It really doesn’t…

…get any better than this.

A full-length performance of Kesarbai Kerkar singing Raga Malkauns.

Wow.

3 Sep 2012, 6:52pm
India Indian music music vocalists
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  • It’s Been A While Since I Posted…

    …Mallikarjun Mansur’s ecstatic singing.

    Here’s a late concert recording of two personal favorites, Raga Bihari (“Ye ho neend na aaye”) and Raga Paraj (“Ankhiyaa mori laagi”). I simply cannot get enough of the ceaseless flow of Mansur’s imagination.

    It’s Agra Gharana Time!

    Latafat Hussain Khan sings a drut khayal in Patdeepki:

    Charlie Haden Sounds Like A Rain Forest

    It was my fifteenth birthday, and my parents knew I was a budding jazz fan. They got me a wondrous thing: a six-lp set billed as The Smithsonian Collection of Classic Jazz. And it was great. I started at the beginning and worked my way through Scott Joplin and Robert Johnson, Jelly Roll Morton, King Oliver, Louis Armstrong, Count Basie, Benny Goodman, Duke Ellington, Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, Roy Eldridge, Billie Holiday…it was incredible.

    And after taking a breath I listened to Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald, the Modern Jazz Quartet, Thelonious Monk (one entire lp side!), Miles Davis, Charles Mingus, Cecil Taylor…

    And the last side had three pieces by Ornette Coleman and one by John Coltrane.

    I put it on the player. Here’s what I heard:


    Ornette Coleman’s Quartet plays “Lonely Woman”

    It started with a melancholic strumming, a giant bass sitar, cushioned in cymbal shimmer. What the hell?

    I’d never heard anything so lovely.

    And that, dear ones, was my introduction to Charlie Haden’s bass playing.


    The early Ornette Coleman Quartet, circa 1961.

    00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000

    The first few paragraphs of Charlie Haden’s bio, from his website:

    Time Magazine has hailed jazz legend Charlie Haden as “one of the most restless, gifted, and intrepid players in all of jazz.” Haden’s career which has spanned more than fifty years has encompassed such genres as free jazz, Portuguese fado and vintage country such as his recent cd Rambling Boy (Decca) not to mention a consistently revolving roster of sidemen and bandleaders that reads like a list from some imaginary jazz hall of fame.

    As an original member of the ground-breaking Ornette Coleman Quartet that turned the jazz world on its head the late 1950’s, Haden revolutionized the harmonic concept of bass playing in jazz. “His ability to create serendipitous harmonies by improvising melodic responses to Coleman’s free-form solos (rather than sticking to predetermined harmonies) was both radical and mesmerizing. His virtuosity lies…in an incredible ability to make the double bass ‘sound out’. Haden cultivates the instrument’s gravity as no one else in jazz. He is a master of simplicity which is one of the most difficult things to achieve.” (Author Joachim Berendt in The Jazz Book) Haden played a vital role in this revolutionary new approach, evolving a way of playing that sometimes complemented the soloist and sometimes moved independently. In this respect, as did bassists Jimmy Blanton and Charles Mingus, Haden helped liberate the bassist from a strictly accompanying role to becoming a more direct participant in group improvisation.

    And just as important as his historic role in the evolution of jazz bass playing is his sound. No bass player anywhere has as big a sound as Charlie Haden, and his presence on a recording is always unmistakable (and a guarantee of quality — the man has, as far as I can tell, never played on a bad record).

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    31 Aug 2012, 12:00pm
    Jazz music
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  • The First Black President

    Lester Young was the first jazz musician I really listened to — on an Aladdin 10″ disc called “Battle of the Saxes,” will Illinois Jacquet on one side and Pres on the other. I still have most of his solo on that version of “D.B. Blues” memorized.

    Here’s a 1958 clip of a visibly frail Young playing “Mean To Me.” Frail…but still strong.

    And a group performance of “Jumpin’ With Symphony Sid” that includes Pee Wee Russell and Coleman Hawkins:

    Mogubai Kurdikar

    One of the greatest singers of the 20th century. A disciple of Ustad Alladiya Khan, she represented the Jaipur-Atrauli gharana. Her daughter, Kishori Amonkar, is perhaps the best-known female khyal singer of today.

    Raga Bageshri Bahar

    Flutes Against Climate Change: Steve Gorn’s Set

    At long last, we can begin to upload the music from May 19th’s Playing For The Planet concert.

    Here is Steve Gorn’s set, with Akshay Navaladi on tabla and me playing tamboura. He began with a lovely Kaunsi Kanada:

    Followed by this Bhatiyali dhun:

    Finally concluding the concert with a ravishing Bhairavi:

    2 Jun 2012, 11:21pm
    Jazz music:
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  • Ornette Coleman…

    …has a few things for us to hear:

    ==================================================

    When I turned fifteen, I was living in my grandmother’s apartment in Lincoln, Massachusetts. My brother and parents were in Toronto for the year.

    On that birthday, knowing of my burgeoning interest in jazz, my parents gave me the Smithsonian Collection of Classic Jazz — a 6-lp box set with a lot of wonderful music.

    And the last side of the last disc had three pieces by Ornette. And I was well and truly hooked.

    30 May 2012, 6:53pm
    music Personal
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  • LaMonte Young’s Gradual Unfolding

    In 1980 I hitchhiked to New York to hear LaMonte Young perform The Well-Tuned Piano at the Dia Arts Foundation building. I had been interested in his music since I read Robert Palmer’s 1975 piece about him in Rolling Stone, titled “When La Monte Young Says ‘Take It From The Top,’ He Means Last Tuesday.” 1975 was also the year I discovered, and fell in love with, the music of Harry Partch (I was a weirder kid than I am adult, and I’m plenty weird).

    My wife gave me Jeremy Grimshaw’s biographical study of Young, “Draw A Straight Line And Follow It” for my birthday (I’m fifty-four! Yikes!). Not being a Mormon, I found some of Grimshaw’s attempts to rationalize Young’s music-theoretical ideas under an LDS rubric somewhat bizarre (LSD seems more likely to me). Regardless, there was a lot of good information in the book which helped me understand more about the composer’s artistic trajectory.

    Five Small Pieces For String Quartet

    Just Charles & Cello in The Romantic Chord