Post on 28-Jul-2015
transcript
Top 10 Jazz PianistsOf All Time
Keith Jarrett
• Huge Repertoire• Rehabilitated the Great
American Songbook with his Standards Trio
• Solo long-form improvisations
• Melds melodic song structures with avant-garde abstract playing
Chronology
• Charles Lloyd quartet– With Jack DeJohnette
• Miles Davis– Electric piano
• Solo– The Koln Concert
• Standards Trio• World’s major concert halls• ECM’s premier artist• Also many classical piano
works by Bach, Shostakovich, Mozart
Standards Trio
• Gary Peacock bass• Jack DeJohnette drums• The premier working
group in jazz• Great American Songbook• Sweeping repetoire• Primarily Straight ahead
playing• Head-solo-head• Since 1983
Solo• Solo Concerts:
Bremen/Lausanne (1973), Time Magazine gave its 'Jazz Album of the Year' award;
• The Köln Concert (1975), which became the best-selling piano recording in history;
• Sun Bear Concerts (1976) – a 10-LP (and later 6-CD) box set;
• The Melody at Night, With You (1999) studio recording;
• Jarrett's 100th solo performance in Japan was captured on video at Suntory Hall, Tokyo on April 14, 1987, and released the same year. The recording was titled Solo Tribute. This is a set of almost all standard songs.
Duets• Charlie Haden
– Legendary Artist– One of the best jazz bassists of all
time– For a time, he shared an
apartment with the bassist Scott LaFaro (Bill Evans).
• Began recording with Ornette Coleman – including the seminal The Shape of
Jazz to Come.[
• Quartet West– Cinematic “Noir” Albums
• Two wonderful duet CDs with Keith
The same strengths that made Jasmine such a wonderful diversion from Jarrett's solo and trio releases remain definitive on Last Dance. Haden demonstrates his usual unerring ability to find the absolutely perfect note—played with equally impeccable tone—whether it's in the spare yet ambling swing of his support for Jarrett's solo on the mid-tempo "Everything Happens to Me" or his own more intrinsically lyrical feature later in the same song; there's never a note wasted or a note out of place. As for Jarrett, while his career has been predicated on both virtuosity and an ability to spontaneously pull music from the ether, and as consistently superb as his solo and Standards Trio work has been over the past three decades, here in this context, he's never sounded so relaxed, so unfettered in a way that's different from his inimitable freedom in live performance. There's something about the unconstrained freedom of playing at home with a longtime friend who shares your language. There's nothing to prove, only music to make, and while Jarrett has visited songs like Thelonious Monk's classic ballad "'Round Midnight" and Thomas Adair and Matt Denis' slightly brighter "Everything Happens to Me" before, they've never sounded this tender, this affectionate.
Bill Evans
• Marvelous interpreter of Songbook Standards
• Invented modern jazz piano
• Rootless chords• Impressionistic harmony• Hip lines• Interactive Trio playing
– Scott LaFaro bassist
• How My Heart Sings– biography
Bill Evans
Thelonius Monk
• Original compositions• Quirky playing style• Dissonance• Crunchy minor seconds
in harmonies• Modern with roots in
older styles such as stride
• Sui Generis
Monk
• A brilliant composer and a criminally underrated pianist whose sense of rhythm, space, and harmony made him one of the founders of modern jazz
Great Monk Classics
• Well You Needn’t• Blue Monk• Straight No Chaser• In Walked Bud• Round Midnight• Ruby, My Dear
Herbie Hancock
• Blue Note as a leader• Composer of jazz classics:
– Watermelon man– Cantaloupe Island– Maiden Voyage– Dolphin Dance
• Miles Quintet– Hippest Band in Modern Jazz
• Headhunters– Funk– Electric
Duke Ellington
• Icon• Legend• Great American
Composer• Superb Jazz Pianist• a clever, quirky,
thoughtful, and bold improviser
Billy Strayhorn
• Sweet Pea• Duke’s collaborator• Composer of the
highest order:– Lush Life– Chelsea Bridge– Take the A Train – Satin Doll
• Marvelous jazz pianist• Urbane
Bud Powell
• Bebop originator• Composer
– Bouncin’ with Bud– Dance of the Infidels
• Brilliant player• When people talk about
the giants – Bird, Bud, Dizzy, and Miles – I think they underestimate Bud.— Bill Evans
Kenny Barron
• One of the absolute best contemporary players
• Hundreds of albums as sideman and leader
• Great duet albums with – Dave Holland– Charlie Haden
McCoy Tyner
• Coltrane• Stacked 4ths• Fifths in the base• Modern Muscular
Sound• Also beautiful; check
out Coltrane quartet backing Johnny Hartman
Hank Jones• Eloquent, lyrical, and
Impeccable• On May 19, 1962, he played
piano as actress Marilyn Monroe sang her famous "Happy Birthday, Mr. President" song to then U.S. president John F. Kennedy.
• His two younger brothers—Thad, a trumpeter, and Elvin, a drummer (Coltrane)—also became prominent jazz musicians.
Oscar Peterson• Canadian• Herb Ellis and Ray Brown;
drummer-less trio• Joe Pass• Virtuoso player• Some of the artists who
influenced Peterson's music were – Teddy Wilson, – Nat "King" Cole, – James P. Johnson and – Art Tatum, to whom many tried to
compare Peterson in later years
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