Showing posts with label Oscar Peterson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oscar Peterson. Show all posts

Saturday, September 14, 2024

Daily best music in the world: a good first jazz album

If we learned about music in a nice orderly way, where everything started at a logical beginning with music that was clear and expository, this would be a good first record for finding out about jazz: Oscar Peterson Trio + One. With Ray Brown, Ed Thigpen, and Clark Terry. 

Everything is stated real plainly, for real clear reasons. All the features of the genre are here— to the extent that jazz is a genre. And it's a good sounding recording, with Thigpen playing the drums in a modern way. 

I could have used this sooner than I ever listened to it— I had to figure out how to support this kind of setting on the gig. I came to this music differently— the first things I sought out were by Charlie Parker, Art Blakey, and Miles Davis. Also “classic” jazz, but also rougher, less obvious music. The functions weren't so plain. Listening to a lot of Tony Williams and Elvin Jones I was looking to create a lot of drum energy, but I wasn't so clear on the underlying musical duties, even as I knew the music, forms, and vocabulary generally.  

Here's one track, you can go buy the CD

OK, two tracks: 

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Very occasional quote of the day: Paul Motian

I had at the time 7A drumsticks. After one set one time, Oscar came over and looked at my drumstick and started bending it. He said, “Man, what the f__ kind of stick is that? Go get you some sticks!”

- Paul Motian on playing with Oscar Peterson