Louis Armstrong vs. George Harrison
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I affirm. Also, both were willing to experiment with their music and go beyond sticking with a proven, popular formula. For example. Armstrong's groups had many different instrumentation combinations. He made due with less and took advantage of larger groups. Harrison's love affair with the sitar and other elements of traditional Indian music were (in all likelihood) the first time American mainstream audiences had been exposed to that genre.
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I would also argue that Pops really didn't evolve after about 1932. He adapted to different groups, and sang more, but his playing style (or really, his singing style) really didn't change much, compared to the (r)evolution brought on by Goodman, Parker/Gillespie, Davis, Mulligan, et al.
The Ken Burns series "Jazz" infuriated me. Armstrong and Ellington were NOT the overriding influences in jazz for their entire careers. Both, after about 10-12 years of popularity, were far overshadowed by others. Armstrong, because he didn't progress (think R Strauss--wrote the same stuff in his late life as in early...compare him to Mahler) Ellington lost his edge in the later 30's when Basie got big, and then Ellington went off into more "classical" oriented directions, within the structure of a big band.
Harrison at least progressed beyond the Lennon/McCartney confines, even if he had comparatively little commercial success. (And, let's just ignore "When We Were Fab" and "Got My Mind Set On You").
The Ken Burns series "Jazz" infuriated me. Armstrong and Ellington were NOT the overriding influences in jazz for their entire careers. Both, after about 10-12 years of popularity, were far overshadowed by others. Armstrong, because he didn't progress (think R Strauss--wrote the same stuff in his late life as in early...compare him to Mahler) Ellington lost his edge in the later 30's when Basie got big, and then Ellington went off into more "classical" oriented directions, within the structure of a big band.
Harrison at least progressed beyond the Lennon/McCartney confines, even if he had comparatively little commercial success. (And, let's just ignore "When We Were Fab" and "Got My Mind Set On You").
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Agreed. This is PC BS that can probably be traced back to Marsalis revisionism.eupher61 wrote:The Ken Burns series "Jazz" infuriated me. Armstrong and Ellington were NOT the overriding influences in jazz for their entire careers. Both, after about 10-12 years of popularity, were far overshadowed by others.
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It appears to me that pre - Armstrong dixieland players took themselves terribly seriously as do too many of us today.
He put the smile in dixieland and the growl on the vocals that made that type of music more palatable and recognizable to visitors.
Heard a story that "Satchmo" would show up for a gig at 8 P.M. with a gallon of gin. Seven o'clock the following morning the gin would be gone and Satch would be hitting high F's consistently and most other trumpet players that showed up would be passed out on the floor or rubber - lipped beyond recovery.
He put the smile in dixieland and the growl on the vocals that made that type of music more palatable and recognizable to visitors.
Heard a story that "Satchmo" would show up for a gig at 8 P.M. with a gallon of gin. Seven o'clock the following morning the gin would be gone and Satch would be hitting high F's consistently and most other trumpet players that showed up would be passed out on the floor or rubber - lipped beyond recovery.
We pronounce it Guf Coast
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I know this has been posted before, but I just makes so much damn sense...Announcer: In 1964, John Coltrane was at his peak, Eric Dolphy was in Europe, where he would eventually die, the Modern Jazz Quartet was making breakthrough recordings in the field of Third Stream Music, Miles Davis was breaking new barrier with his second great quintet, and Charlie Mingus was extending jazz composition to new levels of complexity. But we're going to talk about Louis singing "Hello Dolly" instead.
bardus est ut bardus probo,
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All mushrooms are edible, some are edible only once.
Bill Souder
All mushrooms are edible, some are edible only once.
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you may have seen this before but whenever I think of the Ken Burns jazz thing I can't help but want to read it again...UncleBeer wrote:Agreed. This is PC BS that can probably be traced back to Marsalis revisionism.eupher61 wrote:The Ken Burns series "Jazz" infuriated me. Armstrong and Ellington were NOT the overriding influences in jazz for their entire careers. Both, after about 10-12 years of popularity, were far overshadowed by others.
enjoy....
The following has been making its way around Web jazz sites.
>
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Presenting Ken Burns’ 144-hour, Extremely Important documentary: “Jazz.â€
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Mirafone 187 BBb
1919 Pan American BBb Helicon
1924 Buescher BBb tuba (Dr. Suessaphone)
2009 Mazda Miata
1996 Honda Pacific Coast PC800