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What are you hearing at the moment??? Part II

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Posted on 16 Nov 2012 22:40:07 GMT
FDJ says:
Jex Thoth by Jex Thoth, mixture of doom and psych fronted by a superb female vocalist,really liking this.

Posted on 16 Nov 2012 22:13:11 GMT
Greysuit says:
http://www.dead.net/30daysofdead/

will lead you to 16 (so far this month - as today is the 16th) free Grateful Dead downloads - and I'm just goin' through the lot to make sure that I still like THE GRATEFUL DEAD (as if it was in doubt).

As a p.s. - I had problems downloading the freebies using MS IE8 - so I used Google Chrome on the first couple of days and haven't bothered to kill the macro since - so IE could well be o.k. now but I haven't tried it since 2 Nov - so who knows?

☺ ♫ ☺ ♫ ☺

In reply to an earlier post on 16 Nov 2012 22:00:48 GMT
Red Mosquito says:
Great minds..............

Funhouse
Live: 29-6-00 Spectrum - Oslo Norway

Posted on 16 Nov 2012 21:48:42 GMT
Original Punks by Iggy and The Stooges, just to keep things in a prog theme......

In reply to an earlier post on 16 Nov 2012 21:33:14 GMT
Brass Neck says:
..... and he just said, 'Always use fresh batteries.'

In reply to an earlier post on 16 Nov 2012 21:21:52 GMT
TheFoe says:
Yeah it's a good un SR!!

Posted on 16 Nov 2012 20:44:23 GMT
Post Soviet says:
Live by Free, supposedly Clapton asked Kossoff about his signature vibrato technique.

Posted on 16 Nov 2012 20:16:38 GMT
Last edited by the author on 16 Nov 2012 20:52:14 GMT
The Magnetic North- " Orkney: Symphony of the Magnetic North ".............utterly gorgeous , procured from an independent shop in Newcastle, could have spent a fortune.....but very pleased I grabbed this album, superb.
S.R.J
edit
try this
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1tb2Ebf0gYI

Posted on 16 Nov 2012 19:56:44 GMT
Derek W. says:
Cruel Moon & Midnight and Lonesome - Buddy Miller, an excellent 'twofer', for £5 from Rise Records Cheltenham.

Posted on 16 Nov 2012 18:02:04 GMT
Stanley Clarke Journey to Love album from Original Album Classics

In reply to an earlier post on 16 Nov 2012 17:46:49 GMT
Brass Neck says:
From Dubplate To Download: The Best Of Greensleeves Records - v/a, disc 2

Hit - Peter Gabriel disc 2

Posted on 16 Nov 2012 17:18:01 GMT
Today has been caravan In the Land of Grey and Pink and some tori Amos Little Earthquakes

Posted on 16 Nov 2012 17:17:55 GMT
2nd Vision by John Etheridge and Ric Sanders, a fine bit of jazz fusion,

Posted on 16 Nov 2012 17:12:30 GMT
Blastronaut says:
Butch Walker & The Black Widows - ' The Spade '

In reply to an earlier post on 16 Nov 2012 16:32:05 GMT
china cat says:
Scarred for life.

In reply to an earlier post on 16 Nov 2012 11:58:32 GMT
Last edited by the author on 16 Nov 2012 11:59:17 GMT
nocheese says:
Just because I solved it, and it was difficult, having never heard of the musician or the album. These things leave their mark.

Posted on 16 Nov 2012 11:55:25 GMT
Lez Lee says:
What a memory!

Posted on 16 Nov 2012 11:36:20 GMT
Last edited by the author on 16 Nov 2012 11:42:57 GMT
nocheese says:
I seem to remember John Surman's 'The Road to St Ives' being discussed somewhere around here a while back.

EDIT: - not so recent - it was a code set by Gordon on Crack 11 in Feb 2010!

Posted on 16 Nov 2012 11:33:52 GMT
Lez Lee says:
Wow! Thanks for that ER. I'll have to save up. Sigh.

Posted on 16 Nov 2012 11:31:20 GMT
Wharf Rat says:
From The Vaults.......
Greek Theater,Berkeley - Grateful Dead
............Wonderful!

Posted on 16 Nov 2012 06:53:04 GMT
Elastic Rock says:
Private City
Coruscating
The Amazing Adventures of Simon Simon
Westering Home
Saltash Bells

If you liked that Lez any of these would be a good place to place. Pure class.

Born in Tavistock, Devon in 1944, composer/multi-instrumentalist John Surman is one of the key figures in a generation of European musicians who have crucially expanded the international horizons of jazz during the past thirty years or so. Long acknowledged as an improviser of world class, Surman has also composed a body of work which extends far beyond the normal range of the jazz repertoire. Already, by the late 60s, it was clear that Surman was a phenomenon. He started out as a teenager playing the music of fellow Devonian Mike Westbrook, and then amazed the London establishment with displays of extravagant instrumental proficiency combined with a passionate, rumbustious imagination.

As a soloist, Surman's early career took shape in the melting pot that produced a number of fine British musicians during the 60s. As well as his association with Westbrook, there was varied experience with the blues of Alexis Korner, hard bop with Ronnie Scott's octet, mainstream jazz with Humphrey Lyttleton, South African township influences with the Brotherhood of Breath and jazz-rock with John McLaughlin. During this period he forged lasting relationships with composer John Warren, pianist John Taylor and bassist Dave Holland, with whom he co-led an exciting trio featured on his first album for Deram `John Surman'.

Surman also lead his own Octet in 1968 and performed in the big band directed by Mike Gibbs, but the formation of The Trio, in 1969, can be seen as a watershed in terms of his international profile. This unit, with expatriate Americans Barre Phillips (bass) and the late Stu Martin (drums) became one of the busiest and musically vital groups on the European circuit.

Surman also featured (with Karin Krog) in the European DownBeat pollwinners group that toured Japan in 1970, further enhancing his reputation on the international front.

By the mid-seventies, Surman had produced a couple of important albums - the solo project Westering Home, and Morning Glory, with Terje Rypdal , John Marshall, Chris Laurence, Malcolm Griffiths and John Taylor.

The Trio SOS, with Alan Skidmore and Mike Osborne proved another ground breaking project, combining electronics with the dynamic soloing of three fine saxophonists.

He had also begun a long-term collaboration with the American choreographer/dancer Carolyn Carlson, and was based at the Paris Opera with her company for some time.

In 1978, he recorded in duo both with Stan Tracey (Sonatinas) and also the Norwegian singer Karin Krog (Cloudline Blue). In addition he toured and recorded with the quartet of bassist Miroslav Vitous until 1982.

His debut solo album, `Upon Reflection' was recorded for ECM Records in 1979, launching a fruitful relationship with the company that continues to the present day, and includes four further solo records. Other albums include `Such Winters Of Memory', with Karin Krog and Pierre Favre; and the 5-star Down Beat-rated `The Amazing Adventures Of Simon Simon ` with Jack DeJohnette.

During the 80s and 90s, John maintained an impressively high output of quality work. As an instrumentalist, he played in duo with DeJohnette, Albert Mangelsdorff, Karin Krog, Barre Phillips, John Taylor, and performed in more open group formations with peer group musicians such as Kenny Wheeler, Dave Holland, Elvin Jones, Jon Christensen and Mangelsdorff. In addition he toured and recorded in quartet with Paul Bley, Bill Frisell and Paul Motian.

Surman took part in several tours over a period of years with the great Gil Evans Orchestra - being a member of the band which performed and recorded live in Perugia with Sting, in addition to a number other special concerts that the band staged with the likes of Van Morrison and John McLaughlin.

The duo with Karin Krog remains an important part of his activity, and, on a number of occasions, this has been augmented by a choir of mixed voices.

In the UK, he has toured twice for the Contemporary Music Network, once with the 10-piece Brass Project, and later in duo with Jack DeJohnette.

As a composer, John has continued to work in the contemporary dance field, with Carolyn Carlson and for other companies in Europe. He wrote' Private City' for Sadlers Wells Royal Ballet with choreography by Susan Crow- the music is featured on the ECM album of the same name.

He was Composer in Residence at the Glasgow Jazz Festival in 1989, producing new work for the Surman/Krog duo plus choir, and re-forming the Brass Project (this group has also performed at the North Sea Festival, and at festivals in Portugal, France, Germany and the UK.

The Surman/DeJohnette duo devised new music with the Balanescu Quartet, commissioned by the 1990 Camden Jazz Festival.

He has also written music for theatre and TV, and has had music performed regularly by Radio Big Bands in Germany and Scandinavia. December 1993 saw the premiere of a new suite, commissioned for the Oslo Radio Symphony Orchestra and Quartet.

In 1994, Surman was commissioned by the Bath Festival, BBC Radio 3, the Arts Council and South West Arts, to write new music for various groupings from solo to Brass Project, and including the Nordic Quartet with Karin Krog, Terje Rypdal and Vigliek Storaas, to celebrate his 50th birthday year.

A further commission in 1996 from Salisbury Festival allowed John to return to a long-standing fascination with choral music, producing Proverbs and Songs, an extended work for solo saxophone, pipe organ (John Taylor) and the 80-strong Salisbury Festival Chorus, directed by Howard Moody, and premiered in Salisbury Cathedral. The concert was recorded for BBC Radio 3, and has now been released by ECM. This album was one of the Mercury Prize choices for `Album of the Year' status in 1998. The piece continues to be popular and has been performed in a number of countries including France, Romania, Switzerland and the UK.

In 1998 he premiered a new chamber orchestra version of his acclaimed solo recording, The Road to St. Ives. The work was commissioned and performed by the Bournemouth Sinfonietta,

New music for saxophone and string quintet, (led by Chris Laurence), received its first performance at the Bath Festival 1998 and developed into the collection of pieces which can be heard on the ECM album `Coruscating'.

As well as expanding his horizons as a composer, Surman has continued to play live throughout the world. His unique solo performances reflect the special blend of acoustic and electronic music featured on recordings like `The Road To St Ives , ` A Biography of the Reverend Absalom Dawe', and the popular `Private City' by far his best-selling album. A solo visit to India took place in October 2003.

His duo with John Taylor toured in China towards the end of 1997 and continues to perform regularly throughout Europe and beyond.

He also appears in duo with Karin Krog , using a variety of electronics and keyboards - ( check out `Bluesand' on Karin's Meantime Records label) .

His quartet with John Taylor, Chris Laurence and John Marshall remains one of the most distinctive of European small bands and appeared in November 2003 at the Macau Festival and play in Poland during December.

Surman has recorded prolifically for ECM over the years.

During the 1990s, he released solo albums and recordings with the Brass Project, the English quartet with Taylor, Laurence and Marshall, and with the Nordic Quartet.

He has also featured on two records with Paul Bley, Gary Peacock and Tony Oxley, and on the album, Thimar, with Anouar Brahem and Dave Holland.

Film scores for two Raphael Nadjari films `The Shade' and `Apartment 5c' featured in Surman's output between 1999 and 2002. `Apartment 5c' was recently released on DVD by mk2 editions.

Since 2000, Surman's duo collaboration with Jack Dejohnette has been much to the fore, with two albums being released by ECM - the first 'Invisible Nature' recorded live at the Tampere and Berlin Jazz Festivals and the second `Free and Equal' in which the duo are joined by the10 piece chamber ensemble London Brass in a live concert recorded at London's Queen Elizabeth Hall.

His motet,'Under the Shadow' commissioned by the vocal quartet Red Byrd received it's first performance on BBC Radio 3 in December of 2002.

For the past three years Surman has been `Composer in Association' with the Sarum Chamber Orchestra, a professional orchestra based in Salisbury UK. In 2002 they performed Howard Moody's transcription of `Road to St. Ives'. In 2003 the Orchestra was joined by a choir of voices gathered from schools in the Salisbury area for the first performance of Surman's `In All Weathers'. January 30th 2004 will see the premiere of John's new composition in Salisbury City Hall . The piece, `Ultimate Voyage'is written for saxophone, piano and orchestra.

John Surman is a perennial pollwinner, and in 1989 received the Bird Award at the North Sea Jazz Festival and a Wire Award for services to jazz in Britain. He was awarded an Honourary Doctorate in Music by Plymouth University in 1997 and the BBC voted him `Instrumentalist of the Year' in 2002.

Surman's music transcends familiar boundaries. Although a deep love of the entire jazz tradition is an important element, he is equally affected by the melodic qualities of choral music and English folk music - "If I look back to what turned me on about music, it was what I heard before I ever came across any jazz." The surprise, and the enduring pleasure, of Surman's art is the contrast of simple, haunting melody, lush orchestral textures and intense improvisation combined with a passionate, rumbustious imagination.

BBC voted him `Instrumentalist of the Year' in 2002.

Of Surman's 1996 oratorio Proverbs and Songs, the Times wrote, "Surman confirmed that he should no longer simply be recognized as one of the country's leading improvisers and instrumentalists, but a choral composer of imagination, vision and power." If wanderlust is the overriding dogma of Surman's life, besides his incredibly wry sense of humor and extreme humbleness over his critically lauded abilities, then it's a creed one wishes more musicians were able to as successfully cultivate as well he does.

Between 2001 and 2004 Surman was Composer in Association with the Sarum Chamber Orchestra, a professional orchestra based in Salisbury UK. In 2002 they performed Howard Moody's transcription of `Road to St. Ives'. In 2003 the Orchestra was joined by a choir of voices gathered from schools in the Salisbury area for the first performance of Surman's `In All Weathers'.

January 30th 2004 saw the premiere of John's `Ultimate Voyage' for piano solo and orchestra in Salisbury City Hall.

Highlights in 2005 included recording and concert performances with the Bergen Big Band and Karin Krog. `Seagull' (Grappa Records - see Karin Krog link).

The London Jazz Festival featured a performance of `Road to St Ives' in an orchestral version with the BBC Concert Orchestra, in addition the programme also included a fascinating duet with Surman and Uri Caine. Several solo concerts and an NDR Hamburg recording with Steve Kuhn and Karin Krog followed, with concerts in Ukraine with Chris Laurence and the Kiev String 4tet and a performance of `Songs of the Forest' with Howard Moody being additional features of a busy year.

2006 began for Surman with 3 key recording sessions. The first of these was in Ullern Church Oslo, Norway, where Howard Moody and Surman recorded the organ and saxophone CD `Rain on the Window' for ECM records (ECM1986). The first of two trips to Propstei St. Gerold was with the group The Dowland Project, in this case featuring John Potter, Stephen Stubbs and Milos Valent, where they recorded the CD `Romaria' (ECM1970). Soon after, Surman returned to St. Gerold to record the second of his CDs with Chris Laurence and Trans4mation "The Spaces In Between". (ECM1956). The duo with Howard Moody and the string project with Chris Laurence and Trans4mation were central to Surman's work over the following 18 months - but during the last 6 months of 2007 he was involved in two European tours which explored widely different aspects of music making. The first was with Jack DeJohnette's `Ripple Effect' group, with DeJohnette, Marlui Miranda (vocal/perc), Jerome Harris (guit/bass) and John's son Ben Surman (electronica). The second tour featured `Thimar' (Anouar Brahem (oud) and Dave Holland (bass) in a revival of their successful 1997 project.
The release of `Rain on the Window' in 2008 gave added impetus to the organ and sax duo resulting in several performances notably in Coventry Cathedral, Southampton, Glasgow and performances in Italy and Poland. The String Project also appeared at the North Sea Jazz Festival to considerable acclaim.

The recording `Brewster's Rooster' (ECM2048) was released in 2009 and featured drummer Jack DeJohnette, bassist Drew Gress and guitarist John Abercrombie. This lead to performances in Washington DC at Blues Alley and Birdland in NYC. Surman also traveled to Melbourne Australia to appear in concerts with the renowned recorder player Genevieve Lacey for the first performances of Surman's suite for Recorder and strings - "Three Landscapes". The year ended with a concert at the London Jazz Festival with Karin Krog and the Brewster's Rooster band, followed by a European tour as a member of DeJohnette's Ripple Effect.

The Voss Festival 2010, Norway, played host to Surman and Karin Krog when they performed their joint-commission work `Songs about This and That' accompanied by four Norwegian musicians. vibraphonist Ivar Kolve, Bjørn Klakegg on guitar, Magne Thormodsæter, bass and percussionist Stein Inge Brækhus. Later in the year, Surman, together with bassist Chris Laurence, drummer John Marshall and the string section of the Wroclaw Philharmonic premiered his new composisition `Turbulence' at Jazztopad 2010 in Wroclaw. Howard Moody and John performed `Rain on the Window' at the Montreal Jazz Festival and there were other performances with artists including Dino Saluzzi, Palle Mikkelborg and Marlui Miranda.

Surman began 2011 in the recording studio performing as part of Richard Galliano's `Tribute to Nino Rota'
His new Solo Album "Saltash Bells" is due for release later in 2012

Posted on 15 Nov 2012 23:58:40 GMT
Last edited by the author on 16 Nov 2012 00:04:04 GMT
Lez Lee says:
Late Junction on Radio 3. Just heard a gorgeous piece for sax by John Surman called Saltash Bells. Anyone heard of him? I'll be investigating further.
Smitty, could be your sort of thing.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N22mmDPgXjU

Posted on 15 Nov 2012 23:45:22 GMT
Elastic Rock says:
Deep Dark Blue Centre/Portraits/The Alternate Mosaics - Graham Collier

Posted on 15 Nov 2012 23:39:37 GMT
Last edited by the author on 15 Nov 2012 23:42:01 GMT
http://pitchfork.com/features/articles/8993-the-cloud/ for some interesting info with regards to streaming music services........

In the meantime, from a purchased cd, Circle of Love by Steve Miller, and possibly band, although a fair bit of this was done by Steve on his own, which has the superb Macho City on it, the only reason why I bought it.

Posted on 15 Nov 2012 20:17:53 GMT
Last edited by the author on 15 Nov 2012 20:20:08 GMT
Johnny Bee says:
Fleetwood Mac - 25 Years - The Chain. Not bad, this. And still at a great price.
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Initial post:  16 Jun 2011
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