Charlie Rouse, Unsung Hero -- an album and a half of material recorded for Epic in the early 60s, rereleased in 1990 in Columbia's Jazz Masterpiece series. A fine cd of crisply played tunes. The ballads are as good as the cookers. My favorite tracks are There Is No Greater Love and two uptempo Rouse originals, Lil' Rousin' and Rouse's Point. (If you're new to jazz, Rouse was Monk's sax player for most of the 1960s. A colossal player.)
I've learned a lot from other posters on this forum, including you, Rousseau. Right now though I'm going in the exact opposite direction from you, taking a very deep dive nto the works of one person (Miles Davis). Thanks to Carr's biography I'm exploring Miles' work and development year by year, session by session, cut by cut, and solo by solo. Call me obsessed, but I'm learning about a lot more than Miles. I'm learning a lot about the guts of post war jazz, and I'm learning about how to really listen to what's going on.Charlie Rouse, Unsung Hero -- an album and a half of material recorded for Epic in the early 60s, rereleased in 1990 in Columbia's Jazz Masterpiece series. A fine cd of crisply played tunes. The ballads are as good as the cookers. My favorite tracks are There Is No Greater Love and two uptempo Rouse originals, Lil' Rousin' and Rouse's Point. (If you're new to jazz, Rouse was Monk's sax player for most of the 1960s. A colossal player.)
I've gone through this a few times this week, and also a new (live) release by Don Cherry, called Cherry Jam.
I've been looking for jazz that swings a bit, but that doesn't come from the earlier names that I've already played to death. So far many of ideologyhunter's recommendations have been spot on and a little off the beaten path, so I may go through some of his posts again soon.
I've learned a lot from other posters on this forum, including you, Rousseau. Right now though I'm going in the exact opposite direction from you, taking a very deep dive nto the works of one person (Miles Davis). Thanks to Carr's biography I'm exploring Miles' work and development year by year, session by session, cut by cut, and solo by solo. Call me obsessed, but I'm learning about a lot more than Miles. I'm learning a lot about the guts of post war jazz, and I'm learning about how to really listen to what's going on.Charlie Rouse, Unsung Hero -- an album and a half of material recorded for Epic in the early 60s, rereleased in 1990 in Columbia's Jazz Masterpiece series. A fine cd of crisply played tunes. The ballads are as good as the cookers. My favorite tracks are There Is No Greater Love and two uptempo Rouse originals, Lil' Rousin' and Rouse's Point. (If you're new to jazz, Rouse was Monk's sax player for most of the 1960s. A colossal player.)
I've gone through this a few times this week, and also a new (live) release by Don Cherry, called Cherry Jam.
I've been looking for jazz that swings a bit, but that doesn't come from the earlier names that I've already played to death. So far many of ideologyhunter's recommendations have been spot on and a little off the beaten path, so I may go through some of his posts again soon.
I'm thinking I might go to the big Jazz fest in Clearwater in a few weeks. I assume I'll be feeling better by then.
An oldie but a goodie