5 great piano tracks to get your year off with a bang!

Fri, 01/11/2019 - 1:56pm
Written by GeorgeWhitty
Topics: jazz, music, Piano, tracks

   One of the very best ways to improve your playing is LISTENING to great jazz as much as you can!  Jazz, particularly, is like getting a nice, soulful massage for your ears;  I’d bet that if they hooked us up to some machine to measure what happens when we listen to good jazz all the indicators would start flashing GREEN.  Tower of Power has that great tune “Soul Vaccination”, and if we ever needed such a vaccination, the time is definitely NOW!  

 

So, to help fill your phone/pod/watch/cassette deck/8-track with some great music, here are 5 suggestions for some tracks of great piano music, all different, but all great!  And the albums from which these tunes are derived are well worth owning in their entirety as well!

 

Notes from a giant

Mon, 02/26/2018 - 1:39pm
Written by GeorgeWhitty
Topics: jazz, jazz piano, Piano

I have always really loved this interview, with Andre Previn interviewing Oscar Peterson.  When I was about 15, Oscar came through Oregon to play, but he was playing in Portland, 220 miles from my home town.  And my folks weren't up to driving all the way up there for it, so I organized it as a school field trip for my high school swing choir.  And it's still one of the best concerts I ever saw, Oscar, Joe Pass, Ella Fitzgerald, and the Basie band (who totally blew me away) all at once.  And like a lot of musicians, Oscar was sort of an enigma;  what could he possibly have been like as a person?  Well, here he is!  Herbie Hancock told me once, during a conversation about Herbie's technophilia (he always has the latest and greatest;  he probably already has the iPhone 13) that Oscar put him to shame with his love of things technical.  There are some YouTubes of Oscar in his home studio playing synths, which are fun.  But in this interview, Andre Previn (who's also a scary jazz pianist himself, though best known as a classical conductor) interviews Oscar in a very playful way, and the insights are priceless.  It's like a master class, and Oscar is at the peak of his powers.  And toward the end, the two of them play together, and THAT is also really cool!  Enjoy!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dIW24bySbT4

The Joy of Jazz, captured in a single image

Tue, 02/13/2018 - 11:58am
Written by GeorgeWhitty

Just returned from the Jazz Cruise;  there’s a few blog posts worth of insight to post from THAT extravaganza.  But I’ll just start with this great pic of Brandon Goldberg, who sat in with a bunch of bands on the cruise and just tore it up.  I was on with the Brecker Brothers Band Reunion, which was a huge blast, and on the very last night, we played the very last show, at 10:30 PM.  Brandon came by and sat in on the first tune, played his *** off, and it was such a kick to watch him play on my gear that I started taking some pics.  This picture, and his totally unbridled joy at burning out on the piano, I think reminded ALL of us on the cruise of the huge fun it is when we first learn to burn improvising on an instrument.  It sure reminded me;  on a good night it STILL feels like this, like the spigot is on, the “fatbergs” are cleared (you’ll have to Google that one, as I don’t even wan to go there on an AW blog post!), and things are flowing with the right kind of energy behind them.  Oh, and there’s one more thing about Brandon Goldberg:

 

He’s 11.

 

Can you count this one?

Sat, 01/20/2018 - 3:58pm
Written by GeorgeWhitty
Topics: jazz, world music

I'm playing this Sunday (1/21) at the Baked Potato in Los Angeles with Armand Sabal-Lecco (bassist on the big Paul Simon tours in the '90s), with Joel Taylor on drums and Toshi Yanagi on guitar.  And like every musician I know from west Africa, Armand has this incredibly highly evolved approach to rhythm and time, so sophisticated that it takes the other 3 of us a good while to get our heads around some of the tunes we play.  The song below is a good example.  Like a lot of polyrhythmic music from Cameroon, it starts off in a way that makes you think "I got this".  But then, about 10 seconds in, you start to think "oop...maybe this isn't where I thought it was".  And about 40 seconds in:  "Ooh.  I don't got this".  See if you can tap your foot to that groove, or to the funny, lopsided "montuno" thing that happens on the electric piano after (this is just Armand's demo of this tune).  The first part sounds almost like an old English sailing or drinking, or drinking-and-sailing song;  you can pat your foot 1-2-3-4.  But when the drums come in?  What is that person thinking?  And finally, you get to where it's actually in 9/8, like 4/4 with a wart on it.  And all 3 of us non-Cameroonians have to come up with a way to count this so we could at least stay in sync while we assimilated the groove enough to play it without chapping our lips counting it.  Now that I've been shedding on it for 3 weeks, I feel it pretty naturally the way it's meant to be felt.

I think.