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Cannonball Adderley

Blog

12…6Próximo
  • Top albums - summer '09

    Set 27 2009, 6h30 por wolowina-saute

    wolowina-saute's top albums (3 months)
    1. I Monster - Neveroddoreven (116)
    2. Bar Kokhba - Lucifer - Book of Angels Vol. 10 (113) 3. Masada - Tet (102)
    4. Herbie Hancock - Cantaloupe Island (97)
    5. Crippled Black Phoenix - 200 Tons of Bad Luck (95)
    6. Combustible Edison - I, Swinger (92)
    7. Dexter Gordon - Go! (86)
    8. Masada - Gimel (85)
    9. Cannonball Adderley - Somethin' Else (84)
    10. Nina Simone - At the Village Gate (77)
    11. Beck - The Velvet Underground & Nico (Record Club version) (76)
    12. Kasabian - Kasabian (73)
    13. Bar Kokhba Sextet - 50th Birthday Celebration, Vol. 11 (71)
    14. Masada - Alef (68)
    15. Charles Mingus - Mingus Ah Um (66)
    16. Chet Baker - My Funny Valentine (66)
    17. John Coltrane - Blue Train (64)
    18. Moby - Wait For Me (63)
    19. I Monster - These Are Our Children (62) 20. The Budos Band - The Budos Band (60)
    21. Masada - Dalet (59)
    22. R.E.M. - Reckoning (Deluxe Edition) (57)
    23. Fever Ray - Fever Ray (55)
    24. Nouvelle Vague - 3 (54)
    25. Six Organs of Admittance - Luminous Night (53)
    26. Kasabian - West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum (53)
    27. Thievery Corporation - The Cosmic Game (51)
    28. Thelonious Monk - Jazz Moods - 'Round Midnight (50)
    29. Jane's Addiction - Jane's Addiction (48)
    30. Buena Vista Social Club - Buena Vista Social Club (47)

    Top albums generator
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  • Статистика, часть 5: джаз // Stats, part 5: jazz

    Ago 20 2009, 16h15 por -273C

    Очередной пост, посвященный статистике. Сегодня нашей темой является джаз (точнее, топ-100 тега jazz).

    Just another one statistical post. Jazz is our field of research today (top-100 of the tag jazz, to be exact).

    предыдущие посты / previous entries
    mainstream
    russian rock
    progressive rock
    black metal

    Сначала наше традиционное упорядочение по количеству прослушиваний и слушателей.

    First of all, our traditional arrangement with respect to number of plays and number of listeners.


    Pic. 1 - full size




    Pic. 2 - full size


    И тут, и там наиболее популярным исполнителем является Amy Winehouse (и, да, по личным соображениям я убрал из статистики Тома Уэйтса). Дальше начинается вполне классический джаз - Norah Jones, Frank Sinatra, Louis Armstrong и так далее.

    In both cases the most popular artist is Amy Winehouse (and, yes, I supposed it would be correct to exclude Tom Waits from jazz stats). Then the things go more classical: Norah Jones, Frank Sinatra, Louis Armstrong and so on.


    Pic. 3


    А вот так выглядит общая зависимость количества прослушиваний джазовых исполнителей от числа слушателей. Заметно, что чем правее, тем сильнее эта зависимость идет вверх. Таким образом, получается, что лидеры находятся на каком-то особенном положении у слушателей.

    And that's the way, general dependence of playcount to number of listeners looks like. You can notice, it's bending upwards with growing number of listeners. So, that means, the leaders of our statistics are treated by listeners in a different way, than other artists.


    Pic. 4 - full size


    Это также подтверждается графиком удельного числа прослушиваний (число прослушиваний делить на число слушателей для каждого исполнителя). Вообще, у джаза этот показатель оказался рекордно низким - в среднем 11 прослушиваний. Наибольший показатель у вездесущей Эми Уайнхаус - 32.

    The graph of specific number of scrobbles (a playcount divided by number of listeners for each artist) confirms that notation. Surprisingly, jazz artists have very low specific scrobble number - 11 in average. Amy Winehouse has the highest one - 32.


    Pic. 5


    Гистограмма лишь подтверждает печальный факт концентрации удельного числа прослушиваний вблизи рекордно низких значений, в целом по форме повторяя распределение для других жанров. Джаз умер?

    The histogram just supports concentrating of specific number of scrobbles near very low values, repeating the histogram for other genres in general. Sad, but true. Is jazz dead?


    Pic. 6


    Немного статистики по активности слушателей в рупорах исполнителей. Как видно из графика, какой-либо строгой зависимости числа сообщений в рупоре от числа слушателей не наблюдается. То, что более популярным исполнителям больше пишут, понятно и так. Кстати, Эми Уайнхаус я сюда не включил - взглянув на следующий график, вы поймете, почему.

    Some stats about the user activity in shoutboxes. As one can see, there's no strict dependence of number of shouts to number of listeners. It's obvious, that more popular artists should get more shouts. By the way, Amy Winehouse isn't included here - see the next plot to understand why.


    Pic.7


    А вот зависимость числа сообщений в рупоре от удельного числа прослушиваний. Эми Уайнхаус и здесь лидирует, причем с шестикратным отрывом. Короче говоря, для джаза она - исполнитель, аномальный по всем параметрам) А вот если убрать Эми, то будет видно обнаруженое ранее явление: среднее удельное число прослушиваний является чем-то вроде барьера, разделяющего исполнителей с малым и с большим числом сообщений в рупоре. Посмотрим, что покажут другие жанры)

    And here's the dependence of number of shouts in the shoutbox to specific number of scrobbles. Amy Winehouse takes the lead again, having six times more shouts than others. So, she's really anomalous for the jazz. And without Amy, the graph exhibits the property, found in previous research: average specific number of scrobbles behaves like a barrier, separating artists with few shouts from artists with lots of them. Let us see, what another genres would show us the next time)

    P.S. Суммарное число прослушиваний в top-100 джаза - 348 миллионов.
    The total playcount in jazz's top-100 is 348 millions.

    P.P.S. Спасибо Hzlqgmnzhh за полезный скрипт.
    Thanks to Hzlqgmnzhh for his script.

    List of considered artists:

    Miles Davis, Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, Ella Fitzgerald, John Coltrane, Frank Sinatra, Norah Jones, Diana Krall, Louis Armstrong, Herbie Hancock, Charles Mingus, Chet Baker, Amy Winehouse, Thelonious Monk, Jamie Cullum, Duke Ellington, Django Reinhardt, Charlie Parker, Bill Evans, Michael Buble', Katie Melua, Madeleine Peyroux, Nat King Cole, Ray Charles, Sarah Vaughan, Esbjo"rn Svensson Trio, Keith Jarrett, Dave Brubeck, Stan Getz, Pat Metheny, The Cinematic Orchestra, Oscar Peterson, Cassandra Wilson, Count Basie, Pat Metheny Group, Dizzy Gillespie, Dinah Washington, Koop, Weather Report, John Zorn, Richard Cheese, Sonny Rollins, Wayne Shorter, Pink Martini, The Bad Plus, Chick Corea, Wes Montgomery, George Benson, Melody Gardot, Dexter Gordon, Julie London, Brad Mehldau, Cannonball Adderley, Squirrel Nut Zippers, Eva Cassidy, Stacey Kent, Benny Goodman, John Scofield, Horace Silver, Room Eleven, The Dave Brubeck Quartet, Skalpel, Astrud Gilberto, Marcus Miller, Jan Garbarek, Wynton Marsalis, Lee Morgan, Tord Gustavsen Trio, Peggy Lee, Glenn Miller, Bill Frisell, Jimmy Smith, Jaga Jazzist, Sade, Harry Connick, Jr., Freddie Hubbard, Donald Byrd, Bill Evans Trio, Lisa Ekdahl, Lizz Wright, Erik Truffaz, Ella Fitzgerald & Louis, Ornette Coleman, Blossom Dearie, Jaco Pastorius, Sun Ra, Etta James, The Cat Empire, Paolo Conte, Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers, Mahavishnu Orchestra, Grant Green, Avishai Cohen, Quincy Jones, Al Di Meola, Keiko Matsui, Al Jarreau, Morphine, Silje Nergaard
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  • Best Albums of the Late Fifties (1956-1959)

    Ago 17 2009, 19h30 por thomas10

    1959;

    1 Miles Davis - Kind of Blue
    2 Marty Robbins - Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs
    3 Charles Mingus - Mingus Ah Um
    4 Sonny Boy Williamson - Down And Out Blues
    5 Ornette Coleman - The Shape of Jazz to Come
    6 Bo Diddley - Go Bo Diddley
    7 The Dave Brubeck Quartet - Time Out!
    8 Huey "Piano" Smith & The Clowns - Having A Good Time
    9 Elvis Presley - For LP Fans Only
    10 The Everly Brothers - The Everly Brothers
    11 Blue Mitchell - Blue Soul
    12 Howlin' Wolf - Moanin' In The Moonlight
    13 Ray Charles - The Genius of Ray Charles
    14 Rev. Gary Davis - Rev. Gary Davis at Newport
    15 Ritchie Valens - Ritchie Valens


    1958;

    1 Chuck Berry - Chuck Berry Is On Top
    2 Billie Holiday - Lady in Satin
    3 Sun Ra - Jazz In Silhouette
    4 Miles Davis/Gil Evans - Porgy and Bess
    5 Screamin' Jay Hawkins - At Home With Screamin' Jay Hawkins
    6 Cannonball Adderley - Somethin' Else
    7 The Kingston Trio - The Kingston Trio
    8 Tito Puente - Dance Mania
    9 Lou Donaldson - Blues Walk
    10 Jimmy Smith - The Sermon
    11 Sonny Rollins - Freedom Suite
    12 Johnny "Guitar" Watson - Gangster of Love
    13 Art Blakey - Moanin'
    14 Sam Cooke - Sam Cooke
    15 Elvis Presley - King Creole


    1957;

    1 Bo Diddley - Bo Diddley
    2 Jerry Lee Lewis - Jerry Lee Lewis
    3 Louis Prima - The Wildest!
    4 Machito - Kenya
    5 John Coltrane - Blue Train
    6 The Crickets - The "Chirping" Crickets
    7 Dale Hawkins - Oh! Suzy Q
    8 Screamin' Jay Hawkins - I Put A Spell On You
    9 Sabu - Palo Congo
    10 Ray Charles - Ray Charles
    11 Carl Perkins - Dance Album
    12 Amos Milburn - Let's Have A Party
    13 Dizzy Gillespie - At Newport
    14 Little Richard - Here's Little Richard
    15 Johnny Cash - Johnny Cash With His Hot and Blue Guitar


    1956;

    1 Elvis Presley - Elvis Presley
    2 Odetta - Odetta Sings Ballads and Blues
    3 Duke Ellington - Ellington at Newport
    4 Thelonious Monk - Brilliant Corners
    5 Harry Belafonte - Calypso
    6 Sonny Rollins - Saxophone Colossus
    7 Ravi Shankar - Three Ragas
    8 Bill Haley - Shake Rattle and Roll
    9 Gene Vincent - Bluejean Bop!
    10 Fats Domino - This Is Fats
    11 Frank Sinatra - Songs For Swingin' Lovers!
    12 Ella Fitzgerald - Sings The Cole Porter Song Book
    13 Charles Mingus - Pithecanthropus Erectus
    14 Billie Holiday - Lady Sings the Blues
    15 Dinah Washington - Dinah!


    See also;
    Best Albums of The Sixties;
    http://www.last.fm/user/thomas10/journal/2009/08/17/2y23k7_best_albums_of_the_sixties_%281960-1969%29

    Best albums of The Seventies;
    http://www.last.fm/user/thomas10/journal/2009/08/17/2y22fg_best_albums_of_the_seventies_%281970-1979%29

    Best Albums of the Eighties;
    http://www.last.fm/user/thomas10/journal/2009/08/17/2y24lq_best_albums_of_the_eighties_%281980-1989%29

    Best Albums of The Nineties;
    http://www.last.fm/user/thomas10/journal/2009/08/17/2y25kn_best_albums_of_the_nineties_%281990-1999%29

    Best Albums of The Noughties;
    http://www.last.fm/user/thomas10/journal/2009/09/08/2zux3s_best_albums_of_the_noughties_%282000-2009%29
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  • Chosen records I: 1950s

    Ago 14 2009, 19h38 por samueljeronimo

    - Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengers, Moanin’ (Blue Note, 1959);
    - Bernard Herrmann, Vertigo [Original 1958 Sountrack] (Mercury, 1958);
    - Cannonball Adderley, Somethin' else (Blue Note, 1958);
    - Charles Mingus, Mingus ah um (Columbia, 1959);
    - Chet Baker, My funny valentine (Blue Note, 1953);
    - Chet Baker, Chet (Riverside, 1959);
    - Coleman Hawkins, The hawk flies high (Riverside, 1957);
    - Count Basie Orchestra, E=MC2 (Blue Note, 1957);
    - Dave Brubeck Quartet (The), Time out (Columbia, 1959);
    - Dinah Washington, After hours with miss “D” (Verve, 1954);
    - Donald Byrd, Byrd in hand (Blue Note, 1959);
    - Ella Fitzgerald/Louis Armstrong, Ella and Louis (Verve, 1956);
    - Elvis Presley, Elvis Presley (Sun, 1956);
    - Erroll Garner, Concert by the sea (Columbia, 1955);
    - Gene Ammons, Blue Gene (Prestige, 1958);
    - George Russell, New York, NY (DECCA, 1959);
    - Gerry Mulligan Quartet, Pacific jazz (Blue Note, 1952);
    - Horace Silver, Blowin' the blues away (Blue Note, 1959);
    - John Coltrane, Blue train (Blue Note, 1957);
    - John Coltrane, Lush Live (Universal, 1958);
    - John Coltrane, Soultrane (Prestige, 1958);
    - Karlheinz Stockhausen, Kontakte (Ecstatic Peace, 1959);
    - Maynard Ferguson, The Birdland Dream Band (RCA Victor, 1956);
    - Miles Davis, Blue haze (Prestige, 1954);
    - Miles Davis, 'Round about midnight (Columbia, 1957);
    - Miles Davis, Birth of the cool (Capitol, 1957);
    - Miles Davis, Milestones (Columbia, 1958);
    - Miles Davis, Porgy and Bess (Columbia, 1958);
    - Miles Davis, Kind of blue (Columbia, 1959);
    - Miles Davis, Sketches of Spain (Columbia, 1959);
    - Miles Davis Quintet, Workin' (Universal, 1959);
    - Ornette Coleman, The shape of jazz to come (Atlantic, 1959);
    - Ornette Coleman, Tomorrow is the question (JVC Victor, 1959);
    - Ornette Coleman, Change of the century (Atlantic, 1959);
    - Sonny Clark, Cool struttin’ (Blue Note, 1958);
    - Sonny Rollins, Sonny Rollins with the Modern Jazz Quartet (Prestige, 1951);
    - Sonny Rollins, Saxophone colossus (Prestige, 1956);
    - Sonny Rollins, Vol. 2 (Blue Note, 1957);
    - Sun Ra, Jazz in silhouette (Evidence, 1958);
    - Teddy Wilson Trio, Teddy Wilson Trio (Metronome, 1950);
    - Thelonious Monk, Genius of modern music, Vol. 2 (Blue Note, 1952);
    - Thelonious Monk, Brilliant corners (Riverside, 1956);
    - Thelonious Monk Septet, Monk's music (Riverside, 1957);
    - Thelonious Monk /John Coltrane, Thelonius Monk with John Coltrane (Riversid, 1958);
    - Thelonious Monk/Sonny Rollins, Thelonious Monk & Sonny Rollins (Prestige, 1954).
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  • Stunning instrumentals

    Mar 24 2009, 20h14 por hdsander

    My friend oslofish told me to make a list. :)



    With little help of my friends, here are stunning instrumentals, ordered by year of the album release:

    • West End Blues (feat. Earl Hines) by Louis Armstrong & HIs Hot Five
    • In The Mood by Glenn Miller & His Orchestra
    • Tocar'Round Midnight by Thelonious Monk
    • TocarTake Five by The Dave Brubeck Quartet
    • Giant Steps by John Coltrane Quartet
    • TocarApache by The Shadows
    • Rhapsody In Blue by Duke Ellington & His Orchestra
    • TocarSoul Bossa Nova by Quincy Jones
    • TocarWipe Out by The Surfaris
    • Tocartelstar by tornados
    • TocarToad by Cream
    • TocarRepent Walpurgis by Procol Harum
    • Air by Ekseption
    • Albatross by Fleetwood Mac
    • Bourée by Jethro Tull
    • TocarIn Memory Of Elizabeth Reed by The Allman Brothers Band
    • Echoes by Pink Floyd
    • TocarAlso sprach Zarathustra by Eumir Deodato
    • Frankenstein by Edgar Winter Group
    • TocarTubular Bells (part one) by Mike Oldfield
    • The Köln Concert: Part I by Keith Jarrett
    • Over Birkerot by Terje Rypdal
    • The Hustle by Van McCoy
    • TocarEuropa by Carlos Santana
    • TocarEuropa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile) by Gato Barbieri
    • TocarRise by Herb Alpert
    • Oxygene (Part IV) by Jean-Michel Jarre
    • Trans-Europa Express by Kraftwerk
    • Star Wars Theme / Cantina Band by Meco
    • TocarBirdland by Weather Report
    • TocarLove's Theme by Giorgio Moroder
    • TocarZorba by Mikis Theodorakis
    • TocarGreen Onions by Booker T. & The MG's
    • TocarAnne's Song by William Ackerman
    • El Becko by Jeff Beck
    • TocarWalk Don't Run by The Ventures
    • Mediterranean Sundance/Rio Ancho by Paco De Lucia & Al Di Meola
    • TocarYYZ by Rush
    • TocarDas Boot (Single Version) by Klaus Doldinger
    • Love on a Real Train (Risky Business) by Tangerine Dream
    • TocarAxel F. by Harold Faltermeyer
    • TocarGabriel's Oboe by Ennio Morricone
    • Miami Vice Theme by Jan Hammer
    • TocarMinute By Minute by Larry Carlton
    • TocarJessica by The Allman Brothers Band
    • TocarCliffs of Dover by Eric Johnson
    • Blame It on My Youth by Keith Jarrett Trio
    • TocarOur Love Is here To Stay by Dave Grusin
    • TocarRockit by Herbie Hancock
    • Concerto de Aranjuez by Paco de Lucia
    • Pick Up the Pieces by Average White Band
    • Hocus Pocus by Focus
    • Mercy, Mercy, Mercy! by Cannonball Adderley
    • Theme De Camille by Georges Delerue
    • TocarThe Pink Panther Theme by Henry Mancini
    • The Creek by Jan Garbarek
    • TocarMinor Swing by Django Reinhardt
    • TocarSong From A Secret Garden by Secret Garden
    • Blitzkrieg Bop (instrumental) by Yo La Tengo
    • TocarFlaming June by BT
    • Machine Gun by The Commodores
    • TocarDays of Wine and Roses by Dave Grusin
    • Manhattan (Live) by Eric Johnson
    • TocarLa Femme d'argent by Air
    • Local Hero/Wild Theme (live) by Dire Straits
    • TocarParadigm Shift by Liquid Tension Experiment
    • Lovers of Light by Afro Celt Sound System
    • Shenandoah (for Johnny Smith) by Bill Frisell
    • JFK (Prologue) by John Williams
    • TocarAcid Rain by Liquid Tension Experiment
    • Riviera '68 by Steve Stevens
    • Nothing Else Matters (live) by Apocalyptica
    • Love's theme by Barry White's Love Unlimited Orchestra
    • TocarThe Riddle (instrumental) by Gigi D'Agostino
    • TocarSpirit by Moby
    • TocarSure Thing by St. Germain
    • TocarVeridis Quo by Daft Punk
    • TocarTake The a Train by Duke Ellington
    • TocarQuantum Soup by Jordan Rudess
    • TocarPhunkdified by Justin King
    • River Flows in You by Yiruma
    • Gymnopedie Nº1 by Erik Satie
    • TocarLittle Wing by Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble
    • Stream of Consciousness by Dream Theater
    • TocarFirst Breath After Coma by Explosions in the Sky
    • TocarYour Hand In Mine by Explosions in the Sky
    • 'Cause We've Ended As Lovers by Jeff Beck
    • I Know You Are But What Am I? by Mogwai
    • Chariots Of Fire by Vangelis
    • Beach Party Tonight by Yo La Tengo
    • TocarPallar Anders Visa by In Flames
    • Midnight Express by Nuno Bettencourt
    • TocarNatasha '75 by Ralph Myerz and the Jack Herren Band
    • TocarAlma by Teddybears STHLM
    • TocarAngelina by Tommy Emmanuel
    • TocarAutomagic by Worm Is Green
    • Kiss The Rain by Yiruma
    • I Heard It Through the Grapevine by Bill Frisell
    • Dayvan Cowboy by Boards of Canada
    • Exit Music (for a Film) by Brad Mehldau
    • The Voyage by Emilie Simon
    • Superheroes of BMX by Mogwai
    • Tsunami by Mozdzer Danielsson Fresco
    • America (Single Version) by The Nice
    • Nachtflug by Schiller
    • Bagatelle in A Minor, WoO 59 - "Für Elise" by Vladimir Ashkenazy
    • See In You by The Album Leaf
    • Death Is the Road to Awe by Clint Mansell
    • TocarClair de Lune by Claude Debussy
    • Nocturne no.2 by Frederic Chopin
    • TocarRitual Dance by Kaki King
    • Unfinished Sympathy by Maxence Cyrin
    • TocarStairway To Heaven by Rodrigo y Gabriela
    • TocarDolce droga by Ludovico Einaudi
    • Piano B (Instrumental as heard on French TV) by Phildel
    • Altered Beast by Vessels
    • Comptine d'un autre été : L'après-midi by Yann Tiersen
    • Ride of the Valkyries by Budapest Symphony Orchestra
    • To The Kingdom by Phildel
    • TocarRöyksopp Forever by Röyksopp
    • Ti Ki by Sigur Rós


    Thanks to all who sent me contributions to the list. Originally planned as a small compilation, I gathered 121 tunes now. A few exceptions had to be made as with Kraftwerk's Trans-Europa Express or Pink Floyd's Echoes which in fact have some vocals, but are mainly instrumental tracks.

    Additions:
    • TocarEruption by Van Halen
    • Avril 14th by Aphex Twin
    • TocarWhispering a Prayer by Steve Vai
    • TocarFor the Love of God by Steve Vai
    • TocarRed River Rock by Johnny and The Hurricanes
    • The Good, The Bad And The Ugly by Quincy Jones Feat. Herbie Hancock
    • Larks' Tongues in Aspic, Pt. II by King Crimson
    • Atom Heart Mother Suite by Pink Floyd
    • Cobra by Quicksilver Messenger Service
    • TocarHalleluhwah by Can
    • Spiel mir das Lied vom Tod (Man With the Harmonica) by Ennio Morricone
    • Anonymous Two by Focus
    • Popcorn by Hot Butter
    • Dan the Banjoman by Dan the Banjoman
    • Eruption by Focus
    • Dance With The Devil by Cozy Powell
    • Hamburger Concerto by Focus
    • Red by King Crimson
    • Knock Out by Charly Antolini
    • TocarPeter Gunn Theme by The Blues Brothers
    • TocarAmarok (Excerpt) by Mike Oldfield
    • TocarTequila by The Champs
    • Wild Goose Flaps its Wings by Mike Oldfield
    • TocarWade in the Water by The Ramsey Lewis Trio
    • Maggot brain by Eddie Hazel
    • Conquest Of Paradise by Vangelis
    • TocarPeaches En Regalia by Frank Zappa
    • TocarTamacun by Rodrigo y Gabriela
    • TocarNut Rocker by B. Bumble & The Stingers




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  • Top 50 artists thing. blah blah blah.

    Fev 23 2009, 0h50 por deep_zeppelin

    I'm bored...so here it is. Something about my top 50 artists.

    1. What's your favorite song by 14?
    Iron Maiden - TocarHallowed Be Thy Name (especially the Live After Death version)

    2. How did you get into 20?
    Tom Petty - I think it was just from hearing various songs on the radio and being like...wow, this guy is good!

    3. Who is your favorite member in 8?
    Guns N' Roses - I guess Slash. Axl Rose is a moron and everyone else isn't all that good. Oh, and Slash isn't a bad guitarist either :P

    4. What's your favorite lyric bit by 29?
    Upsize - I don't even know.

    5. Have you ever seen 22 live?
    Cannonball Adderley - I wish

    6. What's your favorite album from 10?
    Deep Purple - Yikes that's hard since they have so many albums, but I think right now my favorite one would be Deep Purple in Rock

    7. Do you own any merchandise from 3?
    fleet - Besides CDs and vinyls? No.

    8. What is a good memory you have of 7?
    The Doors - uhh waking up to The End is actually sort of cool.

    9. Is there a member of the same age as you in 2?
    Led Zeppelin - No way!

    10. When did you first get into 1?
    The Velvet Underground - It was a very gradual process. First my sister had their debut album and I listened occasionally...then they just got to me one day. And from that day on...nothing in the world was the same.

    11. Who likes 4 along with you?
    Sublime - Quite a few people I would say.

    12. Which song did you first hear from 15?
    Cinderella - TocarNobody's Fool

    13. What song made you fall in love with 5?
    Jefferson Airplane - TocarWe Can Be Together

    14. Which song do you not like by 18?
    Dire Straits - I like everything that I have from them

    15. Why do you like 16 songs?

    Def Leppard - Because they have that "awesome" 80's catchy hair metal sound that I so shamefully enjoy so much.

    16. Where did you first hear 6?
    Skid Row - I was looking up hair metal bands and they were on a list

    17. How long was 19 a band before you liked them?

    Yes - They formed in 1968...and i found them in 2008. Took 40 years. Not bad considering I've been alive for 17 years.

    18. Does 13 have a song that gives you a bad memory?
    Poison - Uhh besides feeling guilty for loving it? Nope.

    19. When did you get into 17?
    The Clash - Back in 7th grade!

    20. How long have you been into 11?
    Genesis - Just a year...if even.

    21. If 9 had a concert 300 miles away, would you drive there to see them?
    The Who - Without. A. Doubt.

    22. How many CDs do you own of 12?
    Brazilian Girls - I own a lot of CDs by artists I like...but I don't have a physical copy of any of their albums. I have 3 of them on mp3 though.

    23. Does 21 have a song that makes you cry?
    Black Sabbath - No...not really.

    24. Does 27 have a song that makes you happy?
    The Rolling Stones - TocarGimme Shelter. Only if adrenaline rush and excitement counts as happy.

    25. Does 23 have a song that makes you smile?
    Buckingham Nicks - Not that I can think of

    26. What's the last song you've listened to from 28?
    Sebastian Bach - According to iTunes, its TocarOur Love Is A Lie

    27. Is there a song by 32 that you've listened to more than 30 times?
    Ozzy Osbourne - mr. crowly, TocarOver The Mountain and TocarGoodbye to Romance

    28. What is a song from 50 that you've only listened to once?
    Jimi Hendrix - That I own? No.

    29. Is there a song you are sick of hearing by 24?
    Savatage - nah.

    30. What song got you into 40?
    Steve Vai - TocarErotic Nightmares

    31. What is your favorite single by 25?
    Violent Femmes - I'm assuming TocarBlister in the Sun was one of their few singles...but its not my favorite from them.

    32. If 49 hated you, what would you do?
    Freddie Hubbard - Cry

    33. What would you say if 42 or one of the members from 42 asked you out?
    Television - I love your music...but you're a bunch of guys and not to good looking either.

    34. Would you care if 41 had a boyfriend/girlfriend?
    Stevie Nicks - Yes I would. Grrrr.

    35. Who has the best voice in 46?
    Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers - No voices...

    36. Do you think 26 is/are good looking?
    T. Rex - no.

    37. How many times have you listened to your favorite song by 36?
    Andrew Lloyd Weber - Gethsemane (I only want to say). 30 times.

    38. How many CDs do you own of 30?
    Whitesnake - I own a lot of mp3s of them...I do have one cassette though.

    39. Is there a song from 38 that makes you mad?
    Ratt - nope.

    40. Which member from 31 do you want to see go solo? If 31 is only one artist, what would you do if they joined a group?
    311 - I don't know the band itself well enough to care

    41. What does your favorite song from 48 remind you of?
    The Stooges - All of it reminds me of teenage angst.

    42. Did you hate 43 at first?
    Cream - I didn't think they were great, but I didn't hate them

    43. Does your best friend also listen to 33?
    White Lion - Of course not

    44. Do you think your parents would like 36?
    Return to Forever - They wouldn't hate them.

    45. Does 47 have a song that makes you want to dance?
    Lou Reed - If I had to choose one, I'm So Free

    46. Have you ever seen 34 in person?
    The Beatles - No.

    47. Do you like 44's name?
    Hanoi Rocks? It sounds pretty cool.

    48. Is there someone in 45 that you want to go out with?
    Heart - I guess Nancy Wilson back in the day...but even that, not really.

    49. Do you know anyone that hates 39?
    Judas Priest - I don't know that many people that know who they are.

    50. Have you ever danced to a song from 35?
    Alice Cooper - Dance. No. Rocked out too? Yeah.
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  • Albums

    Fev 20 2009, 21h38 por jazzwhiz

    A friend did a similar thing and although I wanted to do the same, I realized there was a problem: not very many people would be familiar with my music. Thus listing off the top x albums as my favorite would be silly. So I explained each. Sometimes to a general audience, and sometimes to a more familiar audience.
    These are listed in no particular order (not entirely true - I listed off some as they came to mind, but generally went through my music alphabetically so as to not miss anything). There are many great albums out there that I love that I haven't included.
    Oh, and I guess if I tagged you you're all supposed to do the same, or something.

    A Tribute to Jack Johnson (Miles Davis): Miles Davis once claimed that he could create "the greatest rock band you ever heard." Miles Davis was a lot of [ridiculous] things, but he was never frivolous [as can be easily seen by the style he matured into]. Obviously, questions like this will never be settled, but if he did do it, it was this album, and not undeserving either. This will make casual jazz listeners question what they think of both jazz and rock as genres - separate, and fused.

    Kind of Blue (Miles Davis): I could probably include nearly every Miles album I have, but I guess that defeats the purpose. I can't say how many times I've listened to this - in a row. Probably the most precise jazz album I've ever heard, strange because it is both the most revolutionary [arguably] and one of the most open as well. Yet every note is where it should be.

    Just Feelin' (McCoy Tyner): McCoy Tyner in a comfortable setting in a trio. Certainly not his most technical work, but for some reason, the song Manha De Carnaval moved me almost immediately like nothing I've heard before - enough to make the list. I'm not entirely sure why, but this is one I won't be forgetting any time soon.

    Cats (Andrew Lloyd Webber): To be fair, I deserve at least one guilty pleasure. And if so, then this is it. The concept of the show is fantastic, but it's the music that, every time I hear it, I concoct ridiculous plans to put it on here at school. It's fun, serious, blah blah, all the things a musical should have, it has. But just right, not too much either.

    Carnegie Hall 1938 (Benny Goodman): Perhaps I'm just trying to be elitist, but this concert was really good. I mean, really. Regardless of the hurdles and challenges they faced to pull it off, it's a swinging show.

    Keep the Customer Satisfied (Buddy Rich): This is what swing is all about. Buddy Rich drives the band and the audience through the wall. Nothing else by him has come close.

    Paris Jazz Concert (Cannonball Adderley): Cannonball, his brother, and Joe Zawinul have all never sounded better. It's energetic, and let Cannonball open up. Plus I'm particularly weak for Mercy, Mercy, Mercy.

    The Enchantment (Chick Corea & Béla Fleck): Yes, I saw this live, but the melodious nature of the compositions is so fresh and relaxing. It's not in your face, but then again, that's hard without a drummer or a bass. In fact, much of anything is hard without a drummer or a bass, but they pull this one off. Perhaps a bit too well - the studio nature and obvious rehearsal time would be the only drawbacks, but if you listen to the notes played, the rest won't matter.

    Count Basie at Newport: The energy is not only unmistakable, but massively transforming. Not that Basie's band lacks anything in studio recordings per-se, their precision performance is plenty for me, but they don't even lose any of that in front of a wild audience.

    The Complete Atomic Basie: Perhaps to contrast Basie at Newport, this time they play the songs as they're meant to be. Not that Newport was incorrect, but the Atomic Basie is almost like a library - a guide, no the guide, on how to play the Basie standards. A title like that isn't given lightly.

    The Far East Suite (Duke Ellington): There are obviously a lot of choices for Duke, but I decided to go with something outside the standard repertoire. While maintaining the same band as always, Duke manages to still send us to places we've never been. There are, perhaps, better choices for his writing, but nothing better for his arranging. And an entire album of it makes it a truly impressive work.

    Red Clay (Freddie Hubbard): I have some other earlier Freddie Hubbard that establishes him as a solid player, but Red Clay puts him above the rest. Not only does Freddie play fabulously, the band is no sideshow. Joe Henderson does an impressive job, but Stanley Turrentine on the live take of the title track is phenomenal. Not to mention Herbie Hancock plays the set so comfortably.

    Song For My Father (Horace Silver): Joe Henderson just keeps showing up, and he almost steals the show here and would have, had it been with anyone other than Horace Silver.

    Giant Steps (John Coltrane): Yes giant steps. For anyone who has played the title track, they know that it's hard. But almost more importantly than that, the chords are brilliant. Moving through flatted fifth progressions creates a tonality that is simply unmistakable, as are all the tracks. Moreover, his solos promptly polarized saxophones and general jazz followers alike. The so-called "vertical" style of soloing is, new. But jazz is about more than new, it still has to sound good and he does that first. The reason for his vertical solos is, I feel, connected back to the chords themselves. Moving linearly or "horizontally" across them, particularly at the speed he played it at would be a muddled mess no matter who's horn it comes out of.

    A Love Supreme (John Coltrane): This was the first album I ever purchased so it obviously hold a special place in my collection. I had a project for English class and chose a poet to write about because in the one sentence description about him, it said he wrote about jazz, and I had figured out that much about myself thus far, so I decided to choose him. One of the poems was an ode to Coltrane focusing on this album. I figured I ought to give it a listen. And listen I did. And listen I do. This is one of those albums that when I hear alternate takes put together in a hodgepodge format elsewhere, or even the final takes, I skip them. I can't listen them without listening to the whole thing. The progression from section to section is essential in this massive single work. While there are perhaps other albums I might like to place here (notably Blue Train), I feel that these two present Coltrane expertly well.

    Live at the Monterey Jazz Festival (John Handy): I know nothing about the artist or the even [I'm not even sure where the album turned up from] and two long tracks of extended open soloing wouldn't have been my thing in most cases. But John Handy pulls it off. Rather, he blows it away in every sense. It includes exceptional work by the whole band (I recall the bass in particular) but his solos are what I listen to when I feel I need more passion - more individualism, infused in my own work.

    The Koln Concert (Keith Jarrett): It may be cliche, and I could probably select another Keith Jarrett album as well (I won't) but I have honestly never seen, heard, or experienced in any way anything like this. Had someone told me before hand the names of the songs and the composers, this concert would have still made the list. My mind is blown every time I hear it.

    Thelonious Monk with John Coltrane: Older and generally less popular than the "recently discovered" work between the two, I also feel better. While recorded in the studio as opposed to live (and at Carnegie Hall at that), as far as I can tell, Coltrane wouldn't really know the difference. Miles once said that a woman could start dancing in front of him while soloing and the rest of the band would stop, but Trane would keep on playing none the wiser. On Monk, I feel the work is incredibly inventive and declarative - especially considering how early it was.

    Notable Exceptions:
    Charlie Parker - Obviously one of the greatest alto players ever, his short life hindered his potential tremendously. I have yet to find an album of him that, I feel, really showcases his work. I certainly have some nice songs, but nothing cohesive yet.
    Oscar Peterson - I love Oscar Peterson, I just haven't found THE Oscar Peterson album. If anyone has any suggestions, please let me know.
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  • Jazz trumpeter Freddie Hubbard dies in L.A

    Dez 30 2008, 7h15 por Milkshake8



    Los Angeles (Reuters) - influential jazz trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, who played on hundreds of recordings during a career spanning 50 years, died in a los angeles Hospital on Monday, his manager said. He was 70.

    The Grammy Award-winning musician had been a patient at Sherman Oaks Hospital since suffering a Heart Attack a month ago, manager David Weiss said.

    Famed for his fiery style, Hubbard played with such jazz icons as Thelonius Monk, Miles Davis, Cannonball Adderley, Sonny Rollins and John Coltrane.

    Two years after moving to New York from his native Indianapolis in 1958, Hubbard recorded his first album, "Open Sesame," and enjoyed a meteoric rise in jazz circles.

    By August 1961, he was onto his fourth album, "Ready for Freddie," a collaboration with Wayne Shorter considered by many to be his masterpiece.

    Throughout the decade, he played both at the helm of his own small group and with bands led by others. He was also featured on such iconic albums as Coltrane's "Ascension" and Ornette Coleman's "Free Jazz."

    Hubbard won his sole Grammy in 1972 with "First Light," one of a series of crossover albums that brought him mainstream recognition. He later returned to his hard-bop roots, thrilling audiences with his dazzling speed and impassioned blues lines.
    © Thomson Reuters 2008 All rights reserved

    http://www.reuters.com/article/entertainmentNews/idUSTRE4BT0S320081230
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  • The List of Excellence

    Set 30 2008, 21h34 por SirAlecHendrix

    Preamble : SiR HendRix Rating System

    ( or skip and scroll down to the list below )

    SiR HendRix Rating System employs a 50–100 point quality scale for individual musical tracks. the common 5-star rating points — [* to *****] — are not sufficient for rating the complexity of music and results in very subjective measures and inflated ratings. there is not so much 5-star [*****] music around as is rated in this world.

    this rating is very serious. it’s not about “best rock song ever. period” or “my personal top 10” or something similar.

    SiR HendRix takes a hard, very critical listen at tracks in order to underestimate and not overestimate the musical quality. if possible, in a peer group setting, i.e. comparing the track to be assessed with other representatives of the genre or style or with different covers resp. the original version.

    my own personal subjective 5-star rating goes into the whole rating with 10-20 percent only. 80 percent of the rating process is in-depth assessment of musical motif, arrangement and structure, variety and dynamics, development and depth/breadth of the theme, expression and feel, uniqueness and/or innovativity, and performance. last but not least, i rate overall quality and lasting impression. this is not done by one autition only. up to 5 malus or bonus points may be subtracted or added according to two lists of 10 criteria each (including sound quality, metrics, virtuosity, instrumentation, interplay, expression of heart, genius work, simplicity/pureness, overdo, etc.). don’t ask for the specific point ratings for a track, i won’t reveal them, only the end result.

    please note carefully : the ratings reflect a critical *listen at the music* and not just my personal opinion or taste. neither reputation nor being a fan nor the latest hip genre affect the rating in any manner. i don’t care. on the other hand, if a mainstream artist outside my listening habits performs well, he/she will get my points, no matter what. possible high ratings do not necessarily go with my love for the particular piece of music or the artist. i even could nearly object giving points and might be surprised or angried by my own rating results for artists i normally don’t care much about. my loved tracks would yield a different list, and i admit, i even do love mediocre music, we all do. but it simply won’t get my high ratings. i hope this clarifies the difference between love and assessment, it’s two different worlds.

    once again : SiR HendRix Excellence Rating is not about “music i like”. it’s about a deeper understanding, appreciation, acknowledgement (and objection) of music performances beyond personal tastes. otherwise we wouldn’t need the Rating System.

    the scoring of music is a professional task with applying a numerical system to it on a consistent basis. the advantage is rapid precise communication of quality to experts and amateurs alike, nothing more, nothing less.

    music rated over 85 points is very good to excellent. please mind that the majority of quality music usually doesn’t cost more to listen to than to mediocre music. we don’t need to settle for less.


    *****

    98-100 points
    unbelievable (AAA)

    the top of the crop. music in this range is jaw-dropping, heart-stopping, really more than we could reasonably expect ...

    95-97 points
    extraordinary, profound (AA)

    the very best, a rare level of greatness and elegance. music in this range has very high caliber, is overwhelming and might blow you away (or knock your socks off) ...

    90-94 points
    outstanding, high quality (A)

    this is where special effort begins. music in this range is exceptional and terrific, but only few will make it into this category ...


    ****

    85-89 points
    flawless, very very good (BB)

    great value for the price. music in this range is very satisfactory and hardly objectionable ...

    80-84 points
    slightly above average (B)

    better than the bulk. music in this range has some redeeming features and is worth to be collected ...


    ***

    75-79 points
    very average, straightforward, mediocre and unremarkable (CC)

    music in this range is generally pleasant but lacks complexity, character, or depth. this is where most of the mainstream music resides. just switch on the radio or TV. if you want to become somewhat famous and rich as an artist, go here.

    70-74 points
    slightly below average (C)

    music in this range is imbalanced and should be less expensive to pay for ...


    **

    60-69 points
    definitely below average (D)

    music in this range is flawed, amateurish and to be avoided at all costs ...


    *

    50-59 points
    poor, unacceptable, terribly dull (E)

    words are insufficient to describe the inadequacy of this music ...



    ***** The List of Excellence *****

    this list is ever evolving and so are the rating points.

    you can bet that the musical diamonds listed here are NOT the ones most listened to ...


    ***** AAA : unbelievable *****

    100 points

    100 - Miles Davis - TocarConcierto de Aranjuez (adagio) - this genius piece of music is unbelievable. if Miles only had played this and Solea (next track, both from the album Sketches of Spain, 1960), he would still be known as one of the most creative musicians of the 20th century. most people today believe that this is jazz (40 years ago, they didn’t). Miles Davis was a genius capable of playing *music*, not only jazz. Gil Evans’ crossover orchestral arrangement of the famous second movement (adagio) of Joaquín Rodrigo’s concerto plays around the original folkloristic/neoclassical theme and recreates a spanish orchestral landscape, slowly moving from valencia to andalusia, and it’s Miles’ hauting horn that plays the part of the spanish guitar, and yes, of course he’s jazzing every now and then ... asked if this music is jazz, Miles responded “it’s music, and i like it.” some people call it third stream, in oversimplified words : a new emergent genre somewhere between classic and jazz.


    99 points

    99 - Miles Davis - TocarSolea - Soleá is south spanish (andalusian) folk music, a form of (“palo”) flamenco, and Miles plays this genre crossover even more thrilling than the Concierto, weeping with his horn. we shouldn’t forget that without Gil Evans’ unique composition and emotive, expressive orchestration, this milestone of western art music wouldn’t exist. Solea is neither cool jazz nor jazz fusion, and it’s something different than flamenco jazz, third stream again.


    ***** AA : extraordinary *****

    97 points

    97 - Thelonious Monk - TocarRound Midnight - the epitomy of bebop. does it need a comment ?


    96 points

    96 - Eddy Louiss - So What - on the live album Conférence De Presse, Eddy jams with Michel Petrucciani heartful duos of the piano and the hammond organ, nothing else, a rare combination. while Miles and his genius co-players did work hard in developing modal jazz, decades later these two fullblood jazzers can build on it and put much more fun and easyness in this uptempo cover version with much variety, in a relaxed and vibrant live setting with audience applauding after solo improvisations. better than Miles’ original studio version ? so what ...
    96 - Joe Jackson - Round About Midnight - very sensible orchestral cover of Monk’s signature tune on the 1984 sampler That's the Way I Feel Now: A Tribute to Thelonious Monk. arranged by multi-talent Joe Jackson who plays the piano part also.
    96 - Michel Petrucciani Trio - Say it Again and Again
    96 - Yo-Yo Ma - Sur: Regreso al Amor - world-level cellist Yo-Yo Ma interprets Astor Piazzolla’s melancholic soundtrack from the film Sur.


    95 points

    95 - Abdullah Ibrahim - The Pilgrim
    95 - Andreas Scholl - Messe en Si mineur - Agnus Dei - heart-touching aria from Bach’s famous “h-moll-Messe” (Mass in B minor BWV 232). german counter-tenor Andreas Scholl with Philippe Herreweghe conducting choir and orchestra of the Collegium Vocale, on last.fm tagged as Chorus And Orchestra Of Collegium Vocale, Ghent; Philippe Herreweghe. please note, this high rating goes not completely for the streamed version on last.fm—Johann Sebastian Bach - TocarAgnus Dei—which is a good ersatz at least. in offering excellent western art music performances (popularly labelled “classical”), last.fm is minor and it’s tedious to find the right versions (some people would say: “it sucks”). Herreweghe/Scholl’s version wins because of the more sensible interpretation, the more appropriate tempo and the purer voice.
    95 - Dollar Brand - TocarThe Pilgrim - this is the original album
    95 - Miles Davis - TocarWill o' the Wisp - by Manuel de Falla
    95 - Thomas Wilbrandt - Number Three (Gymnopédie) - by Erik Satie - Gymnopédie No. 3 - in a marvellous and very sensitive orchestral arrangement, so beautiful that it hurts - this is exceptional, because most orchestral versions don’t win over the original piano version (same as a movie compared to the novel)
    95 - Véronique Gens, Roger Vignoles - Au Bord De L'Eau Op. 8 No. 1 (Sully Prudhomme) - by Gabriel Fauré


    ***** A : outstanding *****

    94 points

    94 - Abdullah Ibrahim - Ntsikana's Bell
    94 - Abdullah Ibrahim - Saud
    94 - Carla Bley - TocarMisterioso - creative cover and orchestral arrangement of Monk’s famous tune on the 1984 sampler That's the Way I Feel Now: A Tribute to Thelonious Monk
    94 - Ella Fitzgerald - Summertime (Album Version) - with Louis Armstrong
    94 - Dollar Brand - TocarNtsikana's Bell - this is the original album
    94 - Gerardo Núñez - Tarifa (Bulería)
    94 - John Lennon - A Day in the Life - in fact, The Beatles, from their groundbreaking album Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
    94 - Louis Armstrong - Summertime - feat. Ella Fitzgerald
    94 - Peter Thomas Sound Orchestra - TocarSpace Patrol (Raumpatrouille)
    94 - Susan Lincoln - O Virtus Sapientie
    94 - Thelonious Monk - TocarRuby My Dear
    94 - Thomas Wilbrandt - Alone, For A Second - by Erik Satie - Gnossienne No. 3 - again, this orchestral arrangement wins over the original piano version


    93 points

    93 - Alan Marks - Gnossienne No 3 - by Erik Satie (original piano version)
    93 - Gotan Project meets Chet Baker - TocarRound about Midnight - Gotan Project Meets Chet Baker - the masterpiece of this tango project, merging cool jazz with argentinian pub ambience
    93 - John Williams - Sayuri's Theme
    93 - Miles Davis - TocarFlamenco Sketches - the most musical and innovative ballad on the album Kind of Blue with five modal changes and free-form bar improvisation of each musician
    93 - Miles Davis - Flamenco Sketches (Alternate take) - hard to say which version is better, somehow it’s a foretaste to Sketches in Spain ...


    92 points

    92 - Antonio Vivaldi - Concierto RV 121 en Re mayor - Adagio
    92 - Cannonball Adderley - TocarAutumn Leaves (same track as Miles Davis) - this version is hot, hardbop merges with cool jazz. Cannonball Adderley, Miles Davis, Art Blakey and others. i particularly like the powerful screamy beginning, i always shiver ... it's like the movie is starting as a thriller but soon calming down to melancholy ... this recording made the love song ‘autum leaves’ to a jazz standard. the style is neither blues (but has a similar simple chord structure) nor "smooth jazz" (which wasn't yet developed at this time period and sounds completeley different). this version is modern bebop/hardbop with a swing.
    92 - Cannonball Adderley - TocarMercy, Mercy, Mercy - erroneously held as jazz blues, but this hardbop style is soul jazz, similar to Horace Silver's 'song for my father' or Herbie Hancocks 'cantaloupe island'. this song was seminal for the style and for live recordings of jazz music.
    92 - Klazz Brothers & Cuba Percussion - Air (Bach, Air BWV 991 en DO Mineur)
    92 - Miles Davis - TocarAll Blues - from the album Kind of Blue, more “busy” than Blue in Green (see below). the last.fm track is a different live version, though.
    92 - Miles Davis - TocarAutumn Leaves
    92 - Miles Davis - TocarSo What - the epitomy and pinnacle of modal jazz from the best-selling album Kind of Blue, played by a leading group of jazz musicians in 1959, Miles Davis, Cannonball Adderley, John Coltrane, Bill Evans and Paul Chambers. this is the original ‘downtempo’ version, later versions are played faster. we can safely say : you don’t know what jazz is if you ignored this most influential highlight of 20th century music.
    92 - Prince - Under the Cherry Moon - he’s a multi-talent


    91 points

    91 - Cecilia Bartoli - TocarVivaldi: Sposa son desprezzata - the great art singers are massively underrepresented on last.fm. this belcanto aria is fascinating, and despite the fact that the music is from the *baroque era*, it’s NOT “baroque music”. understand the difference ? Vivaldi fostered a new style of composition called galante music which abandoned traditional baroque styling and opened the way to viennese classics. interestingly, Vivaldi is wrongly attributed as the composer, in fact he took it from Francesco Gasparini and included it into his pasticcio opera Bajazet. “reuse” was a common practice in early music (as it is now again). not ending the musical confusion, Cecilia is performing the aria in a *19th century piano adaptation* done by Alessandro Parisotti, a romantic era composer. baroque - classic - romantic, 3 centuries, 3 grand eras, all united in this little piece of music. Cecilia’s relatively low timbre with only sparse trills adds to the expressiveness of this, let’s say it again, *non-baroque* aria. the correct italian wording is ‘Sposa son disprezzata’—I’m a wife and I am scorned. and so are you, poor listeners.
    91 - Enigma - TocarCallas Went Away
    91 - Miles Davis - TocarBlue In Green - the most sensitive track on the album Kind of Blue with different modal changes. a fine interplay between Miles and pianist Bill Evans, soothing and smoothing ...
    91 - Miles Davis - TocarFreddie Freeloader - again from the 1959 landmark album in modal jazz : Kind of Blue, an unusual twelve-bar blues composed by Miles, and three giants of jazz meet to play it out on their horns, Miles Davis, John Coltrane and Cannonball Adderley
    91 - Refractory - Yo Solo Quiero (feat. Youn Sun Nah) - the Korean newcomer in jazz astonishes with her singing performance in portuguese and spanish as well
    91 - Yo-Yo Ma - J.S. Bach: Cello Suite #1 In G, BWV 1007 - 1. Prélude


    90 points

    90 - Aretha Franklin - TocarRespect
    90 - De-Phazz - Nonsensical Thing
    90 - Herbie Hancock - TocarCantaloupe Island - the very prominent example of the 60s emerging style of soul jazz
    90 - Herbie Hancock feat. Tina Turner - TocarEdith And The Kingpin
    90 - Horace Silver - TocarSong For My Father - Horace Silver's signature instrumental, a kind of hardbop bossa nova (inspired by a trip to brazil) in the soul jazz style that emerged in the 60s. Henderson's sax solo adds some mellow (post-)bop feeling. Stevie Wonder "stole" the horn riff for his song 'Don't you worry 'bout a thing'.
    90 - Jean Boguet - La Fille Aux Cheveux De Lin - by Claude Debussy
    90 - Michel Petrucciani - Tocar100 Hearts - piano solo
    90 - Omar Sosa - TocarMis tres Notas - this cuban pianist is amazing, more to expect ...


    the purpose of the _ Center of Excellence _ is to collect and document the most outstanding and extraordinary music performances on this planet.

    of course, only few make it into the _ Center of Excellence _. for quality music below excellence rating [80-89 = ****] refer to the List of Quality, documented in the House of Quality.

    i never ever will rate music upon request. so please don’t ask.
    if you told me this sytem reminds you of Robert Parker’s wine rating system, i would respond : exactly.


    SiR HendRix
    //
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  • ☺ Listening and Scrobbling Together ☺

    Jun 21 2008, 16h43 por Fulvian

    Overview
    Basically I'm gonna talk about how to scrobble Your music to multiple Last.fm accounts at once, I mean everytime You play a track, it'll be scrobbled to multiple Last.fm accounts, note that this only works on local tracks, currently there is NO way to scrobble radio tracks to multiple accounts at once. OK got it? If You're interested, please read on...

    Preludium
    Originally I was only gonna write this guide for my group Last.fm Couples, but I've read many threads asking about the same How-To in the Forums and thought there might be more people out there wanting to know how...

    In some circumstances, You and Your friend, dad, mom, daughter, son, brother, sister, girlfriend, boyfriend, spouse, or maybe even Your pet (if he has a Last.fm account) are listening together on a single computer and both of You have separate Last.fm accounts. In such occasion, a question will rise: "Could I scrobble the songs we play to her account too? not only mine?", normally the answer is "NO", but hey... Fulvian doesn't like such answer so he tried to find a way and succeeded...

    Before we proceed any further, the requirements are:

    • Windows XP or Windows Vista
    • foobar2000 version 0.9.5.3 or newer (freeware, click to download)
    • Last.fm Official Client

    (I know a lot of users also use Linux and Mac OSX, but I must admit that I have very little knowledge on those operating systems), but users of those platforms are very welcome to comment on this.

    Setup
    First make sure Last.fm client and foobar2000 and its official plugin are already installed (if You just installed foobar2000, install the official plugin first: in the client, go to Tools ? Get Plugin...)

    All done? Now click here to download the 2nd foobar2000 Audioscrobbler plugin.

    (that plugin has a Last.fm group: foo_audioscrobbler)

    On that site there are two download options:
    Download foo_audioscrobbler 1.3.16
    Download foo_audioscrobbler 1.3.16 with installer


    Choose the first one (without installer).

    It's a ZIP file, so after downloading just use WinZip/WinRAR or whatever archiver You're using to extract the contents. The ZIP file contains a single file foo_audioscrobbler.dll, extract this file to a temporary folder or Your desktop.

    Now select the file foo_audioscrobbler.dll and press F2. Rename the file to foo_audioscrobbler2.dll. Press ENTER to apply the file name change. Now cut the file (Right-click on it then choose "Cut").

    Open Your Windows Explorer and go to the folder where You installed foobar2000, for example D:\Program Files\foobar2000. In that foobar2000 folder, there's a subfolder called "components", paste foo_audioscrobbler2.dll into that subfolder.

    Now open foobar2000 (close it first and then reopen if it's already open when You paste the new file) and go to File ? Preferences. Go here:



    Enter the user name and password of the other Last.fm account You want to scrobble to and tick the "Enable Audioscrobbler" checkbox. If You're using proxy, fill the "Proxy settings" fields too, if You're not using proxy, leave them blank. Close the Preferences window.

    Now You're set! any track You play on foobar2000 will be scrobbled to both the account on Last.fm client and the account in the Audioscrobbler plugin within foobar2000. The "Now Listening" feature also works on both accounts, just check 'em out!

    Don't forget to disable the Audioscrobbler plugin when Your partner is no longer listening together with You: Go back to Audioscrobbler Preferences window and untick the "Enable Audioscrobbler" checkbox.

    Postludium
    • Please only use this guide for listening together with Your partner, I know this is abusable, but I don't even want to think about the possibilities
    • Listening together too often will cause You and Your partner become each other's Neighbour, this may be good or bad, but I personally don't like the fact that my girlfriend is on my top Neighbours list, she's just wasting one Neighbour space that's supposed to be occupied by other users I don't know.
    • People who know or have ideas on how to do this on Linux, Mac OSX, and also on other media players on Windows are encouraged to give comments, knowledge exists to be shared! :P
    • Have a nice day and happy scrobbling together! :D

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