Senin, 30 Mei 2011

What A Wonderful World Music Only


Music at a wedding is an necessary and integral part of the day as the songs you choose reflect your person style and also tells your guests more when it comes to you both. A wedding without Music ought to be a wedding on the beach, where only the sounds of nature disturb, at the intermediate wedding reception and ceremony,there is Music. At our wedding we chose a song from the Movie Juno, even though our wedding was on the beach, of course everyone who heard it wafting in the breeze thought we were crazy, but it is all in the words! Listen to the words.Music is a ought to at the wedding but galore of us do not recognise what songs to consider and when we must play them. I have put together a road map that may help you below:Firstly comes The Prelude, numerous song selections of the past include:

Falling in Love, Air on A G String, Air (from Water Music), The wedding Song,

I may only Imagine, Largo, Bless the Broken Road, Ariosa.Then the bride walks down the aisle to what we call the ‘Processional’, selections could be;

Reminiscent Joy, Canon In D Jesu, Joy of mans desiring, Hymn, Canon in F, Here comes the bride or Forever my love.During the Ceremony brides are known to select from the songs noted here or choose something more innovative and originative as we did. I still like the words of the Juno song, if you were a tree, I would be the wood etcPopular ceremony songs are The wedding song – there is love, Ave Maria, I will be here, The gift of Love, How beautiful, Panis Angelicus, The Prayer, By the sea, To make you feel my love, The road that never ends.At the end of the wedding ceremony, this is called the ‘Recessional’, songs like these

Spring (from four seasons), Ode to Joy, Finale (from Water Music), Trumpet Tune, Randeau, Wedding March, work well.Here are a lot of general songs and hymns that you may have heard to consider for your wedding:


From this moment


The way you look tonight


Forever in Love


It had to be you


When lights are low


Kiss the girl


At Last


What a fantasti world


Unforgettable – Nat King Cole


Wonderful World – Louis Armstrong


Moon River – Frank Sinatra


Annies Song – John Denver


You light up my Life – Debbie Boone


Love Changes everything – Andrew Lloyd Webber


From this moment – Shania Twain


Immortality – Celine Dion


Power of Love – Laura Branigan


The Wedding Song – Kenny G


Every thing I do – Bryan Adams


I will always Love you – Whitney Houston


When you say not one thing at all – Boyzone


I in the long run found someone – Barbara Streisand & Bryan Adams


Take my breath away – Berlin


Fill the world with Love – Hymn


Let there be love shared amongst us – Hymn


Bind us together Lord – Hymn


How great thou art – Hymn


To God be the Glory – Hymns
Add your list to this one, put them all on your I pod and you are away. I have done a heap of weddings at remote locatings where the I pod was the perfective solution! Happy weddings and listening…and dancing of course!



What A Wonderful World Music Only

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What A Wonderful World Music Only

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What A Wonderful World Music Only

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What A Wonderful World Music Only

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What A Wonderful World Music Only

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What A Wonderful World Music Only

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World Music Station


Internet radio, also known as web radio, net radio, streaming radio and e-radio is an audio service that is transmitted through the internet. It is commonly accessible from anyplace in the world. Internet radio services likewise offer news, sports, talk, and respective genres of music – each format that is available on traditionalisti radio stations.
People who use computers and the internet have increased by leaps and bounds and they are now getting conscious of their features and accordingly are using them like never before. A computer and an access to the web may replace the encyclopedia, media player, DVD player, dictionary, gaming console, TV, phone and the conventional radio – altogether. The web has brought along a world of possibilities, there is no lack of info and entertainment. Likewise, the internet radio likewise gives it is listeners endless access to music and information.
there are thousands of stations from all over the world that you may listen to. For instance, you may listen to a Mexican radio station even when you might physically be in Japan. The quality of the audio transmitted through the internet radio is very good. It has no noise or fluctuations. The basic requirement for using internet radios is that you have a broadband Internet connection at your home or wherever you want to use. There are also internet radios that have wireless capability, provided it is within reception of a wireless internet access point.
Owning an internet radios is cheap and even setting up an internet radio station is likewise not expensive. A very basic internet based radio station needs little basic instrumentation like a computer, some good music, WinAmp, broadcast scheduling software with encoders, microphone and a VPS hosting account. Maintaining an internet radio station requires less hassle. You may do it with less effort. If you begin one, run it well and then attract advertisers, it could even recompense for the running costs. So, the advertisers get a platform to promote their businesses, the station owner is competent to pay the station’s running costs and the listeners get free, limitless music.
Free live radio is another outstanding form of amusement that may be accessed by way of online free stations from any place and you may listen to channels from all over the world. Various radio programs like songs, programs, current news and so on are available in a great deal through various internet sites and what is more, there is no need for any kind of registration. However, there may be a lot of websites that do not concede persons to listen to their radio programs as a guest. In such a case, you just have to register yourself with the radio station internetsite to be competent to listen to their programs. These types of registrations are a breeze and once done, you may effortlessly listen to various new songs, invent a play list and likewise play respective games.
Search the web to find out a great deal of free stations that provide free music so you may receive pleasure from the most. Also look for free live radios; they will introduce you to the new and upcoming sounds. So now you may listen to any music from any where – non-stop and cost free.



World Music Station

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World Music Station

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World Music Station

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World Music Station

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World Music Station

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Music Downloads Youtube


YouTube is a website with a lot of great video content. It’s full of professional and novice video clips that may provide you with hours of endless entertainment. Yet, once in a while you don’t want to say of a full video clip to your hard disk.
Let’s say for instance you are only fascinated in the song that was playing for the duration of a music video, not the music video itself. Or perchance there is a comedy routine that has been caught on video and you are only mesmerized in the MP3 file so you may put it on your portable music player. In this instance you do not want to save an entire video clip, rather you want to download YouTube videos mp3 files instead.
YouTube, of course, does not help saving MP3 files. It doesn’t even help saving video files, so saving an MP3 stripped of the video is plainly out of the question. That is to say, it’s out of the question if you only plan on using the YouTube internetlocation to get your stuff done. To in truth get severe with regards to attempting to download YouTube videos mp3 files you need a third party solution that will primary download the video and then convert it to a portable MP3 file. There are of course a heap of choices for YouTube and video downloaders, and a great deal of choices for video to MP3 converters. And there are not, however, a lot of choices that finish both processes simultaneously within the same software package. Video Piggy is one of those software packages that will download the video and also strip out the MP3 file.
Unfortunately, due to digital rights management and all of the legalities that that entails YouTube is never going to natively help this routine and consequently it will always be the purview of the buyer to use a third-party solution to facilitate their attempts to download YouTube videos mp3 files.


Music Downloads Youtube

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Music Downloads Youtube

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Music Downloads Youtube

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Music Downloads Youtube

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Download To Mp3 From Youtube


YouTube is a fantastic source of entertainment. It is full of hilarious videos depicting little snippings of people’s day-to-day lives that helped engender a sense of community among it is users yet until now it has been very difficult to download these videos to your personal computer for your off-line watching pleasure. Luckily software engineers have devised a way to download videos from YouTube free of charge in such an easy way that we may soon suppose to see a mass download to commence taking place.


After all, why must people settle for only having their content available to them while they are connected to the Internet? Sure, most humans have broadband connections that are always on; but there’s still a significant number of people who have to use dial up Internet access, and for them YouTube may be a real hassle. For these folks it would be much more comfortable to download the videos and then watch them off-line whenever it is convenient.


In order to download videos from YouTube free of charge you need to firstborn get a little software application to handle the downloads for you. The website itself does not grant people to download videos, notwithstanding it is very easy to find software like Video Piggy on the Internet that will handle this task rather capably. Essentially all these software productions do is download the video from YouTube to your hard drive and then transcode it into a video format that your computer may use. It’s fundamentally a one click procedure that downloads the flash video and converts it into something that may be played on whatsoever media player you occur to be using. With all the amusement selections available on the Internet it is no wonder that these programs are getting so frequent these days.



Download To Mp3 From Youtube

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Download To Mp3 From Youtube

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Download To Mp3 From Youtube

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Download To Mp3 From Youtube

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Download To Mp3 From Youtube

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Cylinder

Cylinder (group)
Cylinder (Clean Feed; 2011)
Aaram Shelton (sax)
Darren Johnston (trumpet)
Lisa Mezzacappa (bass)
Kjell Nordeson (drums)

I have become a huge fan of Aram Shelton's work over the last couple years. His various groups/projects are all very different. His departure to San Francisco from Chicago adds a great new thinker to the ever growing West Coast avant garde and free jazz movement.

With his latest collective work, Cylinder, Shelton actually becomes more a member of a unit than leader. And a stellar unit it is. There is a lot of creative thinking going on throughout this session. Each member has a history of moving in and out of both avant garde, free jazz, chamber and straight ahead circles. On their debut as Cylinder it all melds into one of the best sessions you'll experience all year. It's not because it's built on a Free Jazz motif, it's more because of the effectiveness of the performances and concepts within each piece.

You can hear shades of Ornette Coleman or Don Cherry throughout, but the group really doesn't rely on history. In fact, they might be shaping it (if this is an ongoing quartet). While this is a group effort, each member does have opportunity to express themselves on selected pieces. "The Ear That Was Sold To A Fish" opens with a lovely duel phrasing from Shelton and Johnston. Johnston, who has worked in the avant garde arena for years (on both sides of the Atlantic) works in the stratosphere with some beautiful lyrical notes.

A revelation for me was Lisa Mezzacappa, whom I've only known by name but hadn't investigated her music (until now), and I have to say I've really been missing out on an amazing bassist. She has this ability to hit the thick notes delicately and with poise and makes you really feel it. 'Sung By Dogs' is one of those moments. The galloping rhythm laid out by Mezzacappa and Nordeson accompanying on the horns makes for a haunting yet rich piece with lots of intersections for the ear to latch on to.

The individual work of both drummer and bassist rises again on both "The Deep Disciplines" and "Crossings" where both share some nice crosscurrents early on and then the quartet regroups midway and runs through a set of improvised moment before catching a groove that is covered by Johnston and later Shelton's fierce sonic resonance.

'Skipped Rocks' sees Shelton moving poetically on clarinet while his bandmates mingle and experiment with sound. 'Skipped Rocks' isn't a track where you have to listen closely. The melody and theories take hold quickly (even for the uninitiated) and its beautiful. Cylinder closes on a more free form note than it began with 'Earthworm' which weaves its way in and out with sublime work from Mezzacappa and Shelton. It's a piece that doesn't rise in tone so much as it elevates in texture and density. Cylinder seem to utilize the space around them and gives you a look inside the mind of a well focused quartet with a multitude of ideas.


While Cylinder may get headlines because of Aram Shelton, it really is a complete group with a swirl of theories and concepts that makes it one of the best future-forward bands on the scene right now. I really hope they record regularly. An excellent listen.

Jordan Young Group

Jordan Young (drums)
Jordan Young Group (self produced; 2010)
Brian Charette (organ)
Yotam Silberstein (guitar)
Joe Sucato (sax)

One of the main reasons I was drawn to the Jordan Young Group's self-titled debut was the fact that the leader was from Detroit. Detroit has long tradition of music legends across multiple genres (Iggy Pop, Juan Atkins, Elvin Jones).


Jordan Young has a nice pedigree in his short career. He has studied and played with some of Detroit's greatest musicians, including Gerald Cleaver, Marcus Belgrave and James Carter to name a few. Young's playing is understated but precise. The influences of Jimmy Cobb or Philly Joe Jones seem apparent. But as leader of this organ based trio, Young is also very good director of a tight and skillful collection of musicians.

The Jordan Young Group while consisting of some interesting covers, a few interludes penned by organist, Brian Charette and one full track by Young, is still a solid effort and demanding of repeat listens.


Opening with a surprising version of Pat Metheny's 'H and H', the group transform this trio piece into a vibrant and exciting excursion. 'H and H' gives each member moments to shine individually. Young's playing is sharp and well refined. He has a couple rolling moments that really catch the ear. Sucato's sax is killer and has a nice Stanley Turrentine vibe to it. Charette and Silberstein both display funky exchanges, with Young keeping the group in great timing. A great opener and nice prelude to what is to come throughout the session.

As I've said with other organ based groups, its difficult to kept the organ from overtaking the rest of the group sometimes. On the Jordan Young Group that doesn't happens. Charette's playing is leveled and masterful. The arrangements and choices Young and the rest of group have chosen highlight this through the intricacies of the quartet. "Every Time We Say Goodbye" is a wonderful rendition of the Cole Porter standard that emits a lovely tone through Charette and Sucato's performances. The groups interludes, "Pings", while short still give insight into what the band can do for the future. These are like short films or cut-ups. Giving a futurist, post modern element that the rest of the albums standards may not project. Charette and Young drives these pieces with swirling patterns and subtle improvisations.

Jordan Young's own, 'Claudes Monet', the group display a loving touch that is straight ahead but still richly rewarding. It's a beautiful ballad that again gives the individual members a chance to shine and the listen a closer opportunity to hone in on Young's playing and compositional skills. Another stellar performs comes on the yearning 'My One And Only Love' where the group again shows a great deal of pose within a classic number. Young while the leader of group shares a great deal of skill like the aforementioned drummers and possibly even more recently with Paul Motian in making is playing understated when needed and boisterous when demanded. In 'My One And Only Love' it's definitely in the background, allowing his group to take the lead nicely.

On the Wayne Shorter piece "Angola", Young is required to up-the-ante and energize the group with a really magnificent performance. The group's response is smokin'. Young lets loose on a vicious solo midway through that you didn't hear or expect from the earlier portion of the album. It's a good opportunity to experience the full range of Young's playing and direction. The Jordan Young Group closes with another Ping which again could foreshadow a future direction for the group and that I hope comes to disc soon.

Jordan Young has definitely learned a lot from his Detroit mentors. But I think the most important thing was how to be a leader. The Jordan Young Group is fantastic debut from a quartet that display great versatility with originals as well as inventiveness with the elements of the past. A solid effort worth your time and money.

Klang: Other Doors

Klang (group)
Other Doors (Allos Musica; 2011)
James Falzone (clarinet)
Jason Adasiewicz (vibraphone)
Jason Roebke (bass)
Tim Daisy (drums)

Guest Musicians
Jeb Bishop (trombone)
Josh Berman (cornet)
Keefe Jackson (sax; bass clarinet)
Fred Lonberg-Holm (cello; electronics)

There once was a time when Benny Goodman was considered 'avant garde', 'outside the mainstream' or just plain 'what the hell was that he just played'. Goodman's ground-breaking benchmark, Live At Carnegie Hall is evidence of how left of center Goodman was for his time. Fast forward just under 75 years later to Goodman's hometown of Chicago. You will find a vibrant avant-garde/free jazz scene that while not based on Goodman's playing, definitely has Goodman's spirit of collectiveness. Enter the quartet Klang led by clarinetist, James Falzone. Klang, with an unusual lineup of clarinet, vibes, bass and drum have set forth a different direction compared to their more veracious Chicago contemporaries.

Klang's third album, Other Doors investigates the music and legacy of Mr. Goodman but with a very unique free form spin. The album was originally born out of a Chicago Jazz Festival performance that paid tribute to the Chicago native and legendary clarinetist. Other Doors is fun, crisp and filled with improvised moments that turn this session into one of the best Chicago outings of the last few years. "Stompin' At The Savoy" sounds completely fresh and revitalized in the hands of this quartet. It contains all the elements of the swing classic but it's infused with spontaneous exchanges and ethereal swirls (led by Jason Adasiewicz's always sublime performance on vibes). Falzone's playing is respectful but never imitating. He brings some gentle phrasing to certain lines raising this version far above homage and places it into a post modern must listen.

"Memories Of You", a midtempo ballad gets deep, dark re-visitation under Klang's direction. With some great manipulation of space by Falzone, Adasiewicz, and guest Longberg-Holm. Falzone's performance is passionate and introspective and reflects Goodman's own moments were he gets lost in the music but the listener become wrapped inside the rhythm. The title track has an impressionist approach. It's lyrically beautiful and paints a slow but delightful picture that is led by the horn section. Rich and textural with a free spirit, you will find very rewarding.

"The Already And The Not Yet", a track originally written on one of Falzone's earlier albums by the same name, is a delicate but operatic piece that becomes hypnotic and enveloping towards its conclusion. "Goodman's Paradox" is the moment in which the group let's loose (sort of) and delivers an extended workout of swing and experimentation that will take you by surprise but it fits perfectly in context. Goodman would be wowed.

While each of the members and the guest musicians on Other Doors lead their own groups, as Klang they together achieve something completely different from their respective groups. This is a dynamic quartet that experiments with past themes and creating future music. Other Doors is no tribute. It's a complete enlightened re-imagining of one of the most legendary and important figures in jazz. Highly Recommended.



HAPPY BIRTHDAY MILES DAVIS

Miles Davis (trumpet)
May 26, 1926 - September 28, 1991

May 26th is Miles Davis' birthday. Now I'm not going to go into a big long story about how great he is and the history. I believe you can get that from any site today.

I thought it would be good to give a short list of past pieces we've done on Miles Davis over the last few years.


It's not an all encompassing list but I think it covers some essential albums and collections that would be great for the uninitiated or even the collector in this age of digital music storage.

So as you spend the next couple of days reading articles about Miles here's what you might want to consider the next time you go to the record store.




And check out the videos we found as a bit of prove on why Miles Davis is so important.




Resonance Ensemble: Kafka In Flight

Resonance Ensemble (group)
Kafka In Flight (Not Two Records, 2011)
Ken Vandermark (sax, clarinet)
Mikolaj Trzaska (sax, clarinet)
Mark Tokar (bass)
Michael Zerang (drums)
Tim Daisy (drums)
Steve Swell (trombone)
Per -Ake Holmander (tuba)
Dave Rempis (sax)
Magnus Broo (trumpet)
Waclaw Zimpel (clarinet)

This is an album I have been waiting for since I read about it on Ken Vandermark's twitter feed a few months ago. The Resonance Ensemble is the brainchild of the great Chicago saxophonist, Ken Vandermark. In the similar vein to Peter Brotzmann's Tentet (which Vandermark is also a member), Resonance embarks on large scale compositions. But where PBT tend to move into the upper stratosphere in theory--Vandermark is keeping things within a linear pattern as far as the tone is concerned. There is a great deal of improvisation happening but its within the melody and rhythm of the writing.

Resonance Ensemble was first developed out of a series of concerts and studio sessions that were later recorded in 2008 (Live In Lviv) and then for the 10CD box (Resonance Box). What's remarkable is that as Vandermark states in the notes to this album, because of the size of the band and the various groups they lead and projects they participate in, its difficult to get any rehearsal time before live shows or recording. I don't think any of us would notice or care. Why you ask? Because the results are something truly unbelievable.

For the group's third album Kafka In Flight, recorded live in Poland, Vandermark guides the group with three lengthy pieces of jubilant free form that would make you feel as if Ellington, Coltrane, Cherry, Coleman, Blakey, Chambers (and take the your pick of the rest) had gotten together in your backyard. Kafka In Flight is smokin'. Unlike even Vandermark's main group (The Vandermark 5), Resonance Ensemble seem to enjoy mixing the past in a large bowl and coming up with interesting and riviting concoctions. The opener, 'The Pier' is fast moving and allows for moments in which each member can contribute and expound on Vandermark's material. It's a real treasure of ideas that surface. The always incredible Tim Daisy delivers an excellent improvised mid-section, accompanied by a good portion of the horn section and Vandermark on clarinet, explore and exchange some intense possibilities but it works unbelievably well.

'Rope' is a bit more cinematic, led by some great performances from Per-Ake Holmlander on tuba (a rare instrument in modern free jazz) and Magnus Broo (trumpet). 'Rope' moves from funky to experimental to comforting (so-to-speak) and gives the listener a lot to absorb. Michael Zerang and Tim Daisy are superb as they duel it out with sharp intersecting chant from each of the wind players. 'Coal Marker' rounds out this hour long journey in style. It's the ensemble releasing all it's force into your speaker (and you better be able to deal with it). There are spontaneous moments that sees the group in unison but also exchanging circular rhythmic patterns. This is a group that somehow, despite little time together, knows exactly what the other is going to do and each is up for the challenge.

Kafka In Flight is an album and performance that is built around the ability of Ken Vandermark to write excellent material that is interchangeable for each member. You can picture most of these notes performed by different members and each coming up with a different result. But the result would still be amazing. Kafka In Flight is yet another step in the already legendary career of Ken Vandermark. While the first two albums are both hard to find and in the case of the boxed set--expensive--you should definitely seek out Kafka In Flight. It is well worth every avant garde fan's dollars. One of our Top Albums Of The 2011.

Andrzej Przybielski

Andrzej Przybielski (trumpet)
Abstract (Not Two Records, 2005)
De Profundis (Fenom Media, 2011)
Marcin Oles (bass)
Bartlomiej Oles (drums)

Andrezj Przybielski was one of those truly underrated musicians that never got even close to the word "recognized" in the wider public. For probably those outside Poland and parts of Europe, the name Andrezj Przybielski will unfortunately mean nothing. But, he is revered in his homeland and his passing this February will touch the artistic community in Poland for years to come. Fellow Polish trumpeter, Tomasz Stanko has also acknowledged Przybieslski's legendary status. Przybielski's playing might be more fierce and adventurous than Stanko. He could turn phrases like Woody Shaw, Freddie Hubbard or Don Cherry. His loss is the entire jazz community's loss but hopefully in this digital age his legend can grow and be cemented.

Andrezj Przybielski, while having a pretty lengthy catalog, didn't record with any great frequency. Only in the last decade did it seem like he was really recording at a decent pace. He began playing more in the avant garde style in the 60s and 70s. As he got older his playing became more statesman-like but still had a distinctive bit to it. In the last few years he paired up with Europe's most prolific rhythm sections, the Oles Brothers, and formed a trio that recorded two albums under Przybielski's name, and two under the Oles Brothers direction as Custom Trio.

Abstract (Not Two Records, 2005) is a perfect introduction to Przybielski style. Abstract features moments of hard bop mixed with free jazz that form a beautiful and crisp document for a group with evolving ideas. You could compare the youthful injection from the Oles Brothers to that of the Marcin Wasilewski Trio for Tomasz Stanko. The energy featured on "Ride" forces the group into exchanges that are both explosive and beautiful. Przybielski and Bartlomiej demonstrate a brilliant piece of interplay midway through "Ride" that will undoubtedly have you stunned. The classic "Afro Blue" also gets a deep rendering which is drastically different from both the Mongo Santamaria original and the more well-known John Coltrane version. The trio really deconstruct this piece with a great deal of improvisation and post-bop vision. Elsewhere, "Epitafium dla Jacka" illustrates a more relaxed nature to Przybielski's playing that sets him alongside Miles Davis or even Clifford Brown.

It would be six year later that we would get the chance to experience this trio again. This time, in the form of a live album De Profundis (FenomMedia, 2011). De Profundis features tracks from Abstract, including a boisterous version of "Afro Blue" that really brings out the power of Marcin's bass playing. The trio is sublime form on this evening. There's consistency, but also a good deal of improvising throughout. The members have played with each other so long that you can tell they know the other's next move. The title track screams with an immediacy and beauty that you might not get on the previous album, and later develops into a bit a of call and response between the members and then a gentle fade out. "Guru" is a midtempo blues tinged number that has an incredibly introspective quality to it. The album closes on a more chamber/improvisational version of "De Profundis" that sees the trio moving in various directions but still keeps a distinct harmolodic tone that will encapsulate the listener until the end.

The passing of Andrzej Przybielski may not be felt throughout the entire jazz community but these two records are perfect documents of what the world will miss. Przybielski was never an artist who really wanted the spotlight. He played his music - when he was ready to play. When he wanted to record. And the results are something that we are all better off for after listening. Whatever you do this week, Abstract and De Profundis should be on your list of records to check out. A legend has gone but his music will touch more than he will ever know...


RGG: One

RGG (group; formed 2001)
One (Fonografika)
Przemyslaw Raminiak (piano)
Maciej Grabowski (bass)
Krysztof Gradziuk (drums)

Here's the thing. This year has started off with some really incredible albums. Many of which I would never have heard or at least spent months trying to find. One of the groups that I was turned on to this year was RGG out of Poland. RGG are arguably one of the best kept secrets on the global jazz scene. Their latest album, One, is a great example of how outstanding the group has become. They have been grabbing attention since they made their major debut at the 2002 Bielsko Jazz Blizzard Festival (for the uninitiated this is one of the best jazz festivals in Europe).

There have been many trios over the last decade with great ideas and impressive efforts. Comparisons of RGG and fellow countrymen, the Marcin Wasilewski Trio always come to the forefront when both groups put out an album (in this case within weeks of each other). I believe the difference lies in the compositions and production. RGG have been able to expand and take the listener on various journeys over their career. I'm not saying MWT haven't done the same. I'm saying MWT have taken a more direct contemplative approach. RGG continue experiment (loosely put) on each record.

With five albums under their belt, all of which have featured expansive themes, intimate performances, and some fully improvised works, RGG have returned with One, a more focused and extremely balanced session. Opening with the warm and melodic title track, RGG set a mood similar to that of Tord Gustafsson or EST. 'One' contains a beautiful passage from Maciej Garbowski on bass and Raminiak's keys turn the melody into an intimate observation of a rainy day. 'Around Again' (a Carla Bley composition) is the perfect showcase for RGG's ability to stand apart. Like the original there is a real sense of vibrancy that the listener will connect with immediately.

"Almost Blues" really shines. The group are in full force as a unit with each member getting an opportunity to let loose. Gradziuk's solos are fierce and really exciting--keeping the tune humming, despite its short length. "C.T." is dedicated to Cecil Taylor and highlights the improvised nature of the trio. This was brought out in previous albums but in this Cecil Taylor inspired tune you can see the band stretching and having a lot fun doing it. "On The Way To Road 11" is simply a beautiful ballad that reminds me of the some of the more intimate and intricate Keith Jarrett trio pieces.

With One, RGG have managed to combined elements of each of their explorations from albums past into a bold and impressive outing that should be on everyone's wish list this year. I have to thank Maciej at Polish Jazz for turning me on to RGG. In a very short time period they have become one of my favourite groups. If you have the chance you must seek out RGG's One. Highly Recommended.


Another little coup for the in-laws

It's always funny when I hear what's going on at the LPO before the Tomcat does, but this news is very nice: the London Philharmonic has just snaffled Nicholas Collon to be its new assistant conductor. From the autumn season, Nicholas will be the lucky lad who gets to shadow Vlad 'the Impaler' Jurowski, and he will conduct a number of LPO concerts and pre-concert events himself. Twitter addicts have probably found him already, but in case not, follow him at @nicholascollon. Maybe he can persuade Vladimir to tweet too.

Currently in charge of the brilliant Aurora Orchestra, which won the RPS Award for Best Ensemble the other week, Nicholas has already made an impressive mark on the musical scene here. He's dynamic, creative, articulate and has one absolute prerequisite for a gifted young 21st-century conductor: seriously curly hair.

See also the similarly hirsute Ilyich Rivas:


and Robin Ticciati:

Should Strads be played?

One of the best-preserved Stradivarius violins in existence, the 'Lady Blunt' of 1721, is about to come up for auction. The auction house Tarisio has announced that the violin will be included in their online sale on 20 June. It's currently owned by the Nippon Music Foundation of Japan. All proceeds will go to the Nippon Foundation's Northeastern Japan Earthquake and Tsunami Relief Fund. This violin, named after one of its former owners, Lady Anne Blunt, who was Lord Byron's granddaughter, was bought by the NMF in 2008 for over $10m.

The press release quotes Christopher Reuning of Reuning & Son Violins in Boston, praising the instrument's exceptional nature: “Rarely does a Stradivarius of this quality in such pristine condition and with such significant historical provenance come up for sale. It still shows the tool-marks and brushstrokes of Stradivari.” Jason Price, director of Tarisio, says that the instrument is the violin "equivalent of da Vinci's Mona Lisa or Michelangelo's David."

If you have some spare millions sitting about and you won't already have spent them at Sotheby's on the Mahler 3rd first edition, the Mendelssohn watercolour or the nude pics of Britten and Pears, there could be worse purchases than this to consider.

As a pleasant side-effect, you could enable a great violinist to play a great instrument: in the list of illustrious owners of this violin, the names of any actual musicians are conspicuous by their absence. On the other hand - is that why the instrument is as well preserved as it is? Very probably, yes. The less wear and tear there is from playing an instrument, the more you can tell about the original craftsmanship that went into its making. After some 300 years, we're still trying to understand the secret magic of Antonio Stradivari The new owner of the 'Lady Blunt' will need to weigh up the pros and cons of sound versus legacy.

Personally, I believe passionately that great violins should be played by great violinists; it is painful to see a Strad hanging in a glass case, the voice for which it was created silenced apparently forever. But clearly it's a debate that has two sides. Currently there's an amazing exhibition of musical instruments at the Horniman Museum in south-east London and I had a very interesting chat with one of its curators, Bradley Strauchan, just before it opened in March. It’s amazing how much you can learn from a 19th-century French horn, she told me.

Side by side in the exhibition, 'The Art of Harmony', sit two instruments once owned by Giovanni Puzzi. A lynchpin musical impresario in London in the Victorian era, he was also the Paganini of the horn, easily able to transcend the unfortunate Italian slang meaning of his name: “stinky”. His horns are reunited here probably for the first time since his death in 1876. One belongs to the Horniman, the other to the Victoria and Albert Museum.

In the bell of the latter instrument, lavish decoration in green lacquer has worn away exactly at the spots on which Puzzi placed his hand to shape the pitch of his notes. This horn has a tale to tell of its owner’s technique (we can even learn that he was right-handed), his distinguished and wealthy status (such decoration didn't come cheap) and the precious place the instrument held in his family history. The musician’s grandson gave it to the V&A in 1926; nobody had played it but Puzzi himself.

The horns in the Horniman are typical of the fascinating and exquisitely made instruments on show here. We have three years to beat a path to Forest Hill to see them, for this relatively small museum is thinking big. When the V&A’s musical instrument galleries were closed last year, an outcry followed among musicians, music-lovers and all admirers of instruments as historic objets d’art. This was, after all, the first publicly displayed collection of its kind in the country and remained one of the most prized. So the arrival in south-east London of 35 items from the V&A, on extended loan, represents a welcome venture to keep them in the public eye.
The V&A’s instruments provide an intriguing counterpoint to the Horniman's own, which were chosen by Frederick Horniman himself with utterly different aims. The juxtaposition highlights the contrast in mission between the two very Victorian gentlemen responsible for building up the collections. And, situated in the south London hills not far from the Crystal Palace, the museum – Horniman’s former home ­– was within a stone’s throw of one of the most important shopping grounds for instrument collectors, who flocked to its Great Exhibition of 1851 and bought up whatever they could. Horniman, though, accumulated the bulk of his collections – musical instruments and well beyond – during his international peregrinations as a wealthy tea merchant.
“In his whole collection, the emphasis was on eclecticism,” says Strauchen. Horniman was an obsessive collector of artefacts from around the world and especially of natural history; the museum is also home to a quantity of collected butterflies and a magnificent stuffed walrus. “When it first opened, the museum was about entertainment, spectacle and fun -- the grounds would be open, there’d be brass bands, firework displays and balloons ascending.
“Horniman was a Quaker,” she adds, “and very much in keeping with his Quaker ethos he felt a great responsibility to share his material fortune with others and provide the community with access to these things that they might not otherwise be able to see. For him, the Victorian didactic element, the desire to teach, the desire to share, was almost a moral imperative. The musical instruments in his collection, from all over the world, show his interest in music’s anthropological element, focusing on how they were used by musicians and what the social role of music was.”
Carl Engel, on the other hand, was employed by the V&A to build their own collection of instruments with an emphasis on design and craftsmanship. Engel, a German-born pioneer of organology (the study of musical instruments), was the perfect choice for the job. “He had a wonderful eye,” says Strauchen. “The V&A was set up expressly to help British designers and manufacturers to compete on an international basis, and the instrument collection was no exception. Here, it’s as if the two collections and their different purposes have been brought into dialogue with each other.”
The highlights are plentiful. Besides Puzzi’s horns, there is a chance to see Rossini’s oboe; Renaissance viols with exquisitely carved scrolls; an octagonal recorder carved out of ivory; long-abandoned models of instrument such as the viola d’amore and the baryton. Intricately decorated harpsichords and an exquisite oboe bell from 17th-century Holland bear witness to the aesthetic value that was placed on creations of that time. And there is a Stradivarius violin, made in 1699 and part of the V&A’s collection since 1937. It's the first time, says Strauchen, that the Horniman has had a Strad under its roof.
Plenty of violinists would be itching to get hold of that Strad. But it and its fellow exhibits are there for a good reason: leaving them untouched, says Strauchen, is the only way we can continue to gather detailed information from them about how they were made and the techniques that were used to play them. Still, she can’t help seeing both viewpoints. “As a horn player myself, there would be nothing more tempting than to take Puzzi’s horn into a quiet room for a few hours and play it!” she admits. So far she has managed to resist.

What do you think? Let them be played, or leave them alone?

Happy Birthday, EWK


It's Korngold's birthday (114). I'm afraid I'm currently laid up with something bronchial and can neither stop coughing nor think straight, so without further ado, here's 'Ich ging zu ihm' from Das Wunder der Heliane, recorded in 1928 by its original interpreter, Lotte Lehmann. Enjoy.

Balsom soothes and sizzles!

My interview with the lovely and brilliant Alison Balsom is in today's Independent.

She has some strong words, too, that can go under our JDCMB Music for All banner - hopefully a cause of the type she will espouse as a patron of the new Mayor's Fund for music scholarships, which was launched by Boris Johnson a few weeks ago. Alas, the first paragraph below hit the cutting room floor at the paper, but here it is, plus some:

“What worries me greatly is the lack of value put onto arts education,” she says. “Because it doesn’t lead directly to a well-paying job, people think it should be cut from schools. I think this is a travesty! I do earn my living through music, but learning music as a child taught me so much more. It taught me to be a rounded person. It helped with self-discipline, it taught me about working with other people, it’s a way of expressing myself and of organising my thoughts. If I hadn’t had that, I don’t know how I’d have developed those parts of my brain. And I’d never have started to play if I hadn’t had access to heavily subsidised lessons. Music should be available to everybody, not just to people who can afford it.”


“Since I’ve had Charlie [her 14-month-old son] it’s become even clearer to me that even very young children have an instinctive response to music,” she adds. “It’s like a fast track into their brains. It’s so obvious. How can we ignore that? To lose that connection would be a dangerous thing for our culture.” Helpfully, Charlie toddles by, singing to himself.


It will take figureheads like Balsom to bring the cause to the fore – and at least she is there to try. “I want to get that message across,” she says. “But often people are more interested in the Armani dresses and the diamonds. And the fact that I’m a female trumpet player.”
Here she is at the Last Night of the Proms two years ago, with a spot of Piazzolla...

Tempo Explosion

Thank Fred for this one!

01. Sugar Minott - Devil Is At Large
02. Chris Wayne - Don't Worry Yourself
03. Willie Williams - Solid Rock I Stand
04. Ras Melinik Dacosta - Free South Africa
05. Jerry Johnson - Tribute To Prince Knight
06. Black Roots Players - Temp Dub
07. Black Roots Players - Slow Tempo
08. Black Roots Players - Up Tempo

Bobo General - Respect

Yeah Bounty, big up!

01. Bobo General - Sexy
02. Bobo General - Don't Drink And Drive
03. Bobo General - I Don't Want To Wait ft. Trevor Sparks
04. Bobo General - Robber Man
05. Bobo General - Make Up Your Mind ft. Trevor Sparks
06. Bobo General - Your Girl Don't Worry
07. Bobo General - Respect
08. Bobo General - Don Bubbla

Micron Presents Superstars Vol. 1

From a label that was mostly active in the 70s...

01. Pad Anthony - Give Me The Love
02. Micron All Stars - Dub
03. Major Worries - Talk Till She Hoarse
04. Leroy Sibbles & Stamma Ranking - Moddeling Queen
05. Stamma Ranking - Some Girls Can't Get No Man
06. Micron All Stars - Dub
07. Leroy Sibbles & Stamma Ranking - Come Touch Me
08. Micron All Stars - Extras
09. Micron All Stars - Extras

Stone Love Dancehall Vol. 3


digital-reggae


01-Bobby Crystal - Take A Bow.mp3
02-Kevin Jackson(Sanchez) - Feel So Good.mp3
03-Leonard Bartley - Dorothy.mp3
04-Frankie Paul - Raggamuffin.mp3
05-Winsome Burrel - Lately.mp3
06-Tony Curtis - For You Love.mp3
07-Merciless & Mikey Spice - So Many Strangers.mp3
08-Bobby Crystal - I Apologize.mp3
09-Frankie Paul - Skettle.mp3
10-Simpleton - Home Alone.mp3
11-Baby Wayne - Mama.mp3
12-Bobby Crystal - Don't Want To Knowl.mp3
13-President Brown - Devil Game.mp3
14-Gringo - Gal Selina.mp3
15-Version - Gal Selina.mp3

4 The Hard Way

Big thanks DropBob, some tough riddims on this.

01. African - War & Crime (Far East)
02. African - Weh Me No See
03. African - Width & Length
04. African - Pick Out Tail
05. Daddy Rings - How Yu Body Look So
06. Daddy Rings - Young Gifted & Black (Punaany)
07. Daddy Rings - Politician (Shank I Sheck)
08. Daddy Rings - Mad Mad World (Sleng Teng)
09. Dandymite - Mass Murdering (Mad Mad)
10. Dandymite - Informer Fi Dead (Darker Shade Of Black)
11. Dandymite - Gun A Buss Ya So (Answer)
12. Dandymite - Yu A Move Above The Crowd
13. Determine - Never Did A Listen (Soap)
14. Determine - Grave Yard (Carnival-Gangster)
15. Determine - Mash Down Satan Business
16. Determine - Still A Survive (Darker Shade Of Black)

Rabu, 25 Mei 2011

Drake Gets Animated on ‘The LeBrons’ [Video]

Drake


Drake’s crew faces off in a rap battle with LeBron James’ posse in the seventh episode of “The LeBrons,” the NBA player’s cartoon web series. The Canadian rapper provides his voice and likeness to his animated character, while his OVO friend Niko holds down the mic. Did Drizzy and company take ‘em to school? Find out by watching the show below.



Black Eyed Peas Light Up ‘Dancing With the Stars’ Finale [Video]

Fergie


The Black Eyed Peas transformed the ballroom into a futuristic nightclub for the season finale of “Dancing With the Stars.” The Fantastic Four performed their new single “Don’t Stop the Party” before the winner was crowned. Fergie towered high above the crowd on a platform before joining her bandmates on the dance floor for the electrifying laser show. Get pumped to the Peas.

Cassie, Solange, & Mary J. Blige Unite at Carol’s Daughter Launch

Solange, Cassie, and Selita Ebanks


It was all about the ladies at the Carol’s Daughter Spokesbeauty & Monoi Repairing Collection launch at Sephora in New York City yesterday. The beauty brand’s spokeswomen Solange, Cassie, and Selita Ebanks showed off their individual style before posing for photos with fans. Cassie sported a Pompadour Mohawk (shaved on both sides), Solange rocked an Afro, and Selita Ebanks modeled a short red hairstyle. Mary J. Blige presided over the event, where a new ad campaign starring the three ladies was unveiled.




Solange, Cassie, and Selita Ebanks
Solange
Cassie
Cassie
Cassie
Solange and Mary J. Blige
Cassie and Mary J. Blige
Mary J. Blige
Solange, Cassie, Mary J. Blige, Lisa Price, and Selita Ebanks