Contemplazione

DeRank : 9,45
DeAge™ : 6868 days • Here since 20 august 2007
Archie Shepp Attica Blues
Voto:
Good job, little gnome! The album? Gorgeous! Which commercial phase??
David Lynch Blue Velvet
Voto:
Great movie, from every point of view!!
Herbie Hancock Takin' Off
Voto:
Fiquata, be careful, you might start to like me...
Herbie Hancock Takin' Off
Voto:
True, it stumbles in the flow, but King Cobra with the Hancock-Williams interplay (especially at the end of the track) is five stars and foreshadows what they will do later with Miles.
Herbie Hancock Takin' Off
Voto:
An album that still feels unripe to me, not a masterpiece, neither in absolute terms nor in relation to Hancock's work. However, it is quite enjoyable and interesting to listen to. For me, it is from "My Point Of View" that things start to get serious (but there was Tony Williams there!).
Jack Bruce Harmony Row
Voto:
Great drummer John Marshall... excellent collaboration with the Soft Machine! And a big surprise to see him in stellar form with jazz double bassist Arild Anderson's trio (the 2004 album Triangle from ECM). Jack Bruce... what can I say, I agree with the reviewer. A master of the instrument, but he lacks that extra something in his solo projects.
Charlie Haden Liberation Music Orchestra
Voto:
Beautiful review for one of the most enjoyable and important albums by Charlie Haden. My epiphany for Haden is similar to yours, only it happened with the first track of "This Is Our Music"!! And like you, I have a visceral love for low frequencies...amen brother ;-)
A Spirale Agaspastik
Voto:
Very interesting!! Beautiful page...
Luis Bunuel e Salvador Dalì Un Chien Andalou
Voto:
Certainly a very interesting film, but the visionary aspects and insights could have gone further and been even more explosive. True, for its time it might have been quite enough...
Miles Davis Miles Smiles
Voto:
But in fact, this group is the pinnacle of all jazz and Tony Williams is the pinnacle of drumming!! In Miles' first quintet, there were two geniuses; here there are five. The intricacies of this rhythm section are something any other, including Coltrane's, can only dream of, including those in the future. However, to fully appreciate the significance of their innovations, it would be wise to have a deep understanding of this music; 20-30 records are not enough to grasp it completely.