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Topic: Not All 'Lost' Jazz Albums Are Created EqualPosted By: snobb
Subject: Not All 'Lost' Jazz Albums Are Created Equal
Date Posted: 10 Sep 2019 at 6:37am
Historians and critics have pored over the recordings of these jazz greats like https://www.npr.org/artists/15368370/miles-davis" rel="nofollow - Miles Davis , https://www.npr.org/artists/15394783/john-coltrane" rel="nofollow - John Coltrane and https://www.npr.org/artists/15401862/stan-getz" rel="nofollow - Stan Getz
so exhaustively, it might feel like they've left no stone unturned. And
yet, fans are seeing a slew of exciting new discoveries lately from
these and other artists — so-called "lost" albums by some of the biggest
names in jazz.
"For jazz historians and record producers, the work never finishes," Nate Chinen of https://www.npr.org/series/347139849/jazz-night-in-america" rel="nofollow - Jazz Night in Americaand
NPR member station WGBO says. "There's always another lead to be
pursued, another corner to be explored and when we think we know everything about an artist ... There's often something else that we hadn't considered."
In
addition to that air of exploration, Chinen says that the jazz industry
has "commercial motivation" to pump out such albums and cites the 2018
album Both Directions at Once: The Lost Album, released via
Impulse! Records, which sourced material from John Coltrane's 1963
sessions and reference tapes as a shining example. "It sold over a
quarter of a million copies."
Later this month, Impulse Records! will release another album, Blue World, composed of Coltrane recordings from 1964 that were originally intended for a film score.
"Coltrane
recorded this music for a film in Montreal," Chinen says. "It's a
cornerstone of the Québécois film movement. But outside of that
movement, it hasn't been all that widely seen. So, the film historians
and the jazz scholars didn't connect the dots here and because the music
wasn't catalogued by the label it fell into this kind of blindspot."
A new record of Miles Davis' lost recordings called Rubberband was just released via Rhino Records. The album features Davis recordings from 1985 with contemporary touches. Vocalist https://www.npr.org/artists/17794278/ledisi" rel="nofollow - Ledisi is
featured on the track "Rubberband of Life." It's because of these
contemporary aspects that Chinen doesn't truly consider this a "lost"
album.
"We have to sort of raise an eyebrow at that term here because
there's no way Miles would have envisioned this album because, I mean,
Ledisi wasn't recording music in 1985," he argues. "The sound is clearly
something from our time, not his. So is it a lost album? I don't know.
But it is indisputably some music that Miles Davis made at an
interesting moment and because he is who he is people will be interested
to hear what this is all about."
Getz At The Gate (Live) was
released in May 2019 and encapsulates a performance from the late
saxophonist Stan Getz that Chinen says offers a fresh perspective on
Getz's music legacy.
"When you think of Stan Getz, I think many people think of his bossa
nova period," Chinen says. "This was a live recording made in 1961, a
few months before he began that journey with jazz samba. ... He's
leading a fabulous band with Roy Haynes on drums. He's swinging so hard
on the bandstand and so, you have this document of another side of
Getz."
Chinen counts these unearthed live jazz performances as "an area where the windfall just keeps coming."
"We've
seen so many live recordings that become cherished albums now that
weren't originally conceived as albums," Chinen says. "It's all to the
better, I think."