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-   -   The Jazz & Blues Recommendation Thread (https://www.musicbanter.com/jazz-blues/38325-jazz-blues-recommendation-thread.html)

Lisnaholic 01-16-2016 11:24 AM

Quote:

Glad you dug Aziza. She's not only an amazing pianist, but also a very accomplished singer.
Here she is doing an azerbaijani, operatic twist on scat singing.


^ wow, I didn't expect her to have such a powerful voice ! I was also surprised to see the list of famous musicians lending a hand on her Dance of Fire album.
And here's a track that caught my eye on YouTube; what an exquisite tone to her piano playing:-



Quote:

Originally Posted by grindy (Post 1670236)
Never heard of Regina Carter. That's some great musicianship. Will have to check out those albums.
If you can't find music on the internet, use soulseek. It's the program for downloading unfindable stuff.

^ Well, with a violin, an accordion and a kora in the line up, she's off to a good start, right?
Likewise, Aziza Mustafa is new to me.Thanks for the tip; I'll see if soulseek works for me too.

ChelseaDagger 01-16-2016 07:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lisnaholic (Post 1670233)
Yeah, I like Nina Simone too, though I would've posted Strange Fruit as my fave.

My rec today is the opposite of Muddy Water's rough blues singing - it really follows on more from grindy's post of Aziza M.Z., which is really beautiful. Regina Carter has made some mainstream and collaborative jazz albums, but much more interesting imo are two more recent albums; the charming Reverse Thread (2010) in which she explores her African heritage in twelve faultless tracks, of which this is an example:



Her next album, Southern Comfort came out in 2014, and she'll tell you about it herself if you listen to the two tracks here. Unfortunately, I can't find much of this album on the internet, so any help would be appreciated. ;)


Thank you for posting this.

Lisnaholic 01-17-2016 11:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ChelseaDagger (Post 1670407)
Thank you for posting this.

^ You're very welcome, ChelseaDagger. Do you have any recommendations of your own for us?

Mr. Charlie 01-17-2016 02:22 PM

Love those Regina Carter tracks. Great vibe. :love:

grindy 01-20-2016 07:30 AM

Since Rusconi just now released a new live album with Fred Frith, I remembered this older song.
I don't think they are particularly jazzy, but they are usually described as a jazz trio, so I'm posting this here.
Seems more like some kind of post-rock with Frith's usual beautiful guitar styling added.
As a bonus the clip is fun, well done and features cute animals.
What more can you ask for?


ChelseaDagger 01-20-2016 08:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lisnaholic (Post 1670591)
^ You're very welcome, ChelseaDagger. Do you have any recommendations of your own for us?

Thanks for the invite, man, but I'm still in the wee purist stages of jazz ;) I mainly come here to leech off you conneissuers, muahahaha.

Seriously though, I had no clue that bluegrass was considered jazz. This should keep me busy for the next couple weeks :tramp:

grindy 01-20-2016 09:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ChelseaDagger (Post 1671634)
Seriously though, I had no clue that bluegrass was considered jazz.

It isn't.:confused:
There are a few jazzy elements, but it's not particularly noticeable.

ChelseaDagger 01-20-2016 09:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by grindy (Post 1671646)
It isn't.:confused:
There are a few jazzy elements, but it's not particularly noticeable.

I'm still talking about Regina Carter. Some serious bluegrass influence, at the very least. Not all bluegrass is purist, either, after all ;)

grindy 01-20-2016 09:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ChelseaDagger (Post 1671648)
I'm still talking about Regina Carter. Some serious bluegrass influence, at the very least. Not all bluegrass is purist, either, after all ;)

Oh, okay.
I thought you meant that bluegrass is a sub-genre of jazz or something like that. It really isn't.

ChelseaDagger 01-20-2016 09:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by grindy (Post 1671652)
Oh, okay.
I thought you meant that bluegrass is a sub-genre of jazz or something like that. It really isn't.

You will never hear me claim to know anything about genre classification. I'll leave that to all you whippersnappers.


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