Keith Jarrett - Hamburg '72 (2014) [Hi-Res]

  • 18 Jan, 11:05
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Artist:
Title: Hamburg '72
Year Of Release: 2014
Label: ECM
Genre: Jazz
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks+.cue) / 24bit-96kHz FLAC (tracks+booklet)
Total Time: 55:22
Total Size: 126 / 324 MB / 1.06 GB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Rainbow (Live At NDR-Funkhaus, Hamburg / 1972) (9:52)
02. Everything That Lives Laments (Live At NDR-Funkhaus, Hamburg / 1972) (9:44)
03. Piece For Ornette (Live At NDR-Funkhaus, Hamburg / 1972) (9:33)
04. Take Me Back (Live At NDR-Funkhaus, Hamburg / 1972) (8:08)
05. Life, Dance (Live At NDR-Funkhaus, Hamburg / 1972) (3:00)
06. Song For Che (Live At NDR-Funkhaus, Hamburg / 1972) (15:08)

The legendary Keith Jarrett Trio, playing live at NDR Funkhaus, Hamburg in July 1972, is captured at the very apex of its creativity on an album released for the first time by ECM. From the first notes, with its radiant piano, it is clear that something special is happening here.

The trio with Charlie Haden and Paul Motian – formed in 1966 – was Jarrett’s first great band, his choice of players a masterstroke. With the bassist who had learned his craft in Ornette Coleman’s band, and the drummer from Bill Evans’s ground-breaking trio, Jarrett was able to explore the full scope of modern jazz, from poetic balladry to hard-swinging time-playing to ferocious and fiery free music.

The improvisation heard in the Hamburg concert includes episodes with Keith on soprano sax and flute as well as piano, while Motian expands the role of percussion in the music, developing the supple, elastic, supremely unpredictable vocabulary that would subsequently become such a crucial part of both Jarrett’s groups and Paul’s own. The interaction between the three musicians is uncanny throughout, reaching a peak in an emotion-drenched performance of Charlie Haden’s “Song for Che” (this is Jarrett’s only recording of a piece that has become a new jazz classic).

Keith Jarrett, piano, soprano saxophone, flute, percussion
Charlie Haden, double bass
Paul Motian, drums, percussion

Remixed and remaster by Manfred Eicher and Jan Erik Kongshaug from the original tapes