August-18th-2003, 12:36 PM
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#1
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Silver Spring, MD
Posts: 2,323
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Dave Holland Quintet - Extended Play: Live at Birdland
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August-18th-2003, 12:49 PM
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#2
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skirting the issue
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Brussels, Belgium
Posts: 4,328
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Nice one, Amazon!
The cover seems a bit out of touch with the music as well as with recent DH album covers...
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August-18th-2003, 01:03 PM
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#3
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: SF Bay Area
Posts: 1,518
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Clay, you can snag the sucker from cd Universe for 18 smackers & some change.
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August-18th-2003, 09:31 PM
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#4
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atoms for peace
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: AZ
Posts: 503
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Dave has been on a roll of late, can't wait to hear them let loose live. It's almost a forgone conclusion that this disc will rock (errr... I mean, swing).
Pardon me while I wipe the drool off my face.
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August-27th-2003, 10:44 PM
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#5
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Martinsville,VA
Posts: 768
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Back in April me and My main man MicahW dug the Dave Holland Quintet at Roanoke College and all the Props this group got was sho-nuff up they are a Supergroup.When I dropped The "Extend Play" disc on the player,put on the heads,turn out the lights, closed my eyes Man it was like being at the set.THIS SHIT IS THE TRUTH!!Bands tighter than a pair of size 8 short/shorts on a size 16 ass.Eubanks solo on "Bedouin Trail" is Phat , Potter plays his ass off and the more I hear Billy Kilson on the skins I say there is none better.Steve Nelaon on vibes is way underrated and Holland as allways strong and steady.One of the best live albums I've every bought.Peace and all that.
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August-28th-2003, 10:05 AM
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#6
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 6,026
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Does Dave get a lot of solo time?
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August-28th-2003, 10:12 AM
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#7
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Martinsville,VA
Posts: 99
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Not a lot Mike he has a really good one on the last track on disc 2 "Metamorphos".I think he showing off his composing , arranging skills and leadership skills. Letting his band members abilities showoff his writing skills.Peace and all that
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August-28th-2003, 10:37 AM
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#8
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Hartsell Cash, 1924-2006
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Durham, NC
Posts: 6,222
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I think one of the best things about Holland's group is the way they share not just solo space, but writing responsibilities as well. On the last studio side (Not for Nothin') by the 5tet, each of the band members other than Holland contributes a tune to the mix. It's nice to get such a mix of flavors, especially when they meld as well as they do with this group.
I'm a little over-budget this month for CDs, but I'll be picking this one up next month, to be sure. I'm really looking forward to it. I caught the group opening for Joshua Redman (whom I didn't particularly enjoy) in London back in July, and they were phenomenal. There isn't a weak link in the band for my $$$.
__________________
--
Tanager
Last edited by Tanager; September-4th-2003 at 07:59 AM.
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September-4th-2003, 07:23 AM
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#9
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Singapore
Posts: 2,902
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Received this morning. Listened to the first two tracks of Disc 1, if the rest holds up, this will be a recommendation with no reservations whatsoever. Great interplay, great blowing, and great compositions (but of course, the last bit everyone knows without even picking up the set). And, though this might be due to me getting a much superior headphone recently, I can hear Holland more clearly than ever before. More on this later (as I listen).
P.S. Do check out Potter on the double-time section in track 2.
Edit: Just got through it first time and the second disc is every bit as good as the first one and Potter uses quotes more than I would have expected. This thread is not that active, I see, and I don't expect to see many posts other than a few just raving about this.
Last edited by gnhrtg; September-4th-2003 at 12:59 PM.
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September-4th-2003, 04:31 PM
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#10
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Everlasting Gobstopper
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Minneapolis, MN
Posts: 2,226
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It’s a good ‘un, sho’ nuff.
Dave's funky intro on "Metamorphos" had me aping some mean air-doublebass.
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September-5th-2003, 03:53 PM
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#11
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 649
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Hello All,
I just got back from Europe last night from a week of work with Dave's Big Band and Quintet.
It 's nice to read these comments. I have to listen to Extended Play some more.
I heard a test pressing a few month's ago, but not the finished product.
If I recall, the band sounds very good, but I don't like aspects of my playing too much. This is probably due to the fact that the recording is about 2 years old and I hope I've improved some since then. I recall thinking my solo on "Bedouin Trail" was interesting.
I have to listen to the CD again to comment further but I enjoy reading yours.
Feel free to comment on the" Ask Robin..." thread over in "Ask the Musicians", if you like.
-Robin
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September-14th-2003, 05:33 PM
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#12
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atoms for peace
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: AZ
Posts: 503
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I ordered this over a week ago and still don't have it!
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September-15th-2003, 04:01 AM
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#13
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Singapore
Posts: 2,902
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"I recall thinking my solo on "Bedouin Trail" was interesting."
It is, indeed (as, I think, is your playing overall in the set - though I'm sure that you're more discerning than me in this case).
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September-18th-2003, 03:49 PM
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#14
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 649
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Hi gnhrtg,
Thanks for your comments.
I will say that once I listened to the officail cd and not a test pressing, I like my playing a bit more. The sound quality is nicer on the cd and although we've certainly had better nights,
I think this recording caputres the feel of the band in a live setting.
-Robin
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September-21st-2003, 12:22 AM
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#15
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Albany, NY
Posts: 50
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Robin,
You're interaction with Chris on the "Prime Directive" is incredible. This whole set of music is very inspiring. I can't even imagine what a "better night" would sound like!!!  Thanks for the music.
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September-21st-2003, 10:16 PM
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#16
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 649
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Hi Brian,
Thanks for your post.... and you are welcome :-)
I love playing free open improvisation, like I do at the beginning of "Bedouin Trail".
I also enjoy doing it with other people.
The more people you have, the more dificult it is to communicate with everyone.
A duet setting like I do with Chris on Prime Directive is ideal because everything you do is "more", when you have another person to interact with.
Chris and I have been playing together for over 5 years now and we know each other very well musically. It feels like we're talking to each other when we play duo. However, for some reason, it works better when we play together, than it would if we were speaking to each other, at the same time. When we play like that, we listen, play and respond simultaneously.
-Robin
Last edited by Robin Eubanks; September-21st-2003 at 10:17 PM.
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September-24th-2003, 01:44 AM
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#17
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atoms for peace
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: AZ
Posts: 503
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Just go it today. First impression: it sounds fantastic, of course. It's nice to hear their studio compositions in a live context. Good sound quality for a live disc- and Kilson is killin'!
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October-6th-2003, 08:13 PM
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#18
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Posts: 17
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I heard Prime Directive on the radio and was really smitten by that sax/bone duet. (The impact of the song in general might have something to do with hearing the source of the BBS theme song) The way they ended up playing in unision really killed me. The pairing of the trombone and bass during the theme also struck me as both fresh and natural.
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October-22nd-2003, 04:24 AM
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#19
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.
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 2,633
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Extended Star
(one star)
Dave Holland Quintet Extended Play: Live at Birdland
, ECM
Stuart Nicholson is deeply unmoved by a technically perfect - and perfectly soulless - live workout.
Sunday October 19, 2003
The Observer
Here's a glimpse of the future; you tell me whether it works. Jazz as a music for a technocratic elite, a music speaking to itself - to jazz musicians, to jazz educators, music business types and jazz critics. Jazz as a touchstone of craft rather than creativity, a place where like-minded musicians gather to sharpen their skills to impress other musicians. All this seems possible listening to Extended Play , no doubt destined to be among the critics' picks of 2003.
Here is improvised music by four incredibly well educated young musicians, all virtuosi - Chris Potter on saxophones, Robin Eubanks on trombone, Steve Nelson on vibes and Billy Kilson on drums - under the stewardship of the respected elder statesman, poll-winner and bassist Dave Holland. Yet the music they play is so flawless it drives you insane.
You want men in white coats quietly to remove them from the stage and hotwire them to make the odd mistake or add an occasional touch of humanity. Its jazz-as-chamber-music ethos takes the (post-) bebop style to its logical extreme, where the music communicates nothing other than virtuosity itself.
The problem is that solos in this style of jazz - and this style consists almost entirely of solos - have long been so circumscribed technically it's now difficult for musicians to say anything new. Even as Dave Holland, Steve Nelson and Billy Kilson alternate two bars of this metre with two bars of that metre behind a Chris Potter or Robin Eubanks solo, they are limited by the syntax of style.
In 1965, Miles Davis recorded his groundbreaking quintet at the Plugged Nickel, a Chicago nightclub, in some of the greatest acoustic small group jazz ever recorded. But in so doing he all but exhausted the potential for further innovation as far as post-bebop jazz was concerned - Q: 'Where we go from here?' A: 'A new style entirely.' Accordingly, the jazz caravan struck camp and moved on. Now, musicians who return to this musical territory effectively become custodians of a style within well defined parameters so that technique becomes an end in itself to signify mastery within the genre. Yeah, man.
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October-22nd-2003, 04:26 AM
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#20
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.
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 2,633
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Uli may help me here...
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October-22nd-2003, 05:00 AM
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#21
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skirting the issue
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Brussels, Belgium
Posts: 4,328
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Are Robin, Chris, Steve and Billy really that "young"?
Personally, I don't see the connection between "flawless" and "soulless." I like many of the band's melodies a lot and I think that something than other than virtuosity is being communicated in the solos. I don't see that much of a relationship with Miles's 2nd Quintet.
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October-22nd-2003, 07:17 AM
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#22
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Detmold, NRW, Germany
Posts: 624
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wash your ears critizen
what you hear is what you think
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October-22nd-2003, 07:49 AM
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#23
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poor folk's child
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Chicago
Posts: 12,178
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Here you go, Sand:
On the right hand side at the bottom of your screen (with the skin i use) is a
scroll down box called Admin. Options. The creator of a thread can change the
title if he/she choses "edit thread".
btw I think Nicholson is full of it
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October-22nd-2003, 08:25 AM
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#24
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Reevaluating @ 500k
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Here
Posts: 31,318
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I think Nicholson's been reading too much Abbey.
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October-22nd-2003, 09:59 AM
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#25
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The Bluegrass
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: no country for old men
Posts: 30,835
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Well, that's what happens after so many years of not having real working bands, for the most part. When the guy finally hears a real band that knows how to play together and interact on something other than standards, and do it very well, and very tightly, with precision -- he doesn't like it.
He probably wouldn't have dug the Jazz Messengers, either.
And of course there's always the unwritten law in the jazz world. If lots of people like the band, there must be something wrong with it.
Last edited by Rainman; October-22nd-2003 at 10:00 AM.
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October-22nd-2003, 10:19 AM
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#26
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Paris, France
Posts: 6,161
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No, the other four members of the Holland quintet aren't exactly wet-behind-the-ears youngsters compared to Holland the "elder statesman."
Potter's the youngest at 32. Robin Eubanks and Steve Nelson are 47 or 48 (compared to Holland's 57). I couldn't find Kilson's date of birth, but he was at Berklee at the same time as Branford Marsalis, who graduated in 1980 - let's say Kilson left Berklee, at the latest, 20 years ago. Kilson must be in his early 40's.
It doesn't have much to do with the substance of Nicholson's article, but it's not terribly careful of him to characterize Eubanks and Nelson, veterans pushing 50, as "well-educated young musicians."
As to substance:
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Jazz as a music for a technocratic elite, a music speaking to itself - to jazz musicians, to jazz educators, music business types and jazz critics
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Yeah, all of us here who love the Holland quintet are a technocratic elite. Those of us who aren't musicians or educators must be music business types or jazz critics (unlike Nicholson). Right.
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the music they play is so flawless it drives you insane
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I don't know - I recall Robin saying it wasn't their best night, so perhaps it isn't quite the cold perfection Nicholson seems to hear. Personally, I don't mind flaws in music, but I don't demand them, either. "Listen to that melody! Not a single mistake! And the drummer kept the beat! What a bore!"
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You want men in white coats quietly to remove them from the stage and hotwire them to make the odd mistake or add an occasional touch of humanity. Its jazz-as-chamber-music ethos takes the (post-) bebop style to its logical extreme, where the music communicates nothing other than virtuosity itself.
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Well, he's entitled to his opinion. This band's music communicates a lot more to me than "gee, they play all fast and complicated." What I like about this group is its human warmth - its playfulness, its swing, its imagination. They're virtuosic as hell, but with an almost swaggering, at times, pleasure in it, and that's what's communicated. That's a perfectly valid part of skilled performance. Virtuosity can be soulless, but it can also be full of life and feeling.
As for "the (post-bebop) style," I wonder just what that is.
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solos in this style of jazz - and this style consists almost entirely of solos - have long been so circumscribed technically it's now difficult for musicians to say anything new. Even as Dave Holland, Steve Nelson and Billy Kilson alternate two bars of this metre with two bars of that metre behind a Chris Potter or Robin Eubanks solo, they are limited by the syntax of style.
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I'm no musician (despite my apparent membership in the "technocratic elite" Nicholson decries), but I just don't hear this band's music as "circumscribed" or "limited by the syntax of style." I think they manage a lot of freshness and freedom within a group style that is very distinctive.
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[Miles Davis] all but exhausted the potential for further innovation as far as post-bebop jazz was concerned - Q: 'Where we go from here?' A: 'A new style entirely.' Accordingly, the jazz caravan struck camp and moved on. Now, musicians who return to this musical territory effectively become custodians of a style within well defined parameters so that technique becomes an end in itself to signify mastery within the genre.
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What is he going on about? I'd like a musician to come in here and tell me if the Holland quintet's music is really "the same territory" as Miles' 60's quintet. Do the two bands really share "well-defined parameters"? Doesn't sound that way to me.
Last edited by Tom Storer; October-22nd-2003 at 12:21 PM.
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October-22nd-2003, 11:04 AM
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#27
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QAMS2005
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: NYC
Posts: 1,133
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I haven't heard this record yet, but this review reminds me of the one in Downbeat many years ago of Chick Corea's "Now He Sings NOw He Sobs". The critic gave it zero starts and said pretty much the same thing- that is was virtuosic but lacking any emotion. I can't remember that critic, but I seem to still remember that record.
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October-22nd-2003, 11:23 AM
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#28
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the cantilena of speech
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Toronto
Posts: 2,520
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Oh, well, Nicholson's simply like that. I picked up a copy of a UK jazzmag--I think Jazzwise--off a stand the other day & noticed that Nicholson's reviews were either pans or foaming-at-the-mouth raves. (The recipients of his one- or two-star reviews included Marty Ehrlich & Steve Lacy; of his four-star reviews, Bobby Previte, for Counterclockwise, which also got a feature-length article to itself: admittedly it's not a bad disc but Nicholson's anointing it as the future of jazz is ridiculous). Anyway, why get excited about what one cranky tineared git writes about anything? I haven't even heard the Holland disc yet but the review is patently a dumb one, because the guy can't even manage to make an original criticism--as hearsay points out the criticisms are threadbare hand-me-downs.
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October-22nd-2003, 12:27 PM
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#29
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Paris, France
Posts: 6,161
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Here's an imagined 1940's version:
"Here's a glimpse of the future; you tell me whether it works. Jazz as a music for a technocratic elite, a music speaking to itself - to jazz musicians, to jazz educators, music business types and jazz critics. Jazz as a touchstone of craft rather than creativity, a place where like-minded musicians gather to sharpen their skills to impress other musicians. All this seems possible listening to Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie Live, no doubt destined to be among the critics' picks of 1948.
Here is improvised music by five young musicians, all virtuosi - Charlie Parker on alto sax, Dizzy Gillespie on trumpet, Bud Powell on bass, Teddy Kotick on bass and Max Roach on drums. Yet the music they play is so flawless it drives you insane.
You want men in white coats quietly to remove them from the stage and hotwire them to make the odd mistake or add an occasional touch of humanity. Its jazz-as-chamber-music ethos takes the bebop style to its logical extreme, where the music communicates nothing other than virtuosity itself.
The problem is that solos in this style of jazz - and this style consists almost entirely of solos - are so circumscribed technically it's now difficult for musicians to say anything. Even as Roach and Powell add their pyrotechnic punctuations behind a Parker or Gillespie solo, they are limited by the syntax of style."
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October-22nd-2003, 01:14 PM
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#30
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Registered Loser
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: The Altered State Of Drugafornia
Posts: 7,663
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Re: Exstended Star
I don't disagree with the abstract notions that he raises, but to say they apply this band seems way off, imo. I haven't heard this recording, but this band kicks all the ass in the World and gots soul to spare. That they achieve something close to technical perfection is not an isolated event, but a result of their close *human* interactions and their success in expressing a musical vision.
Yes, there are plenty of insanely virtuosic musicians and bands whose biggest fans are other musicians, but this is not one of them.
And I've said before that I like to hear mistakes, flaws, imperfections, and any other frailties in music. It reminds me that there's a human there. But part of the fun of hearing these flaws is to subsequently hear them overcome them. These guys have overcome them.
Quote:
Originally posted by Sand
You want men in white coats
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Lester?
Last edited by Sergio Zamora; October-22nd-2003 at 09:46 PM.
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