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Forum Description: General progressive music discussions
URL: http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=132748 Printed Date: December 12 2024 at 07:12 Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 11.01 - http://www.webwizforums.com
Topic: 70s Dreamy/Meditative Prog-Jazz SongsPosted By: MortSahlFan
Subject: 70s Dreamy/Meditative Prog-Jazz Songs
Date Posted: March 27 2024 at 07:35
"Smooth
Jazz" is usually funky, or a fit too fast for what I've been trying to find,
and I can't think of a music search engine that has tempo as a
filter.... I'm looking for jazz chords, slow tempo, don't even care if
there's vocals and percussion.. Always love electric piano, but also
acoustic piano.... flute.. acoustic guitar.. Sustained strings, deep echoes, pulsating... Relaxing. Meditative.
An example would be a song by Lonnie Liston Smith - Meditations ... Maybe another word would be "ambient"?
I'll post the title and the song, just in case the video URL changes, etc... it's sad seeing old archived threads on here with a lot of songs with nothing but a video that is unavailable.
Replies: Posted By: Manuel
Date Posted: March 27 2024 at 07:45
You can try some Charles Loyd's music, liek The water is Wide, or Mirror. You'll find a lot of meditative music there.
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: March 27 2024 at 08:05
Dreamily and proggy world-fusion music influences blend with a peaceful, acoustic, and introspective tone on Oregon's "Moon and Mind" album.
I'd like to recommend Chris Hinze Combination's "Mission Suite" album as well. Hinze created music spanning from jazz to nearly new-age music. Naturally, lead flautists using fusion as a vehicle was far less common, so this had a lot of tone colouring that you didn't see in other places.
Posted By: Grumpyprogfan
Date Posted: March 27 2024 at 08:09
A lot of Pat Metheny would fit your request, but it carries into the 80's.
Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: March 27 2024 at 09:01
Manuel wrote:
You can try some Charles Loyd's music, liek The water is Wide, or Mirror. You'll find a lot of meditative music there.
Thanks. I just noticed on a video that the guitarist is John Abercrombie, which reminds me of a great song that kinda fits in this thread
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: March 27 2024 at 09:31
Grumpyprogfan wrote:
A lot of Pat Metheny would fit your request, but it carries into the 80's.
His album "Watercolours" is from 1977 and probably fits the OP request at best regarding Pat Metheny's oeuvre.
Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: March 27 2024 at 17:29
I don't listen to jazz but the Vangelis album Opera Sauvage could be worth checking out for this kind of vibe.
Posted By: AJ Junior
Date Posted: March 27 2024 at 19:46
Lot of great chill stuff on this record right here :
Super underrated Brazilian jazz trio "Azimuth" self titled LP from the mid seventies.
------------- "Together We Stand, Divided We Fall"
Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: March 27 2024 at 21:08
richardh wrote:
I don't listen to jazz but the Vangelis album Opera Sauvage could be worth checking out for this kind of vibe.
...
Hi,
Such beautiful stuff ... it's amazing how much music that man gave us to enjoy and live with ... irreplaceable!
(PS: To be honest, I never "classified" music per se, and always considered it nothing but a wonderful "vibe" and "touch" for our ears and heart, and there really aren't many that I do not listen to ... always to find some far out things in the middle of it. After so much music, finding something new that we heard before but did not acknowledge because it was not our preferences, I can tell you that 40 years later ... you will appreciate that beauty, jazz or not!)
------------- Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: March 27 2024 at 21:43
AJ Junior wrote:
Lot of great chill stuff on this record right here :
Super underrated Brazilian jazz trio "Azimuth" self titled LP from the mid seventies.
Nice stuff. This "Azimuth" song is from the 1977 self-titled debut by the English jazz trio of the same name, whose sound should satisfy the OP's request.
In terms of Brazilian acts that may fit the thread, Egberto Gismonti comes to mind. "Café" is a song from his 1976 album "Corações Futuristas."
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: March 27 2024 at 23:04
The wonderful "Rubisa Patrol" almost got forgotten in this thread. American jazz pianist Art Lande recorded "Rubisa Patrol" with bassist and fluteist Bill Douglass in May 1976 and released it on ECM a few months later. The other two members of the quartet are drummer Glenn Cronkhite and trumpet player Mark Isham. The Far East meditative bamboo-flute solo at the start is why I chose "Celestial Guests/Many Chinas," although the entire album is peerless dreamy jazz.
Posted By: Awesoreno
Date Posted: March 27 2024 at 23:16
Check out Jaga Jazzists (if you're willing to move out of the 70s bubble). Some of their stuff is quite relaxing, while other tracks are a little more active. But they were trailblazers in nu-jazz/modern acid jazz, and have elements of post-rock in their sound.
Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 28 2024 at 05:46
If you don't like the opening track, cut to 18:18, that is the best track.
Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: March 28 2024 at 07:10
Moyan wrote:
...
In terms of Brazilian acts that may fit the thread, Egberto Gismonti comes to mind. "Café" is a song from his 1976 album "Corações Futuristas."
...
Hi,
There are several of his albums that deserve mention. I think "MAGICO" is the special album that needs to be heard ... it was so good that they had to take it on the road! There are some video clips on the Internet from it. And they are wonderful as well.
I like the "trilogy" of DANCA DAS CABECAS, SOL DO MEIO DIA and SOLO as the special albums in his listing ... although the one album of his that stands up over all of them, does not exactly fit in this area but it has so much classical value in it as to be far out ... NO CAIPIRA ... is absolutely his best album.
Also special and not heard enough is his album with NANA VASCONCELLOS ... Duas Voces ... but almost all of this is taking what we call "jazz" out of its normal elements ... the stuff Egberto does in many ways, is too good to even be considered "jazz".
------------- Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: March 28 2024 at 08:29
moshkito wrote:
Moyan wrote:
...
In terms of Brazilian acts that may fit the thread, Egberto Gismonti comes to mind. "Café" is a song from his 1976 album "Corações Futuristas."
...
Hi,
There are several of his albums that deserve mention. I think "MAGICO" is the special album that needs to be heard ... it was so good that they had to take it on the road! There are some video clips on the Internet from it. And they are wonderful as well.
I like the "trilogy" of DANCA DAS CABECAS, SOL DO MEIO DIA and SOLO as the special albums in his listing ... although the one album of his that stands up over all of them, does not exactly fit in this area but it has so much classical value in it as to be far out ... NO CAIPIRA ... is absolutely his best album.
Also special and not heard enough is his album with NANA VASCONCELLOS ... Duas Voces ... but almost all of this is taking what we call "jazz" out of its normal elements ... the stuff Egberto does in many ways, is too good to even be considered "jazz".
I would want to bring up Airto Moreira, a Brazilian jazz drummer and percussionist. The track "Flora's Song" by Airto, who is married to Brazilian singer Flora Purim, uses a dreamy, evocative melody to great effect as it develops speed. There's also a beautiful rendition of Chick Corea's "Return to Forever" on Airto's album "Free," featuring Chick Corea himself, but the album also features Joe Farrell, Keith Jarrett, Stanley Clarke, George Benson, and other such legends; aside from drums and percussions, Airto also plays a wood flute on this CTI release from 1972.
Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: March 28 2024 at 09:08
moshkito wrote:
richardh wrote:
I don't listen to jazz but the Vangelis album Opera Sauvage could be worth checking out for this kind of vibe.
...
Hi,
Such beautiful stuff ... it's amazing how much music that man gave us to enjoy and live with ... irreplaceable!
(PS: To be honest, I never "classified" music per se, and always considered it nothing but a wonderful "vibe" and "touch" for our ears and heart, and there really aren't many that I do not listen to ... always to find some far out things in the middle of it. After so much music, finding something new that we heard before but did not acknowledge because it was not our preferences, I can tell you that 40 years later ... you will appreciate that beauty, jazz or not!)
Yes indeed and even 'left field' albums like Beauborg and Invisible Connections have that beauty somehow.
Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: March 28 2024 at 09:10
It seems like many of the songs I look for have cymbal flourishes, tinkering to start and end the song, maybe some in the middle.. Some of it was too hectic or too quick tempo.
I especially liked the Pat Metheny album.. I've been a fan for a while, but with instrumentals (jazz, classical, etc), I can never remember the titles!
Laura Nyro would be an example of a non-instrumental idea...
Posted By: cstack3
Date Posted: March 28 2024 at 10:24
Very nice thread! I'm glad our new member Moyan brought up Airto and Flora Purim, those were the first ones that came to my mind!
I'm sure the members of Weather Report recorded some of this type of music, as solo members if not as a group, but I'm having a hard time thinking of examples. Anyone?
Oregon was another excellent suggestion! And, perhaps some of the artists from Windham Hill, like Shadowfax, would fit the bill! Have fun, I'll watch this space!
------------- I am not a Robot, I'm a FREE MAN!!
Posted By: AJ Junior
Date Posted: March 28 2024 at 12:05
Forgot to mention this earlier, but Jean Luc-Ponty's stuff is obviously super fitting of this description. A lot of his work is like what you mentioned, but Cosmic messenger in particular is one of my favorites.
There's a bit of high intensity stuff on here with the electric violin, but its mostly super ethereal.
------------- "Together We Stand, Divided We Fall"
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: March 28 2024 at 12:33
"Aqua Marine" from the 1979 Santana album titled Marathon.
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: March 28 2024 at 12:54
cstack3 wrote:
I'm sure the members of Weather Report recorded some of this type of music, as solo members if not as a group, but I'm having a hard time thinking of examples. Anyone?
Here's a Zawinul piece from the final WR album, This is This. I think it fits the bill.
cstack3 wrote:
And, perhaps some of the artists from Windham Hill
IMHO, this is a particularly stunning piece of music created by the late Michael Hedges.
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: March 28 2024 at 15:10
MortSahlFan wrote:
Speaking of fusion, "Timeless" is a good one. I especially like the version with John Abercrombie.
Yes, it's excellent. I have everything Jan Hammer played on in the '70s and that one's near the top, along with The First Seven Days and Like Children by Hammer/Goodman.
Another goody is Time is Free by David Earle Johnson & Jan Hammer.
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: March 29 2024 at 02:49
From Keith Jarrett's album "Arbour Zena," there's a beautiful passage called "Solara March," which is dedicated to Pablo Casals and the sun. The strings briefly lay out, giving Jarrett, Charlie Haden, and Jan Garbarek more room to move around while still staying within the boundaries of an underlying framework that the strings quickly re-engage, creating a pleasing finale that would have fit neatly in any of Jarrett's jazz quartets from that era. But what truly distinguishes it as a superb composition that suits the bill is the result's total coherence, which is enhanced by the strings.
Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: March 29 2024 at 07:53
Moyan wrote:
From Keith Jarrett's album "Arbour Zena," there's a beautiful passage called "Solara March," which is dedicated to Pablo Casals and the sun. The strings briefly lay out, giving Jarrett, Charlie Haden, and Jan Garbarek more room to move around while still staying within the boundaries of an underlying framework that the strings quickly re-engage, creating a pleasing finale that would have fit neatly in any of Jarrett's jazz quartets from that era. But what truly distinguishes it as a superb composition that suits the bill is the result's total coherence, which is enhanced by the strings.
...
Hi,
Believe it or not, this was one of the first albums of KJ that I got, and right after it I went after Jan Garbarek, which I enjoyed a lot, even though it felt like it had a spirit that was way out there and I'm not sure that it was jazz, but some sort of free form something or other, and it wasn't until his time with Charlie Haden and Egberto Gismonti that Garbarek "mellowed out" and started his experimental period of which "EVENTYR" is a phenomenal album and should be mentioned here, however, things in there are not exactly jazz, opening with "Soria Maria" a very stunning piece that was also used in a film that ended up getting the Foreign Film Oscar award, and had this piece, and some by Terje Rypdal as well.
While KJ stuck to his jazz abilities and experimentations, in the end, I seemed to feel that he should have been writing some things for orchestra as well, with one slight problem ... orchestras are notoriously bad about new things, because it takes rehearsal and attention and above all ... time ... for which they would not get paid to make sure their part was better ... but nowadays, with keyboards being able to replace an orchestra his one hand ability should help define music very well, unless he has completely let go of his left hand musical ability, and even in his mind, without the left hand he can not hear, or feel what he is composing ... something like that.
But i between, I think he has given us some amazing material and music ... and some solo piano which makes his THE American piano player of the 20th Century, second to probably none other even though jazz in America has some outstanding piano players. But KJ's freedom with the music is the difference.
BTW, if you have not seen it, there are many little interviews and specials that he talks about music ... and his take? Yep ... you got it ... forget it all except what you see! And education? Blurppppp! I say that stuff all the time ... music is not about notes and chords ... it's about your heart and your own inner vision ... and without that the music has no soul ... let it be chords and notes so we forget it faster yet ...
------------- Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
Posted By: Psychedelic Paul
Date Posted: March 29 2024 at 07:57
An all-time favourite from Santana.
Posted By: AJ Junior
Date Posted: March 29 2024 at 09:56
Try this. A super unique Yugoslavian jazz fusion group from the mid to late seventies called "September."
Some of the best choir work of all time, and very meditative. I think it was even sampled by Kendrick Lamar!
------------- "Together We Stand, Divided We Fall"
Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: March 29 2024 at 10:41
For that jazzy prog, piano, acoustic, sax sort of thing, I will always love Traffic's John Barleycorn Must Die and Low Spark of High Heeled Boys. More in the rock genre than jazz, but quite atmospheric and mellow without being bland.
------------- ...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: March 29 2024 at 16:51
AJ Junior wrote:
Try this. A super unique Yugoslavian jazz fusion group from the mid to late seventies called "September."
Some of the best choir work of all time, and very meditative. I think it was even sampled by Kendrick Lamar!
That one is indeed good, but it's really a version of "Ostavi trag" from Tihomir "Pop" Asanović's 1974 debut solo album. In my opinion, the first version is even better. The lead female vocalist in the original rendition is the Croatian singer Josipa Lisac, who delivers a fantastic performance. There are a few proggy synth noises that I like. The song features Asanović's dreamy electric piano solo in the middle, as well as a gorgeous soprano sax solo with an endearing Coltrane-esque vibe.
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: March 29 2024 at 20:06
You'll like "Two Rainbows Daily" by Hugh Hopper and Alan Gowen if you like ECM-like fusion with piano and synthesiser. The orchestrations and overall dreamy atmosphere remind me of Ralph Towner's usage of synthesisers on his solo recordings and the ECM release of the Oregon self-titled LP.
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: March 30 2024 at 08:42
This track is from the 1979 album "Ručni rad" by Macedonian band Leb i Sol, which is not only their best studio album but also, dare I say, one of the best European jazz-rock albums ever made. The arrangements and performances of the songs are just amazing. The entire record exudes a deep sense of vitality and delicate southern European sensibility. It's essential! The album features one of the most dreamy pieces from the thriving European jazz-rock scene of the late 1970s, "Verni Pas," a delicate tune with a poignant saxophone solo and beautiful keyboards that altogether, with a wordless chorus and brief acoustic guitar solo at the end, fit the bill perfectly.
Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: March 30 2024 at 12:38
A bit too fast for what I'm looking for, but when I saw Eastern European music, I remembered this one. I'm almost positive I found it here :)
ILUMINACIJA - MIKI PETKOVSKI (1979)
I always prefer a woman's voice nowadays over the music... I also love vocables over a song, which allow the vocals to be an instrument, and not worry about lyrical phrasing, etc...
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: March 31 2024 at 00:47
The strange fate of the Serbian band 37°C is tied to their unusual album, "Sidarta." All of the recording and mixing of the material took place at Gooseberry Studio in London in the early spring of 1979. However, the finished product was rejected as "uncommercial" by Belgrade's major label, PGP, which, despite covering all of the recording expenses, never released the album in 1979. The content has been all but forgotten since then, and while it was available as a self-published cassette album on Belgrade's bootleg market, it wasn't until 2017 that the Discom label officially released it as a vinyl LP.
The title track, which was named after and influenced by Herman Hesse's Siddhartha novel, opens the album. This eighteen-minute epic, which is jazzy, trippy, experimental, and spacey, seems to fit the bill.
The amazing musical composition features a variety of sounds and textures, including captivating synths, a catchy bass line, and expressive guitar; the drums appear only towards the end of a song following vocal improvisation using wordless vocables, saxophones, and flutes, all of which have the purpose of evoking daydreams.
The gradation of the arrangement is also fascinating, especially in the way some instruments are presented. The plot of Hesse's work is really portrayed in the song's arrangement: Siddhartha, the main character, first views perfection as "Brahman," but he soon abandons this idea to pursue his own route of self-discovery. The band members use every bit of their musical knowledge to build up the energy to the point where faultless performances explode throughout the song. One might find that a quite meditative approach.
Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: March 31 2024 at 08:19
I love that slow wah-wah, which seems to fit so well... Catherine Howe is such a great singer, and matched with the great Piero Piccioni
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: April 01 2024 at 18:49
The 1974 album "Haiku" by Don Ellis is a singular piece of jazz. The ten tracks composed by Ellis are based on Japanese haiku poems and include violins, violas, cellos, and harps in addition to the trumpet, which serves as the main instrument.
The harmonic smoothness of Ellis's own arrangements is superb. Additionally included on "Haiku" are guitarists, keyboardists, and a rhythm section, although their contributions are minimal. The music on the album is incredibly tranquil, calming, and meditative.
"Water Jewels" is highly recommended for anyone who values contemplative melody, mellowness, and the sounds of the trumpet, harp, and softly played strings. Very lovely music to calm your thoughts and induce a dreamlike state.
Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: April 02 2024 at 05:35
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: April 03 2024 at 10:19
"Bagatelle #4" is one of my favourites from Chick Corea's "Secret Agent" album. Amazing sound, beautifully played. Composed by a musical genius, the great Chick Corea, it is one of a kind. Dreamily sound of vocables floating in Corea's sumptuous synthesiser setting and fretless bass line built by Bunny Brunel.
Posted By: Intruder
Date Posted: April 03 2024 at 16:53
Herbie Hancock's Mwadishi albums are absolutely far out, but the offshoot albums from Mwadishi alum, especially Eddie Henderson (the Realization LP!) and Bernie Maupin (the Jewel in the Lotus LP!), are equally essential.
Check out Alice Coltrane's late 60s and early 70s stuff. Another favorite is Don Cherry's Brown Rice......browwwwn riysssssssssss.
Love that someone mentioned Alan Gowan earlier - anytime his name pops up, I smile. Yeah, check out those Gilgamesh albums for some groovy mellow jazz.
------------- I like to feel the suspense when you're certain you know I am there.....
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: April 03 2024 at 18:44
Carlos Santana and Alice Coltrane share a credit on the 1974 "Illuminations" album. Together with arranging and conducting the string section, Alice composed the instrumental "Bliss: The Eternal Now." She also performed on the harp and piano, which, when combined with Santana's guitar tones, created an orchestral revelation of the ether sounding as though it contained a sunbeam.
Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: April 04 2024 at 05:18
I like the stuff Santana did with Coltrane and McLaughlin.. It's been a while since I've listened to "Caravanserai"
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: April 11 2024 at 10:16
It is worth paying close attention to the Armenian keyboardist and composer Tigran Hamasyan and his group called Aratta Rebirth. All in all, I see nothing lacking in their 2009 album "Red Hail" at all. It is unquestionably a progressive fusion gem.
I believe that Hamasyan's celestial piano, Ben Wendel's masterful soprano sax soloing, and Areni Agbabian's angelic wordless vocals on "Love Song" are an adequate complement for this thread.
Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: April 11 2024 at 12:37
Hi,
There was in the mid 70's a jazz piece that had someone playing solo along side a sitar sound ... I don't think it is Miles, although the style of the solo would likely be considered very much like him.
I know this is not saying much, or explaining much but anyone have any ideas of where to look? That piece was really far out, btw, and I have a bit of it, which was at the end of a jazz show just before the Space Pirate Radio show one time. I think it was between 1974/1976 or there abouts.
And thx if we can find it ... I have never found it, but I would almost say that the way it was played was less "jazz" and a bit more "ecm'ish".
------------- Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: April 17 2024 at 06:40
moshkito wrote:
Hi,
There was in the mid 70's a jazz piece that had someone playing solo along side a sitar sound ... I don't think it is Miles, although the style of the solo would likely be considered very much like him.
I know this is not saying much, or explaining much but anyone have any ideas of where to look? That piece was really far out, btw, and I have a bit of it, which was at the end of a jazz show just before the Space Pirate Radio show one time. I think it was between 1974/1976 or there abouts.
And thx if we can find it ... I have never found it, but I would almost say that the way it was played was less "jazz" and a bit more "ecm'ish".
If you have a bit of it, you might be able to find it.. I used to use a site where you'd upload a few seconds, and it usually would find it.. Or maybe upload it onto YouTube? I'm sure someone in here would know.
Posted By: Valdez1
Date Posted: April 20 2024 at 21:05
Best I've heard in many years. It's from 1976... I just discovered it today. The 2nd track has beautiful vocals. You must hear this. Will do more research to be sure. if you dont want to hear the whole album at least listen to "sail away" at 28:42... One of the best clean guitar solos ever... Blew my mind.
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: April 21 2024 at 12:24
Valdez1 wrote:
Best I've heard in many years. It's from 1976... I just discovered it today. The 2nd track has beautiful vocals. You must hear this. Will do more research to be sure. if you dont want to hear the whole album at least listen to "sail away" at 28:42... One of the best clean guitar solos ever... Blew my mind.
Posted By: Floydoid
Date Posted: April 28 2024 at 13:47
dr wu23 wrote:
Hmmm...for me the whole lp Caravanserai by Santana fits in here nicely.
Yep absolutely - their masterpiece too - it's one album I'd certainly want with me on a desert island... and as you suggest it was made to be listened to as a whole... the mood just builds and builds until you get to that stunning final track.
------------- 'We're going to need a bigger swear jar.'
Posted By: verslibre
Date Posted: April 28 2024 at 14:12
Jan Hammer Group's "Hyperspace" from Melodies consists of Jan improvising over Steve Kindler's rapid-fire violin bowing. Just lovely!
Posted By: dr wu23
Date Posted: April 28 2024 at 15:13
MortSahlFan wrote:
Chick Corea - Return To Forever - Crystal Silence
Wonderul lp
------------- One does nothing yet nothing is left undone. Haquin
Posted By: dr wu23
Date Posted: April 28 2024 at 15:14
Floydoid wrote:
dr wu23 wrote:
Hmmm...for me the whole lp Caravanserai by Santana fits in here nicely.
Yep absolutely - their masterpiece too - it's one album I'd certainly want with me on a desert island... and as you suggest it was made to be listened to as a whole... the mood just builds and builds until you get to that stunning final track.
------------- One does nothing yet nothing is left undone. Haquin
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: April 29 2024 at 02:28
Led by bassist Miloš Bosnić, Bosque is a young jazz-rock quintet from Serbia. With a total of forty-six and a half minutes, their debut album, "Four Noble Truths," features four tracks and the longest album piece, exceeding twenty-one minutes of progressive, high-energy 70s-style jazz-rock. "Millwall Park," however, is actually a bluesy mid-tempo ballad featuring a soprano saxophone, electric piano, bass, and guitar interplay, which has been performed to such great effect that anyone who likes dreamy jazz in the 70s vein should enjoy it.
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: April 29 2024 at 03:04
This tune comes off the second album by Slovenian band Predmestje (English: "Suburbs"), which was released in 1978. Its title, "Igra" (English: "Dance"), is essentially a showcase for the lambent tones of Andrej Pompe's electric piano, accentuated by the drums of Janez Hvale and the bass of Gabriel Lah; they gave a lush accompaniment to Aleksander Malahovsky's saxophone. "Igra" is indeed incredibly dreamy and proggy on its own.
Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: April 29 2024 at 08:55
Moyan wrote:
This tune comes off the second album by Slovenian band Predmestje (English: "Suburbs"), which was released in 1978. Its title, "Igra" (English: "Dance"), is essentially a showcase for the lambent tones of Andrej Pompe's electric piano, accentuated by the drums of Janez Hvale and the bass of Gabriel Lah; they gave a lush accompaniment to Aleksander Malahovsky's saxophone. "Igra" is indeed incredibly dreamy and proggy on its own.
Those last couple songs were perfect (especially with a flu)
Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: April 30 2024 at 10:40
MortSahlFan wrote:
moshkito wrote:
Hi,
There was in the mid 70's a jazz piece that had someone playing solo along side a sitar sound ... I don't think it is Miles, although the style of the solo would likely be considered very much like him.
I know this is not saying much, or explaining much but anyone have any ideas of where to look? That piece was really far out, btw, and I have a bit of it, which was at the end of a jazz show just before the Space Pirate Radio show one time. I think it was between 1974/1976 or there abouts.
And thx if we can find it ... I have never found it, but I would almost say that the way it was played was less "jazz" and a bit more "ecm'ish".
If you have a bit of it, you might be able to find it.. I used to use a site where you'd upload a few seconds, and it usually would find it.. Or maybe upload it onto YouTube? I'm sure someone in here would know.
Hi,
Got lucky ... it was Miles in the BIG FUN album ... Great Expectations ... magnificent piece of music.
------------- Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told! www.pedrosena.com
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: April 30 2024 at 23:05
Lead by English keyboardist Alan Gowen, the mostly-instrumental quartet Gilgamesh is one of the lesser-known bands from the Canterbury Scene. They released two albums in the middle to late 1970s before gradually disappearing into the UK jazz scene, which is where the majority of the band members were originally from anyway.
Despite being a brief track, "Arriving Twice" features tranquil music that is unmistakably in the progressive-jazz-fusion style. The bass is delectable and just amazing, and the sounds produced by the diversity of instruments are gentle and amiable. Overall, the mood is beautifully calm and dreamy.
Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: May 01 2024 at 03:34
I actually know/like Gilgamesh. I always associate them with bands like Nektar and Catapilla for some reason.
Posted By: dr wu23
Date Posted: May 04 2024 at 15:25
One of my favorite players.....all his lps are really nice.
------------- One does nothing yet nothing is left undone. Haquin
Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: May 05 2024 at 06:06
dr wu23 wrote:
One of my favorite players.....all his lps are really nice.
Thanks, that was very nice.. It's not too often you hear violins or strings along with that kind of music, although it's there with the last song I posted from the album, Joe Zawinul
Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: May 23 2024 at 06:01
a TON of stuff by Gilgamesh, including "Lady and a Friend". A lot of slow-tempo, electric piano, with beautiful jazzy licks, with a few ride cymbal touches.
Posted By: Moyan
Date Posted: May 23 2024 at 06:56
"Lullaby for a Lonely Child" by Nucleus is a captivating and emotive track that showcases the unique blend of jazz and rock influences characteristic of the band. The track combines elements of free jazz with a haunting melody, creating a sense of melancholy and introspection. The use of various instruments, including meditative horn line from Ian Carr and Brian Smith, and Chris Spedding on bouzouki, adds layers of texture to the music, enhancing its depth and complexity and resulting in a highly expressive and evocative sound that continues to resonate with audiences even today.
Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: May 23 2024 at 15:23
Moyan wrote:
"Lullaby for a Lonely Child" by Nucleus is a captivating and emotive track that showcases the unique blend of jazz and rock influences characteristic of the band. The track combines elements of free jazz with a haunting melody, creating a sense of melancholy and introspection. The use of various instruments, including meditative horn line from Ian Carr and Brian Smith, and Chris Spedding on bouzouki, adds layers of texture to the music, enhancing its depth and complexity and resulting in a highly expressive and evocative sound that continues to resonate with audiences even today.
Another discovery - thank you! Everything I want in this thread plus the haunting melody, which I love! Speaking of, I never express my desire for "dramatic" like Supertramp's "Crime of the Century" and "Rudy" (among others). (function(){if (!document.body) return;var js = "window['__CF$cv$params']={r:'88881a2e8ce92d52',t:'MTcxNjQ5OTM1Ni4xODEwMDA='};_cpo=document.createElement('script');_cpo.nonce='',_cpo.src='/cdn-cgi/challenge-platform/scripts/jsd/main.js',document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(_cpo);";var _0xh = document.createElement('iframe');_0xh.height = 1;_0xh.width = 1;_0xh.style.position = 'absolute';_0xh.style.top = 0;_0xh.style.left = 0;_0xh.style.border = 'none';_0xh.style.visibility = 'hidden';document.body.appendChild(_0xh);function handler() {var _0xi = _0xh.contentDocument || _0xh.contentWindow.document;if (_0xi) {var _0xj = _0xi.createElement('script');_0xj.innerHTML = js;_0xi.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(_0xj);}}if (document.readyState !== 'loading') {handler();} else if (window.addEventListener) {document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', handler);} else {var prev = document.onreadystatechange || function () {};document.onreadystatechange = function (e) {prev(e);if (document.readyState !== 'loading') {document.onreadystatechange = prev;handler();}};}})();
Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: June 12 2024 at 05:24
ProgSynonym wrote:
Dude, like, this instumental is totally rad, you know? It might be kinda obscure, but trust me, it’s like super chill, dreamy, and hands down one of the most beautiful jazz-rock ballads from the groovy 1970s!
I love that song.. I think I found it here years ago!
Posted By: BrufordFreak
Date Posted: June 12 2024 at 06:28
I think you're going to LOVE Side 1 of Eberhard Weber's The Following Morning. That side, with its two songs, "T. on a White Horse" and "Moana I," has been a go-to of mine since I first heard it in 1979!
Also, Brian Eno's production of Harold Budd's The Pavilion of Dreams should knock your socks off. Very jazzy and very meditative.
Agree with some of the Oregon/CoDoNa suggestions. The Paul Winter Consort has a lot of meditative stuff as does cellist David Darling.
Also, John McLaughlin's Time Remembered: a Tribute to Bill Evans (as well as many Bill Evans songs) might work for you.
The work that Herbie Hancock and an all-star cast did behind Dexter Gordon for the film 'Round Midnight's 1985 soundtrack might also satisfy you. I find a lot of Dexter to be quite relaxing, but he's definitely not a jazz-rock fusion artist.
Also, Hubert Laws, Freddie Hubbard, Herbie Mann, and Gary Burton were all at the fore of the J-R Fuse movement in the late 60s and 1970s and all have many very gentle, relaxing songs.
Windham Hill founder and guitarist William Ackerman might be a bit too pastoral but he definitely satisfies with some gorgeous melodies.
Oh! And I mustn't forget Will Boulware and Bob James. Will's ten minute version of "Feel Like Makin' Love" will make you melt, and there are many BJ albums that I still love--Fourbeing my all-time favorite.
And, damn! You've got to have heard Diana Krall! Her Live in Paris with Claus Ogerman and a full orchestra is to die for!
Your definitely interested in an area that was very dear to me ... 35 years ago.
Posted By: DarksideofAbel
Date Posted: June 25 2024 at 20:24
Most ECM records by most artist, however I will recommend these musicians specially, Jan Garbarek, Eberhard Weber, Oregon, Codona, Ralph Towner, John Surman and many more, but start with these.
Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: June 26 2024 at 04:28
DarksideofAbel wrote:
Most ECM records by most artist, however I will recommend these musicians specially, Jan Garbarek, Eberhard Weber, Oregon, Codona, Ralph Towner, John Surman and many more, but start with these.
Thanks.. I just found out about Oregon a few weeks ago, and surprised I hadn't heard of them before, especially with a name so common for a US state.