Sunday Morning Jazz

There are experts on Jazz out there who can describe with great eloquence what you are about to listen to and why it is important. I’m not one of them. It is just good music from great performers. I’ll let the music speak for itself.

Jack

From Wikipedia

Bebop is a style of jazz developed in the early to mid-1940s in the United States, which features songs characterized by a fast tempo, complex chord progressions with rapid chord changes and numerous changes of key, instrumental virtuosity, and improvisation based on a combination of harmonic structure, the use of scales and occasional references to the melody.
Bebop developed as the younger generation of jazz musicians expanded the creative possibilities of jazz beyond the popular, dance-oriented swing style with a new “musician’s music” that was not as danceable and demanded close listening.[1] As bebop was not intended for dancing, it enabled the musicians to play at faster tempos. Bebop musicians explored advanced harmonies, complex syncopation, altered chords, extended chords, chord substitutions, asymmetrical phrasing, and intricate melodies. Bebop groups used rhythm sections in a way that expanded their role. Whereas the key ensemble of the swing era was the big band of up to fourteen pieces playing in an ensemble-based style, the classic bebop group was a small combo that consisted of saxophone (alto or tenor), trumpet, piano, guitar, double bass, and drums playing music in which the ensemble played a supportive role for soloists. Rather than play heavily arranged music, bebop musicians typically played the melody of a song (called the “head”) with the accompaniment of the rhythm section, followed by a section in which each of the performers improvised a solo, then returned to the melody at the end of the song.

Share
31 Comments
Oldest
Newest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
patd
5 years ago

ohm

be boppa do

ohm, baby, ohmmm 

patd
5 years ago

Thump, thump, thump, went his foot on the floor.He played a few chords then he sang some more—     “I got the Weary Blues       And I can’t be satisfied.       Got the Weary Blues       And can’t be satisfied—       I ain’t happy no mo’       And I wish that I had died.”And far into the night he crooned that tune.The stars went out and so did the moon.The singer stopped playing and went to bedWhile the Weary Blues echoed through his head.He slept like a rock or a man that’s dead. [from “the weary blues” by Langston Hughes] from poetry foundation: Langston Hughes, a central poet of the Harlem renaissance,… Read more »

patd
5 years ago

raw story:

CNN released the latest findings of the renowned Des Moines Register poll of the Iowa Caucuses.

 

Former Vice President Joe Biden lead the pack, receiving 24 percent of the vote from likely caucus-goers.

Three candidates were bunched up for second place, with Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) at 16 percent while Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) is at 15 percent South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigeieg at 14 percent.

 

Watch:

https://www.rawstory.com/2019/06/watch-cnn-releases-new-des-moines-register-poll-of-the-iowa-caucuses/

patd
5 years ago

from des moines register: The field of Democratic presidential candidates is starting to settle into tiers: Joe Biden leads the pack, and Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren and Pete Buttigieg are in close competition for second place, a new Des Moines Register/Mediacom/CNN Iowa Poll shows. Twenty-four percent of Iowa’s likely Democratic caucusgoers say former vice president Biden is their first choice for president. Sanders, a Vermont senator, is the first choice for 16% of poll respondents, while Warren, a Massachusetts senator, and Buttigieg, mayor of South Bend, Indiana, are at 15% and 14% respectively.  No other candidate cracks double digits. California… Read more »

patd
5 years ago

New rules prompt poll changes For the first time, the Iowa Poll accounts for new rules proposed this year by the Iowa Democratic Party that will allow Iowans to participate in a virtual caucus online or over the phone. The results of those virtual caucuses will account for 10% of the final delegate equivalents, regardless of how many people participate. The poll, conducted June 2-5, sampled registered voters who plan to attend the Democratic caucuses in person, as well as those who plan to attend virtually. The poll asked respondents to name their first choice for president. The responses to… Read more »

Sturgeone
5 years ago

I’ll say one thing, every time they ask Pete B. a question, he knocks it out of the park.
still for ms Harris or warren.

Sturgeone
5 years ago

Polls, get thee hence. A pox upon thee. 
Poll not lest ye be polled. 
Wrong as much as right.
 

Sturgeone
5 years ago

I’ll read no poll before it’s (sic) time.

Sturgeone
5 years ago

Stick it where the poll don’t shine.
 

Sturgeone
5 years ago

When a poll meets its goal, and the election gets stole, that’s a-palling. 

Sturgeone
5 years ago

How many polls could a pollster post if a pollster could post polls?
(all the above is NOT a criticism of those who post polls here, they dinna hurt me  noone and can be fun to read. It’s just my considered opinion of polling.)

Sturgeone
5 years ago

I’m really getting soaked in this downpour of western movies. It’s like they made so many that they just run slap out of titles for them. The stranger wore a gun, bullet for a bad man. You kiddin me?
lol

Katherine Graham Cracker
5 years ago

Good job Jack!
Jace   
we miss you and hope things are improving for you & Mrs Jace.

Jamie44
5 years ago

One of the better aspects of the film La La Land was a jazz aficianado trying to tell someone what jazz if all about:

And then (of course) someone else needed to comment on what the film got right and wrong about Jazz.

 

RebelliousRenee
5 years ago

Jack…  great selection.  As much as I miss Jace, it’ll be nice to hear some other stuff on Sundays.

I’m glad that Biden is leading in the early polls…  they are usually wrong.

Sturgeone
5 years ago

Along the Great Divide is a 1951 American Western film directed by Raoul Walsh and starring Kirk DouglasVirginia MayoJohn Agar, and Walter Brennan. This was Kirk Douglas’s first Western, a genre that served him well during his long career.

Jamie44
5 years ago

Since I love crossing the international divides, my favorite Kirk Douglas “westerns” is one where he plays twin brothers in Australia is The Man From Snowy River.  This has the added benefit of the poems of Banjo Patterson which not only mentions the Snowy River, but my favorite Clancy of the Overflow.

The Man From Snowy River

Clancy of the Overflow

One of these years should anyone ask where I am, I hope someone will answer “Gone to Queensland”.

 

patd
5 years ago

by George, from newsweek: […] On Twitter Sunday morning, Conway recommended several psychiatric analysis books and railed against what he called Trump’s “irrational, self-defeating” behavior. The 55-year-old lawyer, whose wife has been one of the president’s staunchest defenders, has consistently pointed out oddities in Trump’s behavior that he’s claimed are evidence of the president’s psychological problems. His latest jabs at the president’s mental health were prompted by Trump’s weekend tirade against the “corrupt media” and “fake news,” in which he admitted that his behavior was “not at all ‘Presidential'” but said he needed to “hit back” at what he viewed… Read more »

patd
5 years ago

I imagine Kellyanne in the background hovering over his shoulder, reading as he tweets above and snickering or chortling with a snort here and there

 

patd
5 years ago

for the economists in the crowd, here’s an interesting op ed for you today in the guardian: Elizabeth Warren’s economic nationalism vision shows there’s a better way Robert Reich […] Elizabeth Warren’s new Plan for Economic Patriotism, unveiled on Tuesday, marks a stunningly ambitious version of American industrial policy.   Industrial policy centers on a social contract between the public and business: corporations get extra resources to grow bigger and more innovative. In return, those corporations create high-paying jobs in the nation, and focus on sectors promising the greatest social returns.   This isn’t laissez-faire economics; nor is it zero-sum… Read more »

Jamie44
5 years ago

These proposals of Warren are actually a “back to basics” capitalism.  Actually roughly 250 years back to basics of Adam Smith, Wealth of Nations of 1776.  That “invisible hand” always did take into account David Hume’s Inquiry Concerning Human Nature of the same period. According to Hume, our sympathy-based sentiments can motivate us towards the pursuit of non-selfish ends, like the utility of others. For Hume, and for fellow sympathy-theorist Adam Smith, the term “sympathy” is meant to capture much more than concern for the suffering of others. Sympathy, for Hume, is a principle for the communication and sharing of sentiments,… Read more »

Sturgeone
5 years ago

Ambush is a 1950 western film directed by Sam Wood and starring Robert TaylorJohn Hodiak and Arlene Dahl. This was the last film directed by Sam Wood. The plot is based on the serial story Ambush by Luke Short in The Saturday Evening Post (25 Dec 1948–12 Feb 1949). It is also the first MGM film in the 1950s’. [3]

patd
5 years ago

“Without investment in the whole of workers and society, Captalism carries the seeds of its own destruction due to greed and lack of ethics.”

Jamie, truer words were never spoken. 

same goes for horse racing and other sports industries. thru greed and lack of ethics they’re doing themselves in.

Katherine Graham Cracker
5 years ago

If I knew I wasn’t making the debates I would live stream watching them with a some folks and comment on the action

Sturgeone
5 years ago

Colorado Territory is a 1949 American Western film directed by Raoul Walsh and starring Joel McCreaVirginia Mayo, and Dorothy Malone. Written by Edmund H. Northand John Twist, and based on the novel High Sierra by W.R. Burnett, the film is about an outlaw who is sprung from jail to help pull one last railroad job.

Sturgeone
5 years ago

John Wayne with a dog

Hondo (film) – Wikipedia
hondo from en.m.wikipedia.org

Hondo is a 1953 Warnercolor 3D Western film directed by John Farrow and starring John Wayne and Geraldine Page. The screenplay is based on the July 5, 1952 Collier’s short story “The Gift of Cochise” by Louis L’Amour.
 

 

 

 

 

Jamie44
5 years ago

Patd

Yes I love horse racing and horses.  You can’t have those huge power house hind quarters on those tiny ankles without inviting injuries.  They have been bred to race very fast.  They have also been bred for broken legs and death.

patd
5 years ago

NEW THREAD

Pogo
5 years ago

XR, dig this shit. Only MN & AL don’t have laws stripping incest and rape perpetrators of parental rights resulting from their crimes. Makes ya proud don’t it? And of course AL has no exception in its human incubator law for pregnancies resulting from rape and incest. Makes me doubly proud. AL repugs hate women- and I hate them.