londonjazz: lp review: kenny burrell guitar forms fileburrell, an excerpt from his guitar...

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18.10.13 10:56 LondonJazz: LP Review: Kenny Burrell Guitar Forms Seite 1 von 5 http://www.londonjazznews.com/2013/10/lp-review-kenny-burrell-guitar-forms.html `Kaz Simmons - Signs Recent Comments Lance commented on Rip Tommy Whittle 1926 2013: “Britain's Zoot Getz!” Anonymous commented on Cecile Mclorin Salvant At Ronnie Scotts: “I saw her for the 1st time on Jools Holland, what a talent. Every note was sung with such clarity. …” Derek Akien commented on Rip Tommy Whittle 1926 2013: “Sad news. As teenagers we used to watch Tommy 50 years ago at the Hopvine, Wembley. Fantastic bebop…” Anonymous commented on Rip Tommy Whittle 1926 2013: “Another of our great, original talents has left us. Very sad day. Enjoyed Tommy's playing live…” Lance commented on Rip Tommy Whittle 1926 2013: “A marvellous player so lyrical and yet still swinging. Sadly missed.” Recent Comments Widget OUR PODCAST JINGLE BY KATE WILLIAMS Home Venues Can We Help? Contact LP Review: Kenny Burrell Guitar Forms Kenny Burrell Guitar Forms (Speakers Corner/Verve V6-8612. LP review by Andrew Cartmel) Now celebrating their 20th anniversary, Speakers Corner Records in Germany have been consistently producing some of the finest vinyl records available anywhere. Working from the original master tapes, using all analog equipment, they reissue classic recordings in meticulous pressings on heavy vinyl. Where possible they even employ the original sound engineers who created the record in the first place. Their LPs are manufactured in the famed Pallas plant at Diepholz and the sound quality is unsurpassed. Initially Speakers Corner devoted its output to classical music, but luckily for us they soon expanded to include jazz in their catalogue. Among their reissues are a large tranche of famed albums on Verve, which brings us to Guitar Forms, nominally a Kenny Burrell LP although personally I’d be tempted file it under the name of its masterful arranger, Gil Evans. Recorded in late 1964 and early 1965, Guitar Forms has never quite had the cachet of timeless Evans albums like his collaborations with Miles Davis, Miles Ahead and Sketches of Spain. And, in fairness, only five of the nine tracks on Guitar Forms feature the full glory of Evans’ orchestral backings. Three others are quintet cuts with Burrell supported by Roger Kellaway on piano, Joe Benjamin on bass, the great Grady Tate on drums and Willie Rodriguez on congas. The ninth track is a pure solo by Burrell, an excerpt from his guitar transcription of Gershwin’s Prelude #2 for Piano. The way Lotus Land begins you might be forgiven for thinking that it’s another solo guitar piece. But Burrell’s meditative, flamenco-flavoured strumming and bluesy bebop spoken here Mary Coughlan @ Caedman Hall, Gateshead. October 17 The Jazz Breakfast The Pedrito Martinez Group The Jazz Mann Seth Lakeman - Seth Lakeman, Robin 2 Club, Bilston, Wolverhampton, 15/10/2013. thebluemoment.com Ribot, Grimes & Taylor Jazzwise Magazine Obituary: Tommy Whittle 1926- 2013 Jazz Yorkshire @LondonJazz thanks Seb! Much appreciated and great compering -> pic.twitter.com/a8FIwLB8r Retweeted by LondonJazzNews Michael Janisch @mpjanisch Expand Manu Dibango LIVE at the @BarbicanCentre on the 26th November! Get your tickets now: barbican.org.uk/music/eve @LondonJazz @LondonTown #jazz Retweeted by LondonJazzNews ESIP @esipuk 20h 16h Tweets Follow Follow Tweet to @LondonJazz Links We Like - UK Jazz Teilen 0 Mehr Nächster Blog» Blog erstellen Anmelden

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Page 1: LondonJazz: LP Review: Kenny Burrell Guitar Forms fileBurrell, an excerpt from his guitar transcription of Gershwin’s Prelude #2 for Piano. The way Lotus Land begins you might be

18.10.13 10:56LondonJazz: LP Review: Kenny Burrell Guitar Forms

Seite 1 von 5http://www.londonjazznews.com/2013/10/lp-review-kenny-burrell-guitar-forms.html

`Kaz Simmons - Signs

Recent Comments

Lance commented on Rip TommyWhittle 1926 2013: “Britain's Zoot Getz!”

Anonymous commented on CecileMclorin Salvant At Ronnie Scotts: “I sawher for the 1st time on Jools Holland,what a talent. Every note was sung withsuch clarity. …”

Derek Akien commented on Rip TommyWhittle 1926 2013: “Sad news. Asteenagers we used to watch Tommy 50years ago at the Hopvine, Wembley.Fantastic bebop…”

Anonymous commented on Rip TommyWhittle 1926 2013: “Another of our great,original talents has left us. Very sad day.Enjoyed Tommy's playing live…”

Lance commented on Rip TommyWhittle 1926 2013: “A marvellous playerso lyrical and yet still swinging. Sadlymissed.”

Recent Comments Widget

OUR PODCAST JINGLE BYKATE WILLIAMS

Home Venues Can We Help? Contact

LP Review: Kenny BurrellGuitar Forms

Kenny Burrell Guitar Forms

(Speakers Corner/Verve V6-8612. LP review by Andrew Cartmel)

Now celebrating their 20th anniversary, Speakers Corner Records in Germany have

been consistently producing some of the finest vinyl records available anywhere.

Working from the original master tapes, using all analog equipment, they reissue

classic recordings in meticulous pressings on heavy vinyl. Where possible they even

employ the original sound engineers who created the record in the first place. Their

LPs are manufactured in the famed Pallas plant at Diepholz and the sound quality is

unsurpassed. Initially Speakers Corner devoted its output to classical music, but

luckily for us they soon expanded to include jazz in their catalogue.

Among their reissues are a large tranche of famed albums on Verve, which brings

us to Guitar Forms, nominally a Kenny Burrell LP although personally I’d be

tempted file it under the name of its masterful arranger, Gil Evans. Recorded in late

1964 and early 1965, Guitar Forms has never quite had the cachet of timeless

Evans albums like his collaborations with Miles Davis, Miles Ahead and Sketches of

Spain. And, in fairness, only five of the nine tracks on Guitar Forms feature the full

glory of Evans’ orchestral backings. Three others are quintet cuts with Burrell

supported by Roger Kellaway on piano, Joe Benjamin on bass, the great Grady

Tate on drums and Willie Rodriguez on congas. The ninth track is a pure solo by

Burrell, an excerpt from his guitar transcription of Gershwin’s Prelude #2 for Piano.

The way Lotus Land begins you might be forgiven for thinking that it’s another solo

guitar piece. But Burrell’s meditative, flamenco-flavoured strumming and bluesy

bebop spoken hereMary Coughlan @ CaedmanHall, Gateshead. October 17

The Jazz BreakfastThe Pedrito Martinez Group

The Jazz MannSeth Lakeman - Seth Lakeman,Robin 2 Club, Bilston,Wolverhampton, 15/10/2013.

thebluemoment.comRibot, Grimes & Taylor

Jazzwise MagazineObituary: Tommy Whittle 1926-2013

Jazz Yorkshire

@LondonJazz thanks Seb! Much appreciated and great compering -> pic.twitter.com/a8FIwLB8r7

Retweeted byLondonJazzNews

MichaelJanisch @mpjanisch

Expand

Manu Dibango LIVE at the @BarbicanCentre on the 26th November! Get your tickets now: barbican.org.uk/music/event-de

@LondonJazz @LondonTown #jazz

Retweeted byLondonJazzNews

ESIP @esipuk

20h

16h

Tweets FollowFollow

Tweet to @LondonJazz

Links We Like - UK Jazz

Teilen 0 Mehr Nächster Blog» Blog erstellen Anmelden

Page 2: LondonJazz: LP Review: Kenny Burrell Guitar Forms fileBurrell, an excerpt from his guitar transcription of Gershwin’s Prelude #2 for Piano. The way Lotus Land begins you might be

18.10.13 10:56LondonJazz: LP Review: Kenny Burrell Guitar Forms

Seite 2 von 5http://www.londonjazznews.com/2013/10/lp-review-kenny-burrell-guitar-forms.html

From ImStillAwake - click pic for the fulltrack

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plucking is gradually shadowed by ominous bass, slinky, insinuating tambourines

and measured, menacing snare drum as the composition grows and snowballs in a

way reminiscent of Sketches of Spain. Soon Burrell’s guitar is writhing as if trying to

escape from a cluster of flutes before the cool hand of the saxes is laid across the

feverish sound. (And it’s a very cool hand, with Richie Kamuca, Steve Lacy and

Lee Konitz in the sax section.) This is vintage Gil Evans writing, right up there with

Time of the Barracudas or El Toreador. Its intensity is such that it’s almost a relief to

proceed to the airy mellowness of Terrace Theme, a quintet track with Burrell’s fat

tone set in counterpoint to Rodriguez’s spare congas and Kellaway’s throwaway

piano frills — and one begins to understand the original concept of the album, the

thesis and antithesis of big band numbers.

A beguiling Latin percussion sound also leads us into Moon and Sand, but this is

another orchestral track and the drummers now are Charlie Persip and Elvin

Jones. Burrell is perhaps at his most beautiful on this number set against a

backdrop of trombones, always a key instrument for Evans and played here by

Jimmy Cleveland and Jimmy Knepper. Moon and Sand ends all too soon and you

might be tempted to declare it the highlight of the album, but there are still rewarding

surprises in store.

A big band version of Greensleeves not only steers clear of the cornball, it ultimately

achieves the dark astringency of Evans’ versions of Kurt Weill compositions like

Bilbao Song and The Barbara Song. And the orchestra’s Last Night When We Were

Young ends in a slow-motion impressionist snowfall of chords which takes us right

back to Gil Evans’ first work with Claude Thornhill.

Guitar Forms is a milestone of 1960s jazz. It’s not only a fine showcase for its guitar

star, it is a kind of career summary for Gil Evans. And it’s never sounded more

gorgeous that it does here: wide, deep and three dimensional with instruments

precisely placed in space. If you want to get acquainted with Gil Evans or Kenny

Burrell this vinyl incarnation represents the state of the art — unless you can get

access to the original master tapes.

On Thursday, October 17, 2013

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