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Thelonious Monk With John Coltrane

Thelonious Monk
Release Date: 09/30/2003
Original Release:  1961
# of Discs:   1
J&R Item # 496787_CD
UPC # 025218730921
Label: Jazzland (France)
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SACD
 
Track Details Credits Artist Related Shipping
Disc: 1
1. Ruby, My Dear sound samples  real  |  windows media
2. Trinkle, Tinkle sound samples  real  |  windows media
3. Off Minor sound samples  real  |  windows media
4. Nutty sound samples  real  |  windows media
5. Epistrophy sound samples  real  |  windows media
6. Functional sound samples  real  |  windows media

To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the real player real or windows media windows media players, click to download the FREE software.
Performer: Thelonious Monk
Artist: Coleman Hawkins; Wilbur Ware; Art Blakey; Gigi Gryce
Engineer: Jack Higgins
Producer: Orrin Keepnews
Distributor: Ryko Distribution

Notes: Personnel: Thelonious Monk (piano); John Coltrane (tenor saxophone); Gigi Gryce (alto saxophone); Coleman Hawkins (tenor saxophone); Ray Copeland (trumpet); Wilbur Ware (bass); Shadow Wilson, Art Blakey (drums). Recorded at Reeves Sound Studios, New York, New York in 1957 and 1958. Originally released on Jazzland (46). Includes liner notes by Ira Gitler. Digitally remastered by Kirk Felton (1987, Fantasy Studios, Berkeley, California). This is a hybrid Super Audio CD playable on both regular and Super Audio CD players. Personnel: Thelonious Monk (piano); John Coltrane (tenor saxophone); Gigi Gryce (alto saxophone); Coleman Hawkins (tenor saxophone); Ray Copeland (trumpet); Wilbur Ware (bass); Shadow Wilson, Art Blakey (drums). Recorded at Reeves Sound Studios, New York, New York in 1957 and 1958. Originally released on Jazzland (46). This is a hybrid Super Audio CD playable on both regular and Super Audio CD players. When Monk finally got his cabaret card back in the summer of 1957, he began a six-month engagement on the lower east side of Manhattan. This stand heralded his return, thrilled the media and garnered him a modicum of respect and recognition. Recorded the following spring, THELONIOUS MONK WITH JOHN COLTRANE is an all-too fleeting recreation of the pianist's legendary Five Spot Quartet (plus a solo piano version of "Functional," and a powerful four-horn rendition of "Off Minor" from a June '57 session featuring Coltrane, Coleman Hawkins and Art Blakey). In many ways, Coltrane's stint with Monk marked his artistic breakthrough from a gifted technician, to a top musical innovator. Joining him in this remarkable quartet were Shadow Wilson, a drummer of rare musicality and restraint (listen to his sweeping brushwork on "Ruby, My Dear"), and Chicago bassist Wilbur Ware, whose lower register punctuations and sophisticated harmonic sensibility helped anchor the group. "Ruby, My Dear" is landmark for Coltrane the ballad player. Monk's repeated chordal figures function as a thematic entity, and Trane feels compelled to dig deeper into the melody, rather than simply gallop through the changes--his lyric ardor is compelling. Monk treats the melody with even greater restraint, saving his most rhapsodic flourishes for the tune's coda. "Trinkle, Tinkle" is a jittery Monk masterpiece that quickly separates the men from the boys. It features a rhythmically complex six-bar theme, with a tricky two-bar turnaround for the drummer, and a complex inversion of the theme in the bridge. The saxophonist's opening figures echo Monk's complex trills and runs, as the pianist reprises the theme during the first chorus, then Trane is off to the races in a sneak preview of the'60s, concluding with a bluesy flourish. Then there's "Nutty," with its sardonic bass asides--one of Monk's most engaging blues themes. Even when Monk drops away, the specter of his lines and chords inspire Trane's rapid-fire arpeggios, and Monk's solo is a witty chordal abstraction of the theme, shot through with unexpected accents and rhythmic hesitations.
Thelonious Monk, underappreciated at the beginning of his career in the 1940s, was eventually recognized as one of the most brilliant figures in modern jazz, with a piano and compositional style that began in a classic stride and then veered off, gloriously, into the stratosphere. In contrast to the more athletic exploits of many beboppers, Monk's idiosyncratic playing was filled with stark contrasts of rhythm, space, and harmony, as if he were carefully unveiling some ancient wisdom. His death in 1982 left a void in jazz that could never be filled. However, Monk's songs live on in his remarkable recordings, and his influence is continually present in the work of hundreds of contemporary musicians.
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Shipping or Dimension weight in pounds: 0.25

PID # 3910139


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