thanks!
Any of you guys like Jonathan Kriesberg?
I really liked the guitar trio records he was putting out 5 or 6 years ago. I don't love him leading bigger combos, though, he's not a particularly great composer, arranger, or bandleader.
edit: the guitar/sax unison stuff in that vid really just makes me want to listen to Rosenwinkel with Mark Turner, who have truly incredible synch/telepathy, and the rest makes me want to listen to Metheny. Both guitarists who are phenomenally talented composers.
I just ran across him online a few weeks ago. I actually liked him playing standards in a clinic video I saw a lot better, which probably speaks to his writing.
Howie doesn't realize how lucky he is to be a NYer.
If you're looking for an album, Nine Stories Wide might be the best of the lot.
My favourite straight-ahead standards guy is possibly Howard Alden, who might well be the most underrated guitarist on the planet.
Howie doesn't realize how lucky he is to be a NYer.
If you're looking for an album, Nine Stories Wide might be the best of the lot.
My favourite straight-ahead standards guy is possibly Howard Alden, who might well be the most underrated guitarist on the planet.
Howie doesn't realize how lucky he is to be a NYer.
As always, listen to samples first, it's a big musical world out there, and this particular configuration can tend to be kind of raw and acerbic:
Kenny Baron and Stan Getz: People Time
Paul Bley and Chet Baker: Diane
Stefano Bollani and Enrico Rava: The Third Man
Any of the Steve Lacy and Mal Waldron duet albums
Harry Connick Jr. and Branford Marsalis: Occasion
Vijay Iyer and Rudresh Mahanthappa: Raw Materials
Hank Jones and Joe Lovano: Kids!
Baker and Rava are the most lush and romantic (in a good way) of the bunch.
If you're looking for an album, Nine Stories Wide might be the best of the lot.
My favourite straight-ahead standards guy is possibly Howard Alden, who might well be the most underrated guitarist on the planet.
Howie doesn't realize how lucky he is to be a NYer.
Howard Alden is super-good! He played guitar in the Sean Penn movie Sweet And Lowdown, which was a fun time.
As always, listen to samples first, it's a big musical world out there, and this particular configuration can tend to be kind of raw and acerbic:
Kenny Baron and Stan Getz: People Time
Paul Bley and Chet Baker: Diane
Stefano Bollani and Enrico Rava: The Third Man
Any of the Steve Lacy and Mal Waldron duet albums
Harry Connick Jr. and Branford Marsalis: Occasion
Vijay Iyer and Rudresh Mahanthappa: Raw Materials
Hank Jones and Joe Lovano: Kids!
Baker and Rava are the most lush and romantic (in a good way) of the bunch.
Thanks for the suggestions, Doc. Kenny Baron and Stan Getz: People Time is full of beautiful jazz. I believe Stan died just a few months later. My Dad has been a long time fan of Getz and saw him live several times.
Yeah, it's a special record. Getz's health was failing, his sound isn't anywhere near as gorgeous as it was in his prime, he runs out of breath, etc. But he finds a way to transcend his limitations. Performances like that are part of the reason why jazz is unique.
There's a duet record of Dizzy Gillespie and Max Roach playing a duet concert in Paris in '89 that has a very similar story yet manages to have a totally different mood and vibe.
I'm still not sure whether 'mo would like it, but it's as good a bet for Miles as any.
I mean, how can you not like that rhythm section?
'mo should considering building up to combo stuff by listening to some piano/horn duet albums or something.