Home » Search Center » Results: MAXJAZZ
Results for "MAXJAZZ"
Live at The Jazz Standard, Volume Two

Label: MAXJAZZ
Released: 2007
Track listing: Mugshot; For The Love Of You; Theme From Gunsmoke; How About Me?; Don't Point That Over Here; Playground; Sugar Buzz.
Live at the Kennedy Center Volume 2

Label: MAXJAZZ
Released: 2007
Track listing: Grew's Tune; Old Folks; Song for Darnell; Farewell to Dogma; Eleventh Hour.
Shock Value: Live at Smoke

By Jeremy Pelt
Label: MAXJAZZ
Released: 2007
Track listing: Circular; Blues; Suspicion; Cause; Pythagorus; Beyond; Scorpio.
When You're There
Label: MAXJAZZ
Released: 2007
Track listing: Until Dusk; Jaded Brotherhood; Jordan; Overture/The Rathskellar/Interlude; The Metaphysics of Self-Deception; New Beginnings; Troubling Differences; Gathered Impression; Going Home.
Russell Malone: Live at The Jazz Standard, Volume Two

by C. Michael Bailey
Jazz was meant to be recorded live on the bandstand. It is spontaneous music ruled by improvisation and invention in real time. There exist precious few bad live jazz recordings. This is a ready indication of the high quality of musicianship jazz requires for proper performance and the necessity of said jazz musicians to think quickly ...
Jeremy Pelt and Wired: Shock Value: Live at Smoke

by C. Michael Bailey
Imagine a sacred Shinto sand garden beautifully divided up into all of the genres of jazz, rock, and blues. Interconnections between the genres and subgenres are carefully documented, after having been fully researched and verified. Now visualize trumpeter Jeremy Pelt dragging his horn through this garden, marginally alongside a similar set of tracks left by Miles ...
Jeremy Pelt & Wired: Shock Value: Live at Smoke

by Jim Santella
Born to play the blues and raised on jazz's most recent personality changes, Jeremy Pelt brings fire and passion to his audience while tempering each stroke with the improvisational tools that have grown out of tradition. The trumpeter's wah-wah comments, his low moan caresses and his dizzying romps through bebop heaven gather up a hundred years ...
Russell Malone: Live at Jazz Standard, Volume One

by Jim Santella
Dedicated to the memories of jazz guitarist Ted Greene and jazz pianist John Hicks, this session features Russell Malone at work in New York with his band during a spirited three-night run at the Jazz Standard in September 2005. Always one to keep the blues alive in his mainstream jazz programs, Malone communicates eloquently through his ...
Mulgrew Miller: Live at the Kennedy Center Volume 2

by C. Michael Bailey
Mulgrew Miller was once opined as being one of the most underrated pianists in jazz, belonging to a middle generation of musicians between the 1950s-'60s masters and the young lions of the 1990s. Proving patience is a virtue and there is something to be said for simply doing one's job consistently (citing Cal Ripkin, Jr.) Miller ...