and 1961. |
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#24 | |
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Quote:
what are your favorite record from 64?
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“Me only have one ambition, y'know. I only have one thing I really like to see happen. I like to see mankind live together - black, white, Chinese, everyone - that's all.” ― Bob Marley |
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#25 | |
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I guess we can to agree to disagree. No harm in that, of course. Ultimately, the only good reason for listening ANY music is that we enjoy it.
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#26 | ||
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so in your opinion, both years are as good? I dont have any purpose actually and I like that you point other less known important years. 2009 was unknown for me and I like what I hear from Hollenbeck, a lot actually. I will also look at your 85 recommendation and 75, but god damn, equally as good is too much a stretch. nothing like kind of blue or giant steps or ah um or something else. god damn :P
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#27 |
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Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: NZ
Posts: 1,489
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I find much to enjoy across all decades, but i can see how someone might only like the jazz of a particular era. Take Lee Konitz for example. His career has spanned multiple decades; i enjoy his music from all periods but i can easily see how someone might only enjoy his fifties stuff for example.
Another random thought: getting into Sonny Rollins and Hank Mobley this year really made me fully understand for the first time why a lot of people had such an adverse reaction to Ornette's sound and/or The New Thing at the time. Rollins in particular strikes me as the epitome of Jazz, and if you had it in your head as such circa 1958, Ornette must have been like drinking lemonade after brushing your teeth for a lot of people. Point being i guess there's nothing wrong with that, having an ideal in your mind and sticking to it. It really comes back to ''i like what i like". A great thing about a thread like this is that, at least for me, it highlights that there is no 'be all and end all' year or decade for jazz. At least depending on who you talk to
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#28 | |
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Our preferences and predilections determine what we like best, no matter how much we might want to claim the high ground of objectivity.
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#29 |
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Dressing Like a Fan Since 1997
Join Date: Aug 2007
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Totally with you, Hutch. In fact, I’m glad you said this, since I’ve sort of been biting my tongue watching this thread develop. No offense to anyone intended (since I used to be in the “1955-65 was the greatest era in jazz history” camp myself) but over time, I’ve come to realize that what I used to perceive as objective superiority was really nothing other than subjective personal taste. I.e., I preferred jazz that swung in 4, was grounded in the blues, and followed a conventional format (head, solo, solo, solo, head, etc.). Music outside that box was outside my comfort zone, and therefore (in my opinion) inferior.
And while I still dig music from that era, and listen to it with some regularity, over time, my tastes evolved (and ears expanded) to the point that I now find myself listening to other eras as much, and in some cases, more than ’55-’65. As others have already mentioned, the ‘00’s (including the current decade) have, in my opinion, produced probably the deepest, widest, most virtuosic, incredible jazz ever produced. If someone disagrees, and thinks the old stuff is head-and-shoulders better, I’m fine with that. Listen to whatever floats your boat. Seriously -- life’s too short to listen to stuff that makes your hair curl. Just recognize that what we’re talking about here is subjective. There’s nothing “objectively superior” about music produced in 1956 versus 1976. It’s a matter of taste, pure and simple. Personally, I think it’s all good. Maybe I’m easy to please that way, but I’ve found plenty of music to dig in every decade since the ‘50’s. What I find ironic, is that in many cases, it’s the same cats that were making music in the ‘50’s and ‘60’s that continued putting out stellar albums in the ’70, ‘80’s, and beyond – often in the same straightahead format. E.g., Oscar Peterson put out more 4-star albums after 1970 than he did before 1970 (at least according to allmusic (which I realize is also subjective). Still, he never abandoned his sound – i.e., never went electric or funky or jazz-rock or what have you. Yet, few seem to recognize anything he did after the early ‘60’s. Same goes for a lot of other guys, too. So much so, that I’ve considered starting a separate thread over this very topic – i.e., post 1970 jazz that even that most ardent purists would approve of. There’s a lot more than most people realize. What did change in the late ‘60’s is the economics of jazz, perhaps even more than the music itself. Big labels abandoned mainstream jazz. The mainstream guys fled to Europe and/or signed on small independent labels. A lot of their stuff never received wide distribution. Some never made it to cd. Many others were never re-issued after their initial run. Therefore, it’s harder to find that stuff. You have to hunt it down. Owning a turntable, I have an advantage, I think, in that I can still find a lot of that stuff on vinyl, cheap, which really helped open me up to all that’s out there. It’s not unlike the rock scene. A lot of people think the ‘60’s and ‘70’s were the golden age of rock and that everything produced since then is garbage. Totally untrue. What’s true is that the ‘60’s and early ‘70’s were the golden age of “major label” rock. Ever since, most of the good stuff’s been produced on small independent labels. Harder to find, but definitely out there. Anyway, a couple of cents worth of one man’s opinion. Peace, love, and all that . . . :-)
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I think there are only three things America will be known for 2,000 years from now when they study this civilization: the Constitution, jazz music and baseball. Gerald Early 1952–, American Author |
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#30 | |
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Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 660
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To some that epoch is now. But not for me, I even dig the "attitude" in 50's and '60's Jazz (is there a modern "attitude"?). Heck I've even grown to dig the old look, the suits , the stove pipes and skinny ties! And I don't feel unhip for being a classicist, if anything I feel more hip. I mean, just with Miles alone from 55 to 65, it just doesn't get any hipper, right? ....
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