Quantcast
NEWS: MY AAJ Member Benefits - Sign up Today! SHOP:   CDs/DVDs/Vinyl/Sleeves | Downloads | Poster Art
jazz
HOME NEWS REVIEWS ARTICLES MUSICIANS PHOTOS FORUMS
  Login   |   MY AAJ Signup  
Intro Site Map Shows Free Daily MP3s Videos Upcoming Releases Guides Editorial Calendar Contests Help Wanted  
Advanced
Contact Us   |   Advertise   |   For Contributors   |   For Musicians





Time Away
The Bob Brough Quartet
Innocence: Green Spring Suite
Jack Reilly Trio
Dreams Are Meant For Two
PJ Parker
Storyteller
Rob Mullins
Tough Guys
The Generations Band with Jimmy Cobb and Eric Alexander
Jazz In Bel Air
Alphonse Mouzon
Advertise Here




Jazz Excursion Radio



"Church"
D.D. Jackson
Anthem

Listen Now






Push AAJ Content
AAJ Live | RSS | Widsets

The Very Tall Band/Live At The Blue Note
Oscar Peterson/Milt Jackson/Ray Brown | Telarc Records


By Mark Corroto Discuss        

Sure I’m a fan of Tiger Woods, but sometimes I like to watch the Senior PGA Tour. Even though my heroes of yesterday Hale Irwin, Jack Nicklaus, and Gary Player don’t hit the ball as long or putt as well as the modern player, their games remind me of the glories of the past. Like the Senior Tour, the reunion of The Very Tall Band is memorable. Oscar Peterson isn’t as quick at the keyboards as his protégé Benny Green, nor can Milt Jackson push the envelope on the vibes like Steve Nelson, and Ray Brown can’t record one every musicians dates like Christian McBride. What these seventy-something gentlemen do is draw upon their jazz lives. For Ray Brown, his career spans the birth of bebop, playing with Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, and Bud Powell, then accompanying his wife Ella Fitzgerald and onto his own famous trios. Milt Jackson also played with Diz and Bird, plus Thelonious Monk and John Coltrane before forming the Modern Jazz Quartet and the concept of chamber jazz. Oscar Peterson, Canada’s favorite jazz son was foisted upon the jazz world by Norman Granz Jazz at the Philharmonic. Soon his speed, dexterity and keyboard prowess made him a heir to the Art Tatum legacy. This live date from 1998 is only the third time this trio has recorded together. Covering mostly standards, the three sound as if they have been playing together since before Wynton and crew were born. Loose and bluesy, the band like my all-time favorite Arnold Palmer just keeps on swinging.

Track List:Ja-da; SKJ; I Remember Clifford; When Summer Comes; Blues For JR; Nature Boy; Sometimes I’m Happy; Bass Solo Medley: Full Moon and Empty Arms/The Very Thought Of You/The Work Song; Caravan.

Personnel: Oscar Peterson – Piano; Ray Brown – Bass; Milt Jackson – Vibes; Karriem Riggins – Drums.

Style: Mainstream/Bop/Hard Bop/Cool
Published: September 01, 1999


Discuss         Add to Google  




Articles by Mark Corroto
Stories from the City at Night
Forgiveness
Rob Mazurek's excellent adventures in Brazil and France
We Are MTO
Passing Notes
Life Between
Free Improvised Music from East to West



Recent CD Reviews | More CD Reviews
Sean O'Bryan Smith - Tapestry Sean O'Bryan Smith
Tapestry
Planet Safety - Planet Safety Planet Safety
Planet Safety
Evan Christopher - Django a la Creole Evan Christopher
Django a la Creole
Connie Crothers / Bill Payne - Conversations Connie Crothers / Bill Payne
Conversations
Shakers N' Bakers - YFZ (Yearning For Zion) Shakers N' Bakers
YFZ (Yearning For Zion)
Eliane Elias - Bossa Nova Stories Eliane Elias
Bossa Nova Stories



CD Review Search
Artist Name  
Album Title  
Record Label  
Author  
 

Most Read Reviews
Last 30 Days | All Time
Most Read Articles
Last 30 Days | All Time
Recommended Reviews
Last 30 Days | All Time
Recommended Articles
Last 30 Days | All Time


 



Idit Shner
Yellow Moon
From Tuesday's Blues


More | Recent | Top




Rob Mullins
New CD: Jazz Straight Ahead











Make a donation and support All About Jazz
Contribute to the continued operation of
jazz's most important online resource.
  Privacy Policy | Dedicated Servers All material copyright © 2008 All About Jazz and/or contributing writers/visual artists. All rights reserved.