I heard this guy recently and was moved to tears. I'm not a sax fan at all but this guy isn't exactly traditional sax player. This man is going somewhere..... I hope. Not many time have I heard a human soul in music. People are too shallow to feel what this guy is laying down unfortunately.
He's worked on plenty of things. He's worked with many artists on Red Dead Redemption 2 and has worked on soundtracks for thrillers/horrors like Hereditary and now Uzumaki, which is where I discovered him. He's going places, even more than he already has.
I love his philosophy!!! Like it's fascinating to see what you can do when you accept the pain, and make that almost satisfying. especially when he talks about how the point isn't the strain, it's the actual music that COMES from that strain.
Having known him in the late 90s/early 00s, and gone to pretty much every gig his bands did back then, when he first started playing around with this technique, I am always jazzed to see him being featured at events, in interviews, etc. Even his more "straight" jazz back then was ahead of its time.
Colin when I first saw you I was quite unwell and took a punt (never hearing you before) on seeing you at the Bimhuis, even though I struggled to get there, and when I left I felt a lot better, physically better. Your music engaged me 100%, I felt your music was homeopathic to me. OK that might not make sense to you but it definitely helped and so thank you.
I heard this guy recently and was moved to tears. I'm not a sax fan at all but this guy isn't exactly traditional sax player. This man is going somewhere..... I hope. Not many time have I heard a human soul in music. People are too shallow to feel what this guy is laying down unfortunately.
He's worked on plenty of things. He's worked with many artists on Red Dead Redemption 2 and has worked on soundtracks for thrillers/horrors like Hereditary and now Uzumaki, which is where I discovered him. He's going places, even more than he already has.
@@queensm.3818 yeah, he "made it". thank god
Very true I can feel what he’s laying down but I can’t feel the true extent
I love his philosophy!!! Like it's fascinating to see what you can do when you accept the pain, and make that almost satisfying. especially when he talks about how the point isn't the strain, it's the actual music that COMES from that strain.
Having known him in the late 90s/early 00s, and gone to pretty much every gig his bands did back then, when he first started playing around with this technique, I am always jazzed to see him being featured at events, in interviews, etc. Even his more "straight" jazz back then was ahead of its time.
Do you know hes doing the soundtrack for an upcoming horror animation called Uzumaki?
Colin when I first saw you I was quite unwell and took a punt (never hearing you before) on seeing you at the Bimhuis, even though I struggled to get there, and when I left I felt a lot better, physically better. Your music engaged me 100%, I felt your music was homeopathic to me. OK that might not make sense to you but it definitely helped and so thank you.
It feels like a jazz version of sungazer
🤔
isnt sungazer already a jazz version of sungazer
@@rams6702 you are very much right. I meant to say sunbather when I said sungazer.
what's going on
I like to think he's playing a tune with his beard during the interview, tabs pls.
Song at the beginning?
visded Awake on foreign shores
Judges
06:27 ❤
whats the song name it sounds epic
“who the waves are roaring for”
interesting…… this music is like nothing i’ve heard before and makes me feel uneasy in that inexplicable kind of way
Someone pls tell me what that last song is ?!?!????
“who the waves are roaring for”
does anyone know the song at 2:14?
i hope you found this by now, but it’s high above a grey green sea
He has a little mouth.