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Showing posts from May, 2019

AppleMusicJazz Playlist 19 album With Alan Silva A.R.T.DA MyStreamS may 26

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AppleMusic Playlist jazz Spectrum is up With Abstract Rhythm in Time DigitalART by Alan silva

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Discover your next favorite song, album, or artist — without ever hearing an ad. Play anything in the vast 40-million-song catalog, along with your entire iTunes library. Playing Apple music jazz With Abstract Rhythm in Time DigitalART by Alan silva go to the links below and paste them in a new page and you can listen to the music in preview or you can take a prescription in Apple music, thank you. Alan Silva - Enjoy the ART! EDITORS’ NOTES Uptempo grooves perfect for the dance floor or a morning run. Our editors regularly update this playlist—if you hear something you like, add it to your library. EDITORS’ NOTES The commingling of jazz and rock dates back to the late '60s, when artists like Miles Davis and Frank Zappa started feeling around for new ways to stretch out. That spectral sound that we've come to know as “fusion” has only widened over the ensuing decades, with all kinds of influences—funk, soul, blues—being adventurously mapped onto jazz's template. Wh

Promenade en Velo Parigne l Eveque May 14 with AppleMusic Playlist Cosm...

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Know what’s next. Now. Discover your next favorite song, album, or artist — without ever hearing an ad. Play anything in the vast 40-million-song catalog, along with your entire iTunes library. Playing Apple music jazz With Abstract Rhythm in Time DigitalART by Alan silva go to the links below and paste them in a new page and you can listen to the music in preview or you can take a prescription in Apple music, thank you. Alan Silva - Enjoy the ART! 1.https://itunes.apple.com/fr/playlist/... EDITORS’ NOTES Take a trip to the funky side of the cosmos with these spaced-out jazz-funk grooves. Focusing on the wild side of '60s and '70s fusion, these analogue synth-driven, bass-heavy tracks by Sun Ra, Annette Peacock, Herbie Hancock, Return To Forever and more will make your mind expand while your booty shakes.https://music.apple.com/fr/playlist/c...

youtube and jazz With Abstract Rhythm in Time DigitalART by Alan silva Jackie McLean Essentials Apple Music Jazz

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EDITORS’ NOTES Born in Harlem in 1931, Jackie McLean was thrust into the heart of the modern jazz world with neighbours including Bud Powell and Sonny Rollins. He soon became a protégé of Powell, and later played with Rollins and Kenny Drew in a high school band. Like many players of his generation, he worshipped Charlie Parker, and his influence can be heard in McLean's early recordings with Miles Davis and George Wallington. By the end of the ‘50s, having recorded and performed with Davis, Thelonious Monk, Art Blakey and Charles Mingus, McLean had developed a sound that was all his own. EDITORS’ NOTES Alto-sax heavyweight Jackie McLean was known as a musical firebrand, but he had his reflective side too. His keening, lyrical lines paint delicate-yet-indelible colors across the canvas of "For Hofsa," and when McLean sinks his teeth into a jazz standard like "I Cover the Waterfront," he gracefully glides across the classic chord changes with the unhurried

Promenade en Velo Parigne l Eveque May 11 AppleMusic Playlist playlist/ahmad-jamal playlist/bill-evans-

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When jazz was bebop-hot, pianist Ahmad Jamal helped cool it down. Born in 1930, Jamal began playing professionally at age 14 and released the first of many piano-trio albums in 1951, a year after changing his name and converting to Islam. He had a hit in 1958 with At the Pershing: But No While he recorded many classic sessions as a bandleader, Bill Evans first made his name by playing alongside jazz titans like Miles Davis, Lee Konitz and Charles Mingus. On this collection showcasing his career as a sideman, Evan

Promenade en Velo Parigne l Eveque May 13 AppleMusic Playlist chill-mix bobby-hutcherson hank-mobley

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Attacking his vibraphone and marimba with two mallets in each fist, Bobby Hutcherson challenged the post-bop landscape of early ‘60s modern jazz with his bold harmonic invention and cerebral, swooping runs. His playing was daring enough for the avant-garde and fluid enough for a young EDITORS’ NOTES An essential branch of the Blue Note family tree, Hank Mobley possessed a loose, bluesy sound that kept one foot in the complex musicianship of bebop and another in the rich soil of American R&B. As one of Art Blakey's original Jazz Messengers, he emphasised jazz fundamentals: blues + swing = transcendence. Press play and bask in what Mobley once described as "not a big sound, and not small, but a round sound".