Loris Capirossi Vizitator
|
Trimis: Joi Feb 01, 2007 8:22 pm Titlul subiectului: |
|
|
Pe Mezzo se pare ca luna Februarie este dedicata tobarilor:
FOCUS ON THE DRUMS ! JAZZ A VIENNE :
Sunday 4 – 7 pm CET
Trio Beyond featuring Jack DeJohnette, John Scofield & Larry Goldings
Concert (2006, 52mn), directed by Vincent Massip
John Scofield is one of the master of contemporary guitar since three decades. Larry Goldings is a pianist and organist. And the drummer is the legendary Jack DeJohnette.
Born in Chicago in 1942, Jack De Johnette is widely regarded as one of jazz music's greatest drummers. In his early years on the Chicago scene, he led his own groups and was equally in demand as a pianist and as a drummer.
Jack De Johnette has collaborated with most major figures in jazz history. Some of the great talents he has worked with are John Coltrane, Miles Davis, Ornette Coleman, Sonny Rollins, Sun Ra, Jackie McLean, Thelonious Monk, Bill Evans, Stan Getz, Keith Jarrett, Chet Baker, George Benson…
It was in 1968 that De Johnette joined Miles Davis's group in time for the epochal upheaval marked by "Bitches Brew," an album that changed the direction of jazz. In his autobiography, Miles Davis said, "Jack De Johnette gave me a deep groove that I just loved to play over."
In 1968 he recorded his first album as a leader on the Milestone label, called “The De Johnette Complex”, where Jack played melodica along with his mentor Roy Haynes on drums.
Sunday 11 – 7 pm CET
André Ceccarelli and friends
Concert (2004, 52mn), directed by Emmanuel Pampuri
André Ceccarelli (drums), Biréli Lagrène (guitar), Stéphy Haik (vocal), David El Malek (saxophone), Baptiste Trotignon (piano), Thomas Bramerie (bass).
They all came, even those from Italia... And from Nice, old friends like Bireli Lagrène, David El Malek, and Baptiste Trotignon.
Since more than 40 years, André Ceccarelli plays drums and avoids traps of the instrument. He played with the greatest, from Stan Getz to Aznavour, Aretha Franklin… He took part to so much recordings that it would be easier to tell with whom he didn’t played. Incredible studio musician, luxury sideman, "Dédé" is also composer and leader.
Calm and passionate, André Ceccarelli is glowing around his musicians, inspiring friendship and admiration.
Sunday 18 – 7 pm CET
Ahmad Jamal featuring Idris Muhammad
Concert (2005, 46mn), directed by Emmanuel Pampuri
With James Cammack : bass, Idris Muhammad : drums.
Critic Stanley Crouch cites Ahmad Jamal's impact on the fresh form in jazz as an outstanding conceptionalist. He consider's Mr. Jamal's distinctive style as having had an influence on the same level as "Jelly Roll Morton, Fletcher Henderson, Duke Ellington, Art Tatum, Count Basie, Theolonius Monk, Horace Silver and John Lewis, all thinkers whose wrestling with form and content influenced the shape and texture of the music, and whose ensembles were models of their music visions."
An excellent drummer who has appeared in many types of settings, Idris Muhammad became a professional when he was 16. He played primarily soul and R&B during 1962-1964 and then spent 1965-1967 as a member of Lou Donaldson's band. He was the house drummer at Prestige Records (1970-1972), appearing on many albums as a sideman. Of his later jazz associations, Muhammad played with Johnny Griffin (1978-1979), Pharoah Sanders in the 1980s, George Coleman, and the Paris Reunion Band (1986-1988). He has recorded everything from post-bop to dance music as a leader for such labels as Prestige, Kudu, Fantasy, Theresa, and Lipstick.
Sunday 25 – 7 pm CET
John Zorn featuring Joey Baron
Concert (2006, 52mn), directed by Vincent Massip
With John Zorn (sax player), Dave Douglas (trumpet), Greg Cohen (bass), Joey Baron (drums).
John Zorn is an American composer and saxophone player. He owns his own record company (called Tzadik), so he's free to do whatever he wants. He's used this freedom to write and record dozens of strange and beautiful albums. By the end of the 1990s, he was releasing at least six per year.
Zorn's four-piece jazz band “Massada” (trumpet, saxophone, drums, bass) recorded ten albums in the studio, followed by a series of live albums. The songs are based on Jewish musical themes, with a loose structure that encourages each player to improvise.
Drummer Joey Baron was born into a Jewish working class family in Richmond, Virginia. He is largely self-taught by means of watching others play and listening to recordings, radio and television. His early influences ran the gamut from Ed Sullivan show guests, to "The Wild Wild West" television show theme to records by Art Blakey, Ray Charles, Booker T. & the M.G.'s, James Brown, The Beatles and Jimi Hendrix.
Besides being a member of the Bill Frisell Band for ten years until 1995, he has performed and recorded with an impressive list of musicians - including Carmen McRae, Dizzy Gillespie, Tony Bennett, Hampton Hawes, Chet Baker, Laurie Anderson, Art Pepper, Stan Getz, Lee Konitz, Joe Lovano, Vinicus Cantuaria, Jay McShann, David Bowie…
Monday 5 - 7 pm CET
In the name of Jazz : Manu’s highlights
Documentary (2006, 56mn), directed by Daniel Farhi
With Steve Turre, Lonnie Liston Smith, David Murray, Fred Wesley and Roy Ayers.
Monday 12 – 7 pm CET
Al Foster
Concert (2004, 52mn), directed by Patrick Savey
Al Foster , master drummer, has been a major innovator in the world of jazz for several decades. As a member of the Miles Davis band for thirteen years, Foster's contribution to Davis' music is articulated by Davis himself in his 1989 autobiography, Miles. When Davis describes the first time he heard Foster play live in 1972 at the Cellar Club on 95th Street in Manhattan, he says “ He [Foster] knocked me out because he had such a groove and he would just lay it right in there. That was the kind of thing I was looking for. AI could set it up for everybody else to play off and just keep the groove going forever."
Recorded at the New Morning in 2004, during the JVC Jazz Festival, the legendary drummer plays with the quartet composed of Kevin Hays (piano), Eli Degibri (saxophones) and Doug Weiss (double bass).
Monday 19 – 7 pm CET
Joe Zawinul Syndicate featuring Paco Séry
Concert (2002, 52mn), directed by Patrick Savey
Joe Zawinul is deservedly renowned for his pioneering role in the Jazz world combining the elements of world music rock and jazz. In fact, many of the worldbeat sounds we take for granted today, simply wouldn't exist without his revolutionary compositions and performances with Miles Davis in the late 60s, Weather Report in the 70 - 80s, and The Zawinul Syndicate in the 90s evolving into the year 2004. At age 73, Joe Zawinul is still leading the way and has something fresh to say.
The starting hut Born the 1st of May 1956 at Divo in the Ivory-Coast, Paco Séry has always been fascinated by Drums and remembers the “tom-toms summoning the country man to lunch”. He made his first drums out of wood at the age of 9 - his first bass drum, and all the others drums, too, himself... His music is a mix of groove, afrobeat, funk with the jazz feel providing the ever solid foundation of his music. Eddy Louiss, Nina Simone, Jaco Pastorius, Sixun, The New Zawinul Syndicate, Paco SERY also played with : Monty Alexander, Mino Cinelu, Dee Dee Bridewater, Nicole Croisille, Idrissa Diop, Rido Bayonne, André Ceccarelli, Billy Cobham, Michel Colombier, Charlélie Couture, Manu Dibango, Jacques Higelin, Eddie Gomez, Jean-Michel Jarre, Salif Keita, Eric Lelann, François Louga, Didier Lockwood, Ray Lema, Claude Nougaro…
Monday 26 – 7 pm CET |
|