Disco music of the 1970s-1980s for DJs & record collectors
Discussion on The Jazz Scene of Today within the Funk, Jazz, Northern Soul, Rare Grooves forums, part of the General Music Discussions at DiscoMusic.com category; Naturally, we all tend to rave about old and obscure jazz funk cuts and strange releases. Nothing wrong with that ...
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#1
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| However, I'd also like to turn the topic around and discuss today's jazz scene a bit, since I feel it's somehow being neglected around these forums. Surely, I can't be the only one into the jazz music of recent years. There are just so many artist pushing the genre forward and I really enjoy listening to stuf by people like Roy Hargrove, Christian McBride, Uri Caine, Benny Green and Joey Defrancesco. Obviously, many "older" artist are still doing business as well and newer stuff by Kieth Jarret, Chick Corea and the late great Michel Petrucciani are definetely worth mentioning. Yes - acoustic jazz music is very much alive and kickin' in this world of samplemania and schmaltzy Kenny G clones. Somebody around here must be following this kinda music besides me....what are your views and favorite artists in today's jazz music?? |
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#2
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| KBee: Sorry to disappoint you but I'm stuck in the '50s and '60s when it comes to most of my preferences in Jazz. However, one of my friends who is a great pianist, is very much into Jarrett, Corea and Petrucciani and I've recorded many of their numbers with him and enjoyed them. I think the great trouble with many of today's players is that they don't have a distinctive enough 'voice' and everything more or less stopped with Miles Davis' Kind Of Blue album. I know that's not true, but I'm sure you get my drift. That album was a blueprint for much that has followed. I'm lucky in that my local Jazz club (where I'm on the committee and do the P.A. at the gigs) is a good one for Modern Jazz and we get most of the best UK players there, along with the odd American/European. This coming season we have people like Alan Barnes, Jim Mullen, Andy Sheppard headlining gigs along with some of the lesser known players like Matt Wates, Latin from The North, Clair Teale. I'm hoping that we'll get the James Taylor Quartet in the new year and we'll probably be getting Stan Tracey back along with David Newton and a few others. O.K. maybe they're not exactly the most famous jazzers at the moment, but I get the impression that Jazz is more vibrant in Europe at the moment than in the U.S. The American players that we do get all rue the fact that there's no work for them 'back home'. In fact, people like Mornington Lockett, Gilad Atzmon, Pete King, Lee Goodall and the like, are truly great sax players based in the UK who get very little recognition outside (OK maybe Pete king and Gilad Atzmon do) and we have some absolutely brilliant pianists. The aforementioned David Newton, John Taylor, Gareth Williams and almost anyone else who appears at Southampton Jazz Club. People like Jason Rebello are just about getting onto the world stage again (well the last I heard he was) and Courtney Pine is supposedly doing well. Guy Barker had an album or two on Verve and has been dropped, but he's a marvellous player when he doesn't overblow. Unfortunately, image and gloss even sells jazz these days, so many truly wonderful players never get the recognition they deserve and others who are not so talented, but more interested in stardom do. Jamie Cullum must be a prime example. At the moment he's the hottest thing since.......listen to his singing and it's mediocre and his piano playing is less than inspiring. On the dance front, I really like some of the stuff by Mr. Scruff (even though it's sampled) and who's that really zany Finnish/Norwegian guy? |
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#3
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| I could happily discuss jazz all day, but it never gets past the jazz-funk stage (and seldom goes that far, even) on this page, therefore I think the jazzers are certainly in a tiny minority. I myself am of a more '50s and '60s persuasion, therefore I'd probably be doing battle with Quinny alone! As for the 'scene', there's a ton of programmed rubbish released in the name of jazz which even its greatest ambassadors (like Blue Note) now trumpet, in a vain attempt to equate sampling jazz with playing it! The 'new jazz' scene (in these parts at least) basically involves 'players' of limited ability noodling over house arrangements of varying tempi. Maybe add a sample or two, or some crappy computerised Fender 'Rhodes and hey, it's jazz, isn't it? BULLSHIT! As for current, real jazz releases, I have to admit that since the latter '80s, modern technology has not been kind to jazz. Part of the thrill for me is in the recording - this can stamp an identity pretty much in the same way the best players could. But for too long now, we've been washed down a river of super-clean, digital blandness. Cardboard drum kits, screeching altos, puny bass and toy pianos are what I hear, far too often. Ravi Coltrane's 'Mad 6' from last year is a progressive LP struggling to break free of a shitty, flat, haze of a recording. Nothing breathes, it's just...a mess. On the same hand, the most recent Joshua Redman was typical of the sound which basically hasn't changed for years. It's a sound which completely sucks the life out of the music, reducing it to a digital mush which could have been recorded at any time over the past fifteen years, with nothing to distinguish it from the other formula drivel within that timespan. Jazz died ages ago, for the most part - I truly believe that many of its 'young lions' (with the exceptions of quite a few, the Russell Watsons, James Carters, Donald Harrisons, Cindy Blackmans, Roy Hargroves, etc) don't have a clue about emotion and simply aren't lean and hungry enough in their Playstation worlds. And with those who should know better, forcing it further from its roots in a vain attempt to keep it relevant and profitable to a cloth-eared, sample-driven public (very much to its cost) its true essence will be diluted beyond recognition in the near future.
__________________ What would you do without your muesli...where would you be without a bowl? |
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#4
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| You're tight quinny. A lot of people are still amazed by the fact that there may actually be life beyond "Kind Of Blue" or "A Love Supreme"and the general idea of classic artists being good and new being just copycats is very much alive and well among jazz listeners worldwide :( Needless to say, many of those "stuck up" listeners are truly missing out on some great stuff! Many new artists are having very distinct solistic affectations (in fact, Andy Sheppard is a good example of this) - i guess it's just a case of persuading the averige jazz listener into trying something new. Quote:
Oh yeah - on the jazz dance front im very much into Nathan Haines, Teddy G and Kyoto Jazz massive at the moment. |
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#5
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#6
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So what exactly is jazz? K-Bee, would your comments be directed at me, perhaps? There's a point at which something tangible stops being so, a point where it's not what it should be. I don't hold with the belief that jazz and hip-hop come from the same place and should therefore go hand-in-hand. That is a nonsense. Neither do I believe that the electronic bastardisation of a music built on feeling and emotion is 'jazz' either. You can't program a feeling, can you? All that pretentious drivel by Bugge W., Marc Moulin (what happened?) Koop, etc. is for the same people who had Sade and Soul II Soul CDs on their coffee tables in the Thatcherite era. All style and no-content hogwash, bled dry of anything that could - God forbid - stir the soul. Why do I not hear anything with the fire of a Prince Lasha and Sonny Simmons LP nowadays? Why should music from 40 years ago still kick the ass of all that comes after it? Because it's JAZZ, that's why!!!! By the way, Scruffy has a site. He makes some OK tunes, some jazzy, even...but don't tell me they're jazz! http://www.mrscruff.com/
__________________ What would you do without your muesli...where would you be without a bowl? |
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#7
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| Forrrce: I may be a heretic in your eyes by writing this, but did you see The Michael Brecker Quartet from Brecon Jazz festival on BBC4 a week or so back? In many ways, this epitomises what you and I are saying. He is one of the icons of Jazz these days, but in essence except for the few odd angular runs this could have been almost any quartet from the late '50s/early '60s. I liked that. but at the same time there was nothing really new on offer. To be honest, I was more interested in piano payer Joey Calderazzo and Drummer Jeff 'Tain' Watts than Michael Brecker. The rest of the festival (as shown on TV) except for Junior Mance (who's well past it now, shame) featured a real hotch potch of semi jazz and world music (which is now being touted as jazz to the higher brow 'conservatoire' audience, just 'cos it's different and sometimes has complicated voicings/heads). Yeah, give ME real Jazz!! |
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#8
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| Quinny, For a while now, I have truly believed that jazz has nowhere to go, simply because, as I explained earlier, it's not 'itself' anymore when you push it too far. I missed the concert in question, though I reckon I'd have exactly the same view as you, re. the outcome. Evidently, the foundations the greats laid down are simply too solid for future generations to tear up, though not for want of trying. Even some of my favourite musicians (Shorter, Hancock, Bobby Watson) have failed to excite me with recent projects - the musicianship is finely tuned but, there's just something missing, a 'something' which has all but disappeared from jazz altogether. Even the titans sound like their next-door neighbours nowadays.
__________________ What would you do without your muesli...where would you be without a bowl? |
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#9
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| Forrrce: It's more or less true and accepted by me, except I still get a real buzz seeing live jazz, as performed in a small intimate atmosphere. I believe the essence, the life blood and sometimes that certain something is still there. True, there's not much technique wise that hasn't been done before (but then you see someone like Gilad Atzmon who can turn everything on its head) and most of the tunes and/or structures are reinventions, but it can still go to far off places. I just love it when someone starts a solo and sounds like he's totally out of it, like he's soloing to a totally different tune, only to reveal where he was headed for all the time some/many bars later. No other music can do that. No other music has that kind of excitement and it's different every time. Marvellous! Recorded jazz very rarely goes that far for some reason. As I've written many times before. Go to a live jazz gig to see emotion, blood, sweat and real music. To see every sinew being stained, to see the absolute concentration, to see and hear the joy when something goes right is truly a wonderful experience. In London (one of THE Jazz capitals of the world) there's plenty of opportunity. |
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#10
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| Unfortunately, Quinny, I don't place the same emphasis on live jazz as yourself. I'm sure that if I lived in New York, I wouldn't have time to do anything other than attend jazz gigs. However, I'm not that adventurous when it comes to new talent and more often than not, feel a bit let down when I do see people I really like perform. There are no shortages of jazz gigs in London, but that's a bit of a problem - there's almost too much! Seriously, though, the best performances I know are, natch, on record. Maybe I'll always be chasing that rainbow, then... Saw my drum teacher on TV the other night! The Open University showed a program I first saw a few years ago, called 'Jazz, Raga & Synthesizers' which featured Paul Hardcastle and his '19' hit, before moving on to an interview with Michael Garrick and John Dankworth. Cool footage of Mssrs. Garrick, D'Worth, Dave Green on bass and my sticks-man mentor, Alan Jackson, beavering away. The memories of 24 years ago came flooding back!
__________________ What would you do without your muesli...where would you be without a bowl? |
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