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![]() If anybody still has their copy & wants to get a listen to how Horace was writing in those days, there it is. Tell you what - anybody who would go into a situation think they can readily "handle" Horace's 70s music based on their experience with his earlier works is in for at least a little surprise!īTW - I had nearly forgotten, but I included a cut from Horace's final BN album (which was actually BN's last "new" release before going dormant) on one of my BFT's (the first one I think. It would be kinda cool to get a band together and play some of those 70s tunes, though. But by then, in most [peoples' minds (and in a lot of peoples' careers and actual playing opportunities), the records pretty much were the music. Understandable enough, I'm just saying that it's not like Horace Silver stopped creating great music after his classic run at Blue Note, he just kinda stopped making great records. but they were written and recorded in a different time, place, and working environment than the "classics", so.attention was not necessarily being paid. ![]() The quintet renditions totally kicked ass!Īnd yeah, that's what I mean - those are some badass tunes on those albums. He was leading a quintet, and he played several pieces from the new album. I saw Horace live around the time that the last in the Siver And series came out (Silver And Strings - Music of the Spheres). ![]() Talk about something that sounds fairly straightforward until you really listen to it, this is it! Edited Septemby JSngry Skip the performance and check out the tune. Since I already have all the albums, I didn't follow the trail.Īnd Paul - when you get a sec, go back to Voices (with Monica Mancini apparently the female lead, which explains any number of things.) & check out "I Will Always Love You". For those people, it's my understanding that the whole series has been blogged somewhere. People who are interested in Horace Silver - Jazz Composer and not just Horace Silver - Purveyor Of Funky Hard Bop (and what is that, about enough people to buy about 2/3 of the promos that would get released?) need to hear these albums. There's also a lot of that dreaded 70s "recording sound" too, so people who hear "style" over "substance" might well let that be all they need to hear before rendering a negative verdict.īut I tell you this, and will stand by it no matter what - there is plenty of great writing on those albums. Not so hot on Harrell, Berg, or Larry Schnieder, who's on at least one (hold your calls, please, I know they're all great players, just personal preferences at work, nothing more), but they don't mess anyth8ng up either, far from it. According to Silver, the track showed that the band could reach way back and get that old time, gutbucket barroom feeling with just a taste of the back-beat. If you have any information relating to these unsolved crimes, contact the Metropolitan Police Department at (202) 727-9099.I'm with Paul about the tunes - Horace was still growing as a writer and there are some really meaty gems there, some true "lost gems". The all new series premieres on May 17, 2023. Headlee will ask the questions: Why didn’t these murders make the news headlines? Did law enforcement do enough to solve these crimes? And how do racial disparities impact these types of investigations, past and present? Plus, we’ll explore new evidence which may crack the cold case wide open again. Label:Blue Note 7243 8 66745 2 4: Series:Blue Note Connoisseur Series: Format: 2 x CD, Compilation, Copy Protected. Journalist and Public Radio veteran Celeste Headlee (NPR, PBS, TEDx) examines old case files and interviews the investigators and family members who are still haunted by these killings. 3 The Allmusic review awarded the album 4 stars. Listen online 6 songs from Serenade To A Soul Sister 2004 - Horace Silver. You can buy latest album The United States Of Mind CD1 2004 - Horace Silver. The media dubbed him “The Freeway Phantom.”įrom iHeartRadio and Tenderfoot TV, a new podcast reinvestigates the 50 year old unsolved murders of these young girls. You Gotta Take a Little Love is an album by jazz pianist Horace Silver released on the Blue Note label in 1969, featuring performances by Silver with Randy Brecker, Bennie Maupin, John Williams, and Billy Cobham. Listen free to Horace Silver The United States of Mind (That Healin Feelin, The Happy Medium and more). Here you can buy and download music mp3 Horace Silver. 60s and 70s jazz quintets led by At Blakey, Horace Silver, Miles Davis and. Their bodies were discarded alongside DC freeways. some Jazz quintet Jazz quintet As some of the West Coasts stellar sideman. A lot of ink’s been spilled, and many garments rent, over the rise of fusion and soul jazz in the late ’60s and early ’70s, especially in the context of its supplanting the hard bop tradition. Between 19, six black girls went missing in the Washington D.C. Horace Silver's The United States Of Mind Trilogy - Blue Note Records.
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