Sunday Music Selection - Brit Jazz
Apr. 2nd, 2017 10:16 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
More jazz and stuff -
The Mike Westbrook Concert Band - Love Song No. 1
The Mike Westbrook Concert Band (UK) -Love Song No. 1 [Love Songs] 1970
Mike Westbrook - piano
Norma Winstone - vocals
Mike Osborne - alto sax
George Khan - tenor sax
Paul Rutherford - trumpet
Chris Spedding - guitars
Harry Miller - bass
Alan Jackson - drums
Mike Westbrook was perhaps the most influential of the band leaders of British jazz fusion. His Concert Band originally featured Westbrook on piano, John Surman on baritone saxophone, soprano saxophone and bass clarinet two altoists, one tenorist, French Horn, trombone, valve trombone, trumpet, tuba, bass, drums, and debuted with Celebration (august 1967), co-composed by Mike Westbrook (particularly the eight-minute Echoes And Heroics and the seven-minute Portrait) and John Surman. After the inferior Release (august 1968), a larger band (still featuring Surman) performed the pacifist concept of the double-LP Marching Song (april 1969), entirely composed by Westbrook and inspired by Charlie Haden's Liberation Music Orchestra. A smaller band with Chris Spedding on guitar and Paul Rutherford on trombone, besides Surman, recorded Love Songs (april 1970). The zenith of Westbrook's dense and smooth arrangements was the nine-movement symphony Metropolis (august 1971), recorded by a 24-piece band (without Surman but with trumpeter Kenny Wheeler), followed by the eleven-part suite Citadel/ Room 315 (march 1975), with Surman back in the ranks.
The Mike Westbrook Concert Band, - Waltz (for Joanna)
The Mike Westbrook Concert Band, "Waltz (for Joanna)", 1969, album Marching Song Vol. 1
This album is an instrumental commentary on the origination and folly of war, inspired by the war in Vietnam.
The Howard Riley Trio - Dawn Vision
John Taylor - Pause
John Stevens Freebop - Blue Line
John Stevens Freebop recorded for the BBC 'Sounds of Jazz' in October 1982.
They're playing Stevens' composition "Blue Line" which was on side one of the LP 'Freebop' released the previous year which was recorded live at the Bracknell Jazz Festival.
The band here is:
Trevor Watts & Pete King (as)
Paul Rutherford (tb)
John Etheridge (g)
Jeff Clyne (b)
John Stevens (d)
For this BBC recording they played all three tracks from side one of the Freebop album; the difference being that instead of Gordon Beck on piano and Jon Corbett on trumpet, you have Trevor Watts on alto and John Etheridge on guitar.
Enjoy.
The Mike Westbrook Concert Band - Love Song No. 1
The Mike Westbrook Concert Band (UK) -Love Song No. 1 [Love Songs] 1970
Mike Westbrook - piano
Norma Winstone - vocals
Mike Osborne - alto sax
George Khan - tenor sax
Paul Rutherford - trumpet
Chris Spedding - guitars
Harry Miller - bass
Alan Jackson - drums
Mike Westbrook was perhaps the most influential of the band leaders of British jazz fusion. His Concert Band originally featured Westbrook on piano, John Surman on baritone saxophone, soprano saxophone and bass clarinet two altoists, one tenorist, French Horn, trombone, valve trombone, trumpet, tuba, bass, drums, and debuted with Celebration (august 1967), co-composed by Mike Westbrook (particularly the eight-minute Echoes And Heroics and the seven-minute Portrait) and John Surman. After the inferior Release (august 1968), a larger band (still featuring Surman) performed the pacifist concept of the double-LP Marching Song (april 1969), entirely composed by Westbrook and inspired by Charlie Haden's Liberation Music Orchestra. A smaller band with Chris Spedding on guitar and Paul Rutherford on trombone, besides Surman, recorded Love Songs (april 1970). The zenith of Westbrook's dense and smooth arrangements was the nine-movement symphony Metropolis (august 1971), recorded by a 24-piece band (without Surman but with trumpeter Kenny Wheeler), followed by the eleven-part suite Citadel/ Room 315 (march 1975), with Surman back in the ranks.
The Mike Westbrook Concert Band, - Waltz (for Joanna)
The Mike Westbrook Concert Band, "Waltz (for Joanna)", 1969, album Marching Song Vol. 1
This album is an instrumental commentary on the origination and folly of war, inspired by the war in Vietnam.
The Howard Riley Trio - Dawn Vision
John Taylor - Pause
John Stevens Freebop - Blue Line
John Stevens Freebop recorded for the BBC 'Sounds of Jazz' in October 1982.
They're playing Stevens' composition "Blue Line" which was on side one of the LP 'Freebop' released the previous year which was recorded live at the Bracknell Jazz Festival.
The band here is:
Trevor Watts & Pete King (as)
Paul Rutherford (tb)
John Etheridge (g)
Jeff Clyne (b)
John Stevens (d)
For this BBC recording they played all three tracks from side one of the Freebop album; the difference being that instead of Gordon Beck on piano and Jon Corbett on trumpet, you have Trevor Watts on alto and John Etheridge on guitar.
Enjoy.