What Were Your First Few Jazz Albums? |
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darkshade
Forum Senior Member Joined: 09 Mar 2011 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 1966 |
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Posted: 09 Aug 2011 at 3:25am |
What were your first jazz albums? Which albums got you started?
Technically, this was my first jazz record, back when I was in 6th or 7th grade Of course, it wasn't until a few years later, while I was still a senior in high school in 2005, when I first got this album. How I came across this album is a long story involving a series of events. I was just getting my feet wet with progressive music, and then this album essentially opened up my eyes and ears to lots of new and interesting music. I think having enjoyed the Charlie Brown album so much as a kid, kinda prepared me for it. And I was coming off of mostly metal and hard rock. After that I remember getting these albums. It took a while before I started exploring non-fusion jazz, but I still love the above albums. How bout you guys? |
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harmonium.ro
Forum Senior Member Joined: 07 Apr 2011 Location: Kobaia Status: Offline Points: 478 |
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This was my first jazz album:
Not bad for an introduction, eh? I think I got it either in my first highschool year (at 15) or in the last gymnasium year (at 14). The band had just played in our town but I didn't go see them, but I was hyped enough to get the album. It sounded quite esoteric for me back then... Strange music. |
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Sean Trane
Forum Senior Member Joined: 19 Apr 2011 Location: Brussels Status: Offline Points: 789 |
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Yikes.... In terms of pure jazz, this goes back to the mid-80's
if i don't count my father's jazz albums they weren't mine... and I'd have never bought them) or my first JR/F albums of the very start of the 80's (I know that one is Santana's Caravanserai followed MO's Birds Of Fire and a tad later Miles' Bitches Brew)
theoretically,with pure jazz albums this would bought around 85 or 86 (best I can do)... and it would be Trane's A Love Supreme, but Mingus' Black saint is right up there as well. but I couldn't possibly remember in which order the following jazz vinyl albums came and that would include KOB, Sketches, Time Out and more timeless classics (all vinyls, btw... none of which I still own, I must say, except for Borboletta, Bitches and Caravanserai)
Somehow if I could tell that with my rock albums around when (and sometimes even where) I bought them and in which order or chronology (as a teen, you tend to find it important, or it just sticks to you), in terms of jazz, I was somewhat much older, and these issues didn't seen to matter at all.
Edited by Sean Trane - 10 Aug 2011 at 3:23am |
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my music collection increased tenfolds when I switched from drug-addicted musicians to crazy ones....
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js
Forum Admin Group Site admin Joined: 22 Dec 2010 Location: Memphis Status: Offline Points: 35157 |
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Some of my first jazz records were:
Keith Jarrett "Fort Yaweh" Chick Corea "Return to Forever" Coltrane "Om" all on 8 track tape. |
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Sean Trane
Forum Senior Member Joined: 19 Apr 2011 Location: Brussels Status: Offline Points: 789 |
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Yikes!!! that's ancient!!
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my music collection increased tenfolds when I switched from drug-addicted musicians to crazy ones....
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dreadpirateroberts
Forum Admin Group Joined: 06 Jul 2011 Location: AU Status: Offline Points: 1836 |
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My first jazz albums were lent to me by an older friend, when I was in my early twenties.
Coming from rock, metal and folk, I didn't get it right away - it probably took me a year, on and off, to come around. I guess sometimes it just takes a while to appreciate what's going on in jazz (part of what makes it so rewarding) There are the three I was given And I listened to them in that order too, from memory. When I finally got it, KOB received the most rotation, but I think it was Davis' version of "Round Midnight' that sold me on jazz. Then it was straight to Bitches Brew and I was buried sound, coming up for air with Mahavishnu Orchestra and other albums of a more fusion-nature. Next came my second favourite Miles album From memory, approximately the same time as either BB or Sketches..., I got Head Hunters by Hancock and was hooked. From there I went mostly into the post-bop area, with this, my second Hancock album, which is still one of my favourites years later and which in turn led me to Freddie Hubbard and so on and so on! Thanks for the opportunity to ramble here, great thread, Mike Edited by dreadpirateroberts - 09 Aug 2011 at 8:07am |
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darkshade
Forum Senior Member Joined: 09 Mar 2011 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 1966 |
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No problem. The reasons I enjoyed jazz when I first got into it are sooo
much different than they are now. It's probably similar for everyone
here. When I first got into it, I was always looking for great
electric/Rhodes piano work, or some funky bass work. Now it's all about
the overall mood, but I'm into so many different sub-genres and have
wrapped my head around jazz in general, that it's tough to say.
My first non-fusion albums were Miles Davis - Kind of Blue and E.S.P. (Way after getting into Miles fusion albums), and Herbie Hancock - Empyrean Isles (after getting into his fusion albums). The rest is history.
I like it!!! Who is that? |
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harmonium.ro
Forum Senior Member Joined: 07 Apr 2011 Location: Kobaia Status: Offline Points: 478 |
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^ I suggested them for JMA here: Jazz Unit / Romania
That track is a composition by Lucian Ban and Eduard Jak Neumann (who both have solo entries on JMA too). Unfortunately the album can't be accessed in any way. My cassette is lost, too, so if I ever get the mp3s in a way or another, I'm going to upload them to YouTube. The best part of the album, or at least the one that fascinated me the most, was a track dedicated to Mingus and which started with more than one minute of a very realist simulation of the sounds emitted by an African cow herd and its shepherds (all done with musical instrument). That was amazing to listen at headphones, at night, in the dark. Took me to Africa... Edited by harmonium.ro - 09 Aug 2011 at 3:26pm |
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darkshade
Forum Senior Member Joined: 09 Mar 2011 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 1966 |
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^ Sounds really cool. I will have to check them out. Are they on the site?
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Cannonball With Hat
Forum Senior Member VIP Joined: 10 Apr 2011 Location: The Opium Den Status: Offline Points: 1212 |
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Christ...I have no idea. Haha. I'm assuming it was something in the fusion field being I only started to get into jazz proper recently. Maybe Brand X's Moroccan Roll? I've also had some The Industrial Jazz Group stuff for what seems like quite a long time, so maybe their City Of Angels.
For jazz proper...idk...hmm...seriously I have no idea. Maybe Bitches Brew (yes yes...technicall jazz-rock but lord knows I can't tell ) But I'm drawing serious blanks here.
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Hit it on Five.
Saxophone Scatterbrain Blitzberg Stab them in the ears. |
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Slartibartfast
JMA Special Collaborator Joined: 14 Jun 2011 Location: Atlantais Status: Offline Points: 625 |
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If I'd been doing the cataloging thing many years ago I might be able to answer that. Most likely stuff from ECM.
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Dick Heath
Forum Senior Member Joined: 11 Jul 2011 Location: Loughborough UK Status: Offline Points: 103 |
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In order of purchase (and in one case, in order of having heard after borrowing and then eventually buying from a friend):
Dave Brubeck Quartet: Carnegie Hall Live Volume 2
John McLaughlin: Extrapolation (on the original Marmalade label)
Lifetime: Turn It Over
Mike Westbrook: Marching Song
(Soft Machine: Volume 2 fits in here, on the cusp between underground music and jazz fusion, and indeed the underground music was somewhere between psychedelia and progressive music)
Miles Davis: Bitches Brew - in fact purchased after hearing Pete Drummond play the whole of Pharoah's Dance on BBC Radio 1 - sad to say that station lacks that sort of imagination anymore.
I may add, working at the end of the 60's in a record department of a well know British chain as a Saturday job, I had access to LPs which might have ended up in the dumper bins during sales - and that's where I found the first two for less than10 bob, (50 pence nowadays) !!!
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Matt
Forum Admin Group Jazz Reviewer Joined: 16 Jan 2011 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 2525 |
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I don't remember clearly but it was Miles......"Bitches Brew"( definitely first). "Round about Midnight", 'Milestones" and "Kind of Blue" and "Blue Trane" by Coltrane or Moanin' by Art Blakey. But I was starting to pick up Blue Note albums as well.
Primarily started with Miles though. That cover on Bitches Brew always had me curious about what music it contained for years and back then and still now to a degree I personally found that Rock and Pop had pretty much done it all. As you may know I find a lot of those Alternate and Indie bands are just not me and I was going to a music store and thinking there is nothing I want so I took up Jazz, Latin and African music. Result, Boredom no more
Have I mentioned Hard Bop rules
Always played Country though, from when I first shot out of me mum.
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Matt
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Chicapah
JMA Special Collaborator Jazz Reviewer Joined: 20 Jan 2011 Location: Forney, Texas Status: Offline Points: 56 |
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I'm pretty sure it was an album by Jimmy Smith because I loved the sound of the Hammond B3 ever since I'd heard Dave "Baby" Cortez's 45 single of "The Happy Organ." Not sure if I was ready for what Smith was doing, though, and the fact that I don't still have that LP proves that it went over my head. "Streetnoise" by Brian Auger and the Trinity may have been the first one that I liked enough to keep but that one opened me up to all sorts of possibilities.
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Make a joyful noise unto the Lord...
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Moshkito
Forum Groupie Joined: 15 Aug 2011 Location: Vancouver, WA Status: Offline Points: 42 |
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Hi,
My first taste of "jazz" was in Brazil ... Getz, Jobim, and a few others, that pretty much became synonymous with a lot of music in the 60's in Brazil, some of which really stuck it out good. Later on, Milton (Nascimiento) and then later Gismonti and a few others that defy the description of music and jazz!
A lot of it preceeded the "fame" and the "radio" era like the American Black music that was wiped out in the 50's in favor of the movie stars and fame game. Edited by Moshkito - 15 Aug 2011 at 8:48pm |
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Noak2
Forum Newbie Joined: 19 Apr 2011 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 27 |
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The first jazz albums I really got into were The Black Saint and The Sinner Lady by Mingus, and Live at the Monterey Jazz Festival 1965 by John Handy.
Edited by Noak2 - 20 Aug 2011 at 7:55am |
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Kazuhiro
Forum Admin Group Joined: 15 Jan 2011 Location: Tokyo, Japan Status: Offline Points: 3774 |
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I was listening to hard rock and prog rock well at student's time. However, jazz was an unknown territory for me. However, the music to which I listened at infancy time and the music to which it listens in one's teens are connected with jazz. It was felt that it was inevitable. Tune of Art Blakey to which I listened on radio by chance. And, 8:30 of Weather Report to which it listens by chance in the library of the university. These have expanded my interest in jazz. |
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harmonium.ro
Forum Senior Member Joined: 07 Apr 2011 Location: Kobaia Status: Offline Points: 478 |
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I also started my interest in fusion with Weather Report (Black Market) |
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Reserpine Wonk
Forum Newbie Joined: 15 Jan 2012 Status: Offline Points: 1 |
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I started learning piano at 16 and was babysitting for a couple with a huge record collection. In it was The Koln Concert.
My first teacher was really a drummer but he told me to start listening to Jazz 90 (in Philly). On one of my first few listens, they played Trane's "My Favorite Things." So luckily, I was exposed to top tier stuff from the beginning. Then, while in college, I got a job at a jazz CD shop. The owner was cool and allowed me to open any CD in the store to play it -- frequently, a customer would buy it as a result -- and let employees make purchases by paying cost only. This was when the first Penguin Guide came out so I'd give a listen to whatever Morton and Cook recommended. I spent just about everything I earned buying jazz CDs. But it was very nice at that time to be able to avoid clunkers. |
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dreadpirateroberts
Forum Admin Group Joined: 06 Jul 2011 Location: AU Status: Offline Points: 1836 |
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^ Very cool! Welcome to JMA. I used to work for a CD retailer too - it was pretty damn good having access to amazing music at a staff discount!
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