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JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Porter
Jr. Member
Posts: 85
JAZZ. A Definitive List.
«
on:
30 Jan 2007, 07:26 pm »
This growing list of albums will eventually constitute a definitive jazz collection. This is a work in progress. What you see is a framework for growth.
Help me add to it... suggestions, AudioCircle?
NOTE: No compilations. Original albums only. Masterwork box sets an exception.
Al DiMeola
In The Flesh
Albert Ayler
New York Eye And Ear Control
Spiritual Unity
Vibrations
Andrew Hill
Black Fire
Judgment!
Point of Departure
The Day The World Stood Still
Time Lines
Antonio Carlos Jobim
Stone Flower
Art Blakey
A Night At Birdland
A Night In Tunisia
Free For All
Moanin'
Orgy In Rhythm
The Quintet At Massey Hall
Art Pepper
Art Pepper + Eleven
Meets The Rhythm Section
Winter Moon
Art Tatum
God Is In The House
Piano Starts Here
The Complete Pablo Group Masterpieces (Box Set)
The Complete Pablo Solo Masterpieces (Box Set)
Barney Kessel
The Poll Winners
Ben Webster
With the Oscar Peterson Trio
Benny Carter
Further Definitions
Bill Evans
But Beautiful
Everybody Digs Bill Evans
Explorations
Know What I Mean?
Moon Beams
Portrait In Jazz
Sunday at the Village Vanguard
Undercurrent
Waltz for Debby
Bill Frisell
Blues Dream
East/West
Unspeakable
Billy Strayhorn
Lush Life
Bobby Hutcherson
Happenings
Bud Powell
Sonny Stitt/Bud Powell/J.J. Johnson
The Amazing Bud Powell (Vol 1&2)
Cannonball Adderley
Somethin' Else
Sophisticated Swing: The EmArcy Small-Group Sessions (Box Set)
Cecil Taylor
Unit Structures
Charles Mingus
Black Saint & The Sinner Lady
Mingus Ah Um
Mingus Plays Piano
Pithecanthropus Erectus
Presents
Tijuana Moods
Charlie Christian
After Hours
Complete Studio Recordings (Box Set)
Charlie Parker
The Savoy & Dial Studio Sessions
The Washington Concerts
Yardbird Suite
Chet Baker
Chet
Chet Baker in Tokyo
My Funny Valentine
The Last Great Concerts (Vol 1&2)
Chick Corea
Crystal Silence
Like Minds
Clifford Brown
Brown and Roach, Inc.
Sarah Vaughan w/ Clifford Brown
Study in Brown
Coleman Hawkins
Body & Soul
Dave Brubeck
1975: The Duets
For All Time (Box Set)
Jazz at Oberlin
Live at Carnegie Hall
Live at the Berlin Philharmonie
London Flat, London Sharp
Time Out
Time Was (Box Set)
We're All Together Again (For the First Time)
Dave Holland
Conference of the Birds
Critical Mass
Extended Play: Live at Birdland
Not for Nothin'
Overtime
What Goes Around
Dave Koz
Saxophonic
Dexter Gordon
Go!
Gotham City
Our Man in Paris
Django Reinhardt
Djangology
Gypsy Jazz
Le Jazz Hot
Nuages
Souvenirs
Don Cherry
Complete Communication
Eternal Rhythm
Mu
Symphony for Improvisers
Don Sleet
All Members
Duke Ellington
Ellington at Newport 1956
First Time: The Count Meets the Duke
Jazz Party
Money Jungle
The Blanton-Webster Band
The Far East Suite
Three Suites
Ella Fitzgerald
Ella and Louis
Elvin Jones
Duke Ellington and John Coltrane
John Coltrane & Johnny Hartman
Emily Remler
East to Wes
Firefly
Eric Dolphy
Far Cry
Out to Lunch
Flip Phillips
Spanish Eyes
Freddie Hubbard
Open Sesame
Red Clay
Gerry Mulligan
Dragonfly
The Mulligan/Baker Quartet
Grant Green
Ain't It Funky Now
Am I Blue?
Idle Moments
Hank Mobley
Soul Station
Herb Ellis
Nothing But The Blues
Herbie Hancock
1+1
Dis Is Da Drum
Empyrean Isles
Head Hunters
Maiden Voyage
The New Standard
Herbie Mann
Live At The Village Gate
Memphis Underground
Standing Ovation At Newport
Herbie Nichols
Strange City (The Herbie Nichols Project)
The Complete Blue Note Recordings (Box Set)
Horace Silver
Blowin' the Blues Away
Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers
Song for My Father
Hubert Laws
Moondance
Morning Star
Jack McDuff
Down Home Style
Jaco Pastorius
Curtain Call
Jaco Pastorius
The Birthday Concert
Jim Hall
Ballad Essentials
Live
Jimmy Smith
Back at the Chicken Shack
Dynamic Duo
Retrospective
The Sermon!
Joao Gilberto
Getz/Gilberto
Joe Henderson
Inner Urge
Lush Life
Page One
So Near, So Far
Joe Pass
Virtuoso
Virtuoso No. 4
John Coltrane
A Love Supreme
Ascension
Blue Train
Coltrane Jazz
Coltrane's Sound
Crescent
Giant Steps
Impressions
Live at Birdland
Live at the Village Vanguard: The Master Takes
My Favorite Things
Newport '63
The Complete Africa/Brass Sessions
John McLaughlin
Friday Night In San Francisco
Live at Festival Hall
John Scofield
A Go Go
That's What I Say
Keith Jarrett
Standards, Vol. 1
The Koln Concert
Kenny Burrell
Midnight Blue
'Round Midnight
Soul Call
Kenny Drew
The Kenny Drew Trio
Kenny Garrett
Pursuance
Standard Of Language
Lee Morgan
Cornbread
The Sidewinder
Lester Young
With the Oscar Peterson Trio
Louis Armstrong
The Complete Decca Studio Master Takes 1935-1939 (Box Set)
The Complete Decca Studio Master Takes 1940-1949 (Box Set)
The Hot Fives & Sevens (Box Set)
Marcus Roberts
Alone With Three Giants
The Truth Is Spoken Here
Maynard Ferguson
Brass Attitude
Chameleon
Conquistador
One More Trip to Birdland
This is Jazz
McCoy Tyner
Live At Newport
New York Reunion
Miles Davis
58 Sessions
A Tribute to Jack Johnson
Birth of the Cool (The Complete)
Bitches Brew
Cookin' With the Miles Davis Quintet
In a Silent Way
Kind of Blue
Miles Ahead
Miles Smiles
Milestones
Porgy and Bess
Relaxin' With the Miles Davis Quintet
Round about Midnight
Seven Steps to Heaven
Sketches of Spain
Steamin' With the Miles Davis Quintet
Walkin'
Workin' With the Miles Davis Quintet
Milt Jackson
Bags Meets Wes!
Plenty, Plenty Soul
Sunflower
Wizard of the Vibes
The Modern Jazz Quartet
Django
European Concert
Fontessa
In Memoriam
Longing For The Continent
Nels Cline
Hilly Terrain
Ornette Coleman
Free Jazz
Sound Grammar
The Shape of Jazz to Come
Top of the Heap
Oscar Peterson
Exclusively For My Friends (Box Set)
Night Train
Oscar Peterson Live!
The Trio: Live From Chicago
Pat Martino
Consciousness
Pat Metheny
80/81
Beyond the Missouri Sky
Bright Size Life
Letter from Home
Offramp
Speaking of Now
Paul Bley
Diane: Chet Baker and Paul Bley
Open, To Love
Paul Brown
Up Front
Quincy Jones
Walking in Space
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
Domino
Inflated Tear
Natural Black Inventions: Root Strada
Rip, Rig and Panic
Volunteered Slavery
Ray Brown
Summer Wind: Live At The Loa
Ray Charles
Genius + Soul = Jazz
Soul Brothers/Soul Meeting
Ronny Jordan
At Last
Roy Haynes
The Roy Haynes Trio
Ryan Kisor
Minor Mutiny
Shelly Manne
2-3-4
Alive in London
At the Blackhawk (Vols. 1 & 2)
Checkmate
Sonny Clark
Cool Struttin'
Sonny Rollins
Alfie (soundtrack)
Freedom Suite
Saxophone Colossus
Sonny, Please
Way Out West
Without a Song
Stan Getz
Anniversary!
At the Opera House
Bossa Nova
Captain Marvel
Cool Velvet
East of the Sun: The West Coast Sessions
Focus
Jazz Samba
Stan Getz at Storyville
Sweet Rain
Voices
Ted Greene
Solo Guitar
Thelonious Monk
Brilliant Corners
Monk's Dream
Solo Monk
With John Coltrane
Underground
Wayne Shorter
Alegria
Beyond the Sound Barrier
Footprints Live!
JuJu
Night Dreamer
Speak No Evil
Weather Report
Black Market
Heavy Weather
Mysterious Traveller
Sweetnighter
Wes Montgomery
Full House
Smokin' at the Half Note
The Incredible Jazz Guitar of
Wynton Marsalis
Black Codes (From the Underground)
Live at the House of Tribes
Live at Bubba's
Standard Time Vol. 1
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Last Edit: 31 Jan 2007, 10:53 pm by Porter
»
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Porter
Jr. Member
Posts: 85
Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
«
Reply #1 on:
30 Jan 2007, 07:40 pm »
There we go, much better.
Looking forward to your input, folks!
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robert1325
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Posts: 471
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Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #2 on:
30 Jan 2007, 07:48 pm »
One of my favorite jazz recordings is :
Ray charles - Milt Jackson
Soul Brothers/Soul Meeting
http://www.amazon.com/Soul-Brothers-Meeting-Ray-Charles/dp/B000002IO0/sr=1-1/qid=1170186472/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/104-3004845-4163144?ie=UTF8&s=music
Another one that is very good :
Flip philips - spanish eyes
http://shopping.yahoo.com/p:Spanish%20Eyes:1921208905
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BradJudy
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Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #3 on:
30 Jan 2007, 08:22 pm »
I'm guessing you're not looking for a comprehensive collection across all jazz sub-genres. If you are trying to be comprehensive, where are all the great jazz vocalists? Or swing?
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Porter
Jr. Member
Posts: 85
Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
«
Reply #4 on:
30 Jan 2007, 08:27 pm »
I was trying to confine the list to post-swing, postwar stuff. I.e., jazz as composition and free art form, rather than as dance hall music. I love swing, but there are two problems... the early stuff was never really intended as a recorded art form, and the quality of surviving recordings is typically not great. Later Basie, Ellington, Kenton, Herman etc do not suffer from this though, and I will include what I can.
The exclusion of vocal jazz artists is not intentional, but does represent a rather slippery slope. You start with Ella and Sarah Vaughan, and eventually end up with Tony Bennett and every other "jazzy" vocalist of the late 20th century.
Specific great recordings are what I'm looking for... I'm not a vocal jazz connoisseur though, so please make suggestions!
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PhilNYC
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Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #5 on:
30 Jan 2007, 08:33 pm »
I think this is an impossible task! But here are a couple off the top of my head that I think should be added to your list:
Stan Getz - Captain Marvel
Stan Getz - Bossa Nova
Kenny Burrell - Midnight Blue
Kenny Burrell - 'Round Midnight
Kenny Burrell - Soul Call
Wes Montgomery - Full House
Oscar Peterson - Oscar Peterson Live!
Weather Report - Heavy Weather
Weather Report - Black Market
Weather Report - Sweet Nighter
Weather Report - Mysterious Traveller
Jaco Pastorius - self-titled
Stanley Jordan - Magic Touch
Stanley Clarke - School Days
Michael Brecker - self-titled
Jean-Luc Ponty - Individual Choice
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Porter
Jr. Member
Posts: 85
Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #6 on:
30 Jan 2007, 08:47 pm »
Thanks Phil... added most of those. Will do more when time permits.
Thanks for your suggestions! I also added a few more Jaco albums I had forgotten about.
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kirch
Full Member
Posts: 314
"He's not the messiah, he's a very naughty boy!"
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Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #7 on:
30 Jan 2007, 09:39 pm »
Yikes! What a daunting task! Terrific list thus far.
I'd have to add one to the Miles section: "Seven Steps to Heaven". It really is . . .
Oliver Nelson - "The Blues and the Abstract Truth".
Stolen Moments
is an all-time classic. Great line up on this one, too -
I'd also add the Chick Corea/Gary Burton CD "Duet".
Good luck!
Kirch
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jqp
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Posts: 3964
Each CD lovingly placed in the nOrh CD-1
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Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #8 on:
30 Jan 2007, 09:55 pm »
Herbie Hancock -
Dis Is Da Drum
I have Head Hunters - this one is a real fusion experience, and a Grammy Winner to boot! Not responsible for the hair standing up on the back of your neck...
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Porter
Jr. Member
Posts: 85
Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
«
Reply #9 on:
30 Jan 2007, 10:08 pm »
Cool, added it along with a number of other things. I'll have to check out that album!
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jermmd
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Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #10 on:
30 Jan 2007, 11:49 pm »
My single favorite Jazz recording is Count Basie, St. Louis Blues. It is part of a Jazz collection I own called "The Very Best of the Jazz Giants." I'm sure it can be found on a Count Basie CD somewhere. It probably doesn't belong on your list but I thought my very favorite recording from an entire genre should be mentioned.
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lcrim
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Larry
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Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #11 on:
31 Jan 2007, 01:28 am »
Duke Ellington-Three Suites-The Duke and ensemble translate Tchaikovsky's "The Nutcracker", parts of Grieg's "Peer Gynt" and Duke's collaboration w/ Billy Strayhorn entitled "Suite Thursday." Utterly accessible and a totally realized concept. Great music.
Antonio Carlos Jobim-Stone Flower-I hate the term masterpiece but this is on the level of "Kind of Blue"
Sweet Rain - I'm a big Stan Getz fan, and this is Stan's move into bebop after years of playing samba-my favorite Getz LP (you can find it on CD too) Chick Corea, Grady Tate and the ubiquitous Ron Carter. You can get lost in this one.
Ella And Louis- Fitzgerald and Satchmo Nothing else need be said
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chadh
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Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #12 on:
31 Jan 2007, 02:34 am »
What's this definitive list meant to define? Should I be writing in with 30 or 40 of my favorite jazz albums? Or is there some qualification other than being "good"?
Regardless, here are some names that perhaps could have been mentioned: Chick Corea (and w/ Akoustic Band, Elektric Band, Return to Forever), John McLaughlin (and w/ Mahavishnu Orchestra), Kenny Garrett, Marcus Roberts, John Patitucci, McCoy Tyner, Gary Burton, Roy Haynes, Frank Morgan, David Murray, James Carter, Lester Bowie, Joey DiFrancesco, The Bad Plus, Art Ensemble of Chicago etc etc etc
I have no idea how one draws the line.
Chad
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Porter
Jr. Member
Posts: 85
Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #13 on:
31 Jan 2007, 03:16 am »
Chad,
Sorry to not have been more precise. I'm trying to assemble a list of albums that could be considered "essential" to a comprehensive jazz collection.
I'm not looking for every random album, but instead albums that represent a seminal work or a notable performance of some kind, especially ones that would be of historical significance. The list actually has too much Miles Davis and Coltrane at the moment, but it was just so hard to narrow it down, because both artists evolved so significantly over time, especially Miles.
Hope this helps.
Can you suggest any specific albums that I don't yet have on the list? Or albums that I have on the list that should be removed, or traded for other works by the same artist?
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chadh
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Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #14 on:
31 Jan 2007, 04:24 am »
This is hard.
Apart from some really obvious inclusions (Kind of Blue, Giant Steps, Bitches Brew, Birth of the Cool, Time Out, Impressions, Mingus Ah Um, Saxohone Colossus, that kind of thing), it's hard to justify most albums for such a list, simply because albums tend not to mark important events in jazz. So, for a "definitive" list, you end up wanting to include "really good" albums from artists whose work should be celebrated. For example, I couldn't point to a single McCoy Tyner album that I knew to be significant. But it just seems wrong for him not be be represented (except as part of Coltrane's band).
Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers - this group is an exeption, I think. The band was a training ground for so many great players, I think that MANY of their albums highlight significant moments in jazz. So, I'd include
Art Blakey: "A Night in Tunisia" and "Free For All" as representative of Wayne Shorter's tenure there. They're both wonderful.
"The Quintet at Massey Hall" deserves inclusion, simply for the fact that it's a recording of what is arguably the greatest band imaginable.
There needs to be some Dizzy Gillespie included - but I don't know what.
John McLaughlin deserves to be there. How about "Friday Night in San Francisco", with Al DiMeola and Paco deLucia, The John McLaughlin Trio "Live at Festival Hall", Mahavishnu Orchestra "The Inner Mounting Flame" and "Birds of Fire."
Kenny Garrett may be the most explosive, impassioned sax player since Coltrane (okay, so this is sheer subjectivity. But I won't apologize for loving this guy), and I think he deserves inclusion. "STandard of Language" is certainly a phenomenal album, as is his Coltrane tribute album("Pursuance"), which also features Pat Metheny.
I think some albums take on some kind of importance because of the collaborations that they represent. I agree that the Chick Corea/Gary Burton collaborations are spectacular: "Crystal Silence" was the first one of these. Then there's also "Like Minds", which brought Corea and Burton together with Pat Metheny, Roy Haynes and Dave Holland, and is just awesome. I'd also vote for "The Roy Haynes Trio" (Roy Haynes with John Patitucci and Danillo Perez) for the same reasons.
Marcus Roberts made his first appearance as band leader on "The Truth is Spoken Here". It won a bunch of awards, and rightly so. It was a fabulous album, with loads of good performances. I think he marked himself as a truly stupendous pianist, if anybody had been unsure after his work with Wynton Marsalis. His first completely solo work ("Alone with Three Giants") was even better though.
I think The Bad Plus deserve a mention too, as my feeling is that they are striking out in quite a new direction. "These are the Vistas" was the first album, and so is notable, although many seem to prefer "Suspicious Activity".
Chad
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ZLS
Full Member
Posts: 834
Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #15 on:
31 Jan 2007, 04:35 am »
If nothing else the list is fun to argue about.
1.Bird & Diz on Verve
2. Count Basie trio-For the Second Time on OJC
3. Duke Ellington Orchestra-and his mother called him Bill
4. Johnny Hodges Small Group Sessions on Mosaic (2 Box Sets)
Some of the Albums listed I totally agree with, others I can't stand. I think a fun offshoot would be to list significant events in Jazz
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lonewolfny42
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Posts: 16918
Speakers....What Speakers ?
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Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #16 on:
31 Jan 2007, 06:13 am »
Good list....here's a few to add :
McCoy Tyner - New York Reunion (Chesky)
Kenny Drew - Kenny Drew Trio (Riverside/OJC)
The L.A.4 - Live At Montreux (Concord)
Jack McDuff - Down Home Style (Blue Note)
Joe Pass - Virtuoso (Pablo)
Herb Ellis - Nothing But The Blues (Verve)
Barney Kessel - The Poll Winners (OJC)
Ray Brown - Summer Wind : Live At The Loa (Concord)
Billy Strayhorn - Lush Life (Blue Note)
Monty Alexander - Triple Treat, Vol.1 (Concord)
Gabor Szabo - The Sorcerer (GRP/Impluse)
Billy Cobham - Spectrum (Atlantic)
Tony Williams - Emergency (Polydor)
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Last Edit: 31 Jan 2007, 06:59 am by lonewolfny42
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RoadTripper
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Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #17 on:
31 Jan 2007, 06:29 am »
A name that should be listed and I didn't see it is Gonzalo Rubalcaba. He is a Cuban, monster pianist.
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alan m. kafton
Jr. Member
Posts: 151
Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #18 on:
31 Jan 2007, 07:38 am »
Another great Cuban pianist, Chucho Valdes....great facility like Oscar Peterson.
Some great horn players:
Branford Marsalis
Miguel Zenon
Yosvany Terry
Steve Lacy
Art Pepper
Johnny Hodges
Prez
Roscoe Mitchell
Arthur Blythe
Steve Coleman
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Whitese
Full Member
Posts: 1328
Give me glow!
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Re: JAZZ. A Definitive List.
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Reply #19 on:
31 Jan 2007, 10:51 am »
Most of my Jazz is modern jazz.
so my essential will be few:
Billy Cobham's Spectrum
STanley Clarke's first self titled LP
Allan Holldsworth's live CD "All Night Wrong"
Bill Bruford's Feels Good To Me
Bill Bruford and Patrick Moraz's "Flags"
Al DiMeola's "In The Flesh"
Andy Summer's pair of CD's covering two masters but I forgot this early who they are...great solo guitar.
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JAZZ. A Definitive List.