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You can find some amazing collections on archive.org - grabbing a random tape from https://archive.org/details/davidwnivenjazz can be a fun adventure.
There's a lot of cool modern stuff with rock sensibilities if you're into that! Lage Lund's "Terrible Animals" has been on pretty consistent rotation for me the last few years, and The Bad Plus Joshua Redman is amazing too.
~tatterdemalion wrote (thread):
Going to recommend some Miles Davis: Birth of the Cool and Kind of Blue. Couple of the most influential albums of the late '50s.
hey ~ew!
Noted! I will check out the Gil Evans album here soon. I definitely enjoyed the JCQ, and will explore more of his stuff (I listened to a bit of Live at the Half Note on Tidal a couple of nights ago, but it wasn't nearly as captivating as Africa/Brass.
Thanks for the recommendations :)
Hey ~tffb, glad you like my "recommendation" :)
~bartender? A BIG lemonade and a glas of White Port, thank you very much!
Cheers!
Ok, on to side B. Greensleeves. Traditional it says. And yes it is. I was performing that on guitar a loooong time ago. But the thing is: John Coltrane Quartet imho do not "kill" the tune. Swinging does not kill it either. And yet I think it is quite nice, while not being "easy listening" --- boy I hate that term. In my not so humble opinion said "easy listening" is just boring for me. Nothing notable happens.
I guess I have to find something new for you in the lists of the jukebox ...
There is Gil Evans' album "Out of the Cool". Recorded in 1960. Big Band --- but cool. Not everyone blowing away like there is no tomorrow, but quiet, well chosen riffs and colors (so to speak) to generate a collage, a picture, a mood.
Let us know, whether you liked it ...