Coltrane's India: Brecker, Liebman and Lovano

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  • Опубліковано 16 жов 2024
  • 19 December, 1999 - Saxophone Summit Live at Birdland featuring Michael Brecker, David Liebman and Joe Lovano, with Phil Markowitz on piano, Rufus Reid on bass and Billy Hart on drums
    Michael Brecker, the Philadelphia-born saxophonist star could hurl out more notes faster than almost all of his fellow-practitioners, but his 11 Grammy awards, devoted worldwide audience and status among musicians everywhere testified to artistic strengths that went far beyond technique. He was a composer, bandleader and improviser whose solo career started late, after years as a sideman and session-player; but in the two decades after he made his leadership debut, he became the most emulated jazz saxophonist on the planet after John Coltrane.
    Brecker was held in such awe by students, commentators and players alike that the thought of his exit will be hard for many to comprehend. A reserved, private and undemonstrative man, who made light of his talent - he was so indifferent to onstage histrionics that he would play the most high-energy solos with almost nothing visibly moving but his fingers - Brecker inspired enduring loyalties for his modesty as much as his influence. He also inspired confidence in the most demanding of artists that his presence would make even their best work sound better. Those who hired him in his pre-leadership days included Frank Sinatra, John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Steely Dan, Frank Zappa, Bruce Springsteen, Joni Mitchell, Charles Mingus and Jaco Pastorius.
    Brecker combined the striving energy, technical ambition and sophisticated harmonic sense of Coltrane - his first and biggest inspiration - with a soulful bluesiness that allowed him to drop easily into the earthiest of blues, rock or funk bands. In his prime, he could sustain an unaccompanied one-man show by sounding like several sax players, and even parts of a rhythm section, all at the same time. But if he could tingle the spine with Coltranesque split-note wails that took the tenor sax way above its regular range as well as transforming it into a chordal instrument, he could be tender with slow music, as his performance of Every Day I Thank You on guitarist Pat Metheny's 80/81 album confirms.
    Self-revelatory emotions were not perhaps his style, in the way they were Coltrane's. But, playing in New York in the week following 9/11, Brecker told me: "I maybe felt in touch with the true purposes of music in a way I never had been before - as a hearing, transporting, unifying force." He seemed to tune into both his inner voices and the wider possibilities of his art increasingly in later years; that journey ends with an as yet unnamed new album completed just two weeks ago.
    One of the group's album titles, Heavy Metal Bebop, aptly described the style. Michael's spiky, chromatically dense improvising style developed in this period - but, unlike a good many jazz players turning to funk in the 70s, he never sounded cramped by the rhythm patterns of the idiom. He burst with ideas whether the underpinning was the loose, cruising feel of swing, or the slamming backbeats of rock.
    In 1987 recorded his debut album as a leader (it was jazz album of the year in both Downbeat and Jazziz magazines), and toured with Herbie Hancock's quartet. He also briefly explored the possibilities of an electronic sax, the EWI.
    That first album was well received, partly for the revelation that Brecker had an eloquent compositional talent with which to trigger his torrential saxophone variations (though he never composed extensively, and depended on a close relationship with pianist Gil Goldstein as a composer-arranger). Sideman roles still occasionally tempted him (he toured with Paul Simon in 1991-92 and with Hancock in 1997), and the Brecker Brothers were occasionally coaxed out of retirement, but it was the powerful quartet (often featuring the drummer Jeff "Tain" Watts) that was his most regular vehicle through the 1990s. Albums like Tales From the Hudson, Time Is Of the Essence, The Ballad Book and Wide Angles (2004) displayed the same improvisational verve as ever, but were also showcases for Brecker's high-class admirers - like McCoy Tyner, Metheny, Hancock and Elvin Jones.
    In his 50s, Brecker's improvising gradually shed the grandstanding pyrotechnics, gaining subtler colours, greater contrast and a compelling narrative strength. In 2001, at the invitation of the English Contemporary Music Network, he also successfully explored leadership of a larger band, working with Gil Goldstein and an Anglo-American group on expanded arrangements of his own compositions. A bigger group also participated on Wide Angles, which won two Grammy awards.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 35

  • @jahkneep8351
    @jahkneep8351 11 років тому +3

    had NO idea this was available.. I have the first cd, with Lieb, Lovano and Brecker...went to see them at Jazz fest in Newport but Michael had fallen ill...how amazing to SEE and hear all 3..this version of "India", in it's bow to the original with a new "arrangement" is so beautiful...Thanx a lot for making this available...

  • @luiseckenberger2508
    @luiseckenberger2508 7 років тому +1

    my favorite Video, gr8 Solos, rythm section provides such different moods, ahhh

  • @zitherbefree
    @zitherbefree 13 років тому

    Thank You very much for share, I love it.

  • @Official_David_Milzow_Music
    @Official_David_Milzow_Music 13 років тому +1

    AWESOME, just love it!

  • @123must
    @123must 13 років тому

    Beautiful !!!
    thank yiu

  • @tyaossey
    @tyaossey 13 років тому

    Luv it all. thanks for posting.

  • @callonthesly
    @callonthesly 13 років тому

    thanks 4 the post...Great Stuff..!

  • @drumstudio2000
    @drumstudio2000 13 років тому +1

    go billy go !!!!

  • @luiseckenberger2508
    @luiseckenberger2508 7 років тому +3

    have to laugh out loud cause it s so good n they re all so in it

  • @jevonj77
    @jevonj77 13 років тому +3

    Micheal Brecker completely destroys! on this song...

  • @moxievisioninfo
    @moxievisioninfo 13 років тому

    This is so good!

  • @T.H.W.O.T.H
    @T.H.W.O.T.H Рік тому +1

    Ooff! 🎷🎷🎷

  • @tackyacky
    @tackyacky 12 років тому +1

    As a jazz-lover since childhood, I've heard my share of great performances, especially from michael brecker, who's been an idol for me... but this performance is just JAW-DROPPING!! the trio of saxophonists (and that piano-player!) just-- TRANSCEND what seem like "laws of music" to everyone else... Bravo, what an homage to coltrane!!!

  • @claudinoit
    @claudinoit 13 років тому +2

    liebman è avanti di un secolo sul pensiero musicale

  • @claryscat
    @claryscat 13 років тому +1

    These are seriously sick solos. You gotta have iron chops to hold the horn and work the mechanism... all while blowing your guts out. Some of the fingering combinations jerk the horn so violently that inside of your lower lip gets raw. You gotta be so relaxed to play with that kind of intensity. It's one thing to work the horn and another to have a conception of the music and a personal style. The whole thing had a weird swing to it that glued all the harmonic insanity together.

  • @ianbuxton8332
    @ianbuxton8332 3 роки тому

    👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @jahkneep8351
    @jahkneep8351 11 років тому +2

    Billy Hart is so intense...

  • @avuolo
    @avuolo Рік тому

    jeeeeez

  • @anthupack
    @anthupack 9 років тому +3

    Repito, ese Robben toca muy genial.

  • @jahkneep8351
    @jahkneep8351 11 років тому

    Oh! AND it's a 1/2 hour long...SUPREME!!!!

  • @DavidMGarens
    @DavidMGarens 11 років тому +1

    Reminds me of the Crescent sound, but faster and with other Coltrane lifetime elements thrown in....Love the drums in this~~Wow !

  • @jiyujizai
    @jiyujizai 4 роки тому

    😀💙🎶🌸

  • @marcus2515
    @marcus2515 6 років тому

    I ask myself, would JC be still improving on this were he still here. I say hell yeah. Good stuff.

    • @JazzVideoGuy
      @JazzVideoGuy  6 років тому

      Absolutely. He was always improving, always changing his music and trying to be a better person.

    • @marcus2515
      @marcus2515 6 років тому

      Kool man. Keep on keepin on

  • @klaus8456
    @klaus8456 9 місяців тому

    Liebmans solo is pure witchcraft.

  • @simon12332
    @simon12332 6 років тому

    I want that flute recorder thing Liebman is playing... what is it? is it chromatic...

    • @FCntertainr
      @FCntertainr 5 років тому

      A grenadilla wood flute!

    • @FCntertainr
      @FCntertainr 5 років тому

      I mean Lovano is playing. Lieb is playing another type, whistle type flute.

  • @jahkneep8351
    @jahkneep8351 11 років тому

    Ithink that's what makes this work, the frontline can be"free" but the riddim section has a "pulse' or "drive" that keeps it NOT sounding free...

  • @GeoCoppens
    @GeoCoppens 5 років тому

    Grover Washington is an original???

    • @klaus8456
      @klaus8456 6 місяців тому

      100%

    • @GeoCoppens
      @GeoCoppens 6 місяців тому

      @@klaus8456 Too bad for you that you do not have ears!

    • @klaus8456
      @klaus8456 6 місяців тому

      @@GeoCoppens U dont even know what i listen to and what i dig