Lee Konitz & Martial Solal - Live at the Berlin Jazz Days 1980 (2016) [Hi-Res]
Artist: Lee Konitz, Martial Solal
Title: Live at the Berlin Jazz Days 1980
Year Of Release: 2016
Label: MPS Classical
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [88.2kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 48:53
Total Size: 893 / 233 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Live at the Berlin Jazz Days 1980
Year Of Release: 2016
Label: MPS Classical
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [88.2kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 48:53
Total Size: 893 / 233 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Invitation
02. No. 317 East 32nd Street
03. A Ballad for Lennie
04. Improvisation No. 53
05. Just a Blues
06. Star Eyes
07. Noblesse Oblige
08. Subconciously
A duo album of the highest caliber! US Alto saxophonist Lee Konitz’s career encompasses the beginnings of bebop, the Birth of the Cool, mainstream as well as the Avant-garde. Konitz has recorded with virtually every major modern jazz figure of the last 60 years, including Miles Davis, Charles Mingus, Gil Evans, and Brad Mehldau. French pianist Martial Solal has been a major musical voice since the 1950’s. The two have had a rich musical relationship since the 1960’s. This live 1980 album was conceived in part as a “Lennie Tristano Memorial”. Lee’s studies and playing experience with the iconoclastic pianist left an indelible imprint on the saxophonist’s concept, and Solal is the perfect partner for the project. A free-wheeling interpretation of the standard Invitation is followed by No. 317 East 32nd Street Tristano’s Manhattan address. Martial and Lee play the piece as if they were at one of Lennie’s open-ended sessions, as they experiment with the musical possibilities. The two take a deep bow to the master in a heart-felt A Ballad for Lennie,and Improvisation No.53 has Lee and Martial in an inspired duo hovering around the changes to All the Things You Are. It’s everything but Just A Blues, as the two explore by-tonal pathways. They go on to scope out Star Eyes in a spacey rendition. Noblesse Oblige sounds suspiciously like Cherokee, the composition Charlie Parker morphed into a defining jazz standard. The two play it with the appropriate virtuosic passion. Konitz’s Subconscious-Lee is a bop era classic that transcends the period – an example of Tristano’s innovative influence. An exhilarating exploratory session by two masters of the music.
„This recording contains the music performed at a Lennie Tristano memorial, duets by altoist Lee Konitz (Tristano's greatest student) and pianist Martial Solal. Although the repertoire certainly pays tribute to Tristano's legacy (including such songs as "No. 317 East 32nd Street," "Star Eyes" and Konitz's "Subconsciously"), the altoist had grown quite a bit as an improviser during the previous 30 years and Solal is a major stylist in his own right. Their explorative and spontaneous music covers a wide area of styles from swing and cool-toned bop to freer explorations and lives up to one's expectations.“
Lee Konitz, saxophone
Martial Solal, piano
Recorded live at the Philharmonie of Berlin on 30 October 1980
Digitally remastered
„This recording contains the music performed at a Lennie Tristano memorial, duets by altoist Lee Konitz (Tristano's greatest student) and pianist Martial Solal. Although the repertoire certainly pays tribute to Tristano's legacy (including such songs as "No. 317 East 32nd Street," "Star Eyes" and Konitz's "Subconsciously"), the altoist had grown quite a bit as an improviser during the previous 30 years and Solal is a major stylist in his own right. Their explorative and spontaneous music covers a wide area of styles from swing and cool-toned bop to freer explorations and lives up to one's expectations.“
Lee Konitz, saxophone
Martial Solal, piano
Recorded live at the Philharmonie of Berlin on 30 October 1980
Digitally remastered