Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The Best of McCoy Tyner: The Blue Note Years by McCoy Tyner released in 1996. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

    • (3)
  2. 18 de mar. de 1991 · This best-of collection is made up of tracks from all of the saxophonist's early Blue Note LPs, including his signature tune, the beguiling bossa nova "Recorda Me"; the coolly complex "Serenity"; and a choice take on Cedar Walton's tribute to Henderson, "Mode for Joe."

    • (18)
    • Live at Newport
    • The Turning Point
    • Echoes of A Friend
    • Today & Tomorrow
    • Reaching Fourth
    • Fly with The Wind
    • Sahara
    • Horizon
    • Extensions
    • Trident

    Though not as cathartically intense as the pianist’s potent 70s live albums, Enlightenment and Atlantis, this onstage snapshot of Tyner and his band, captured at the Newport Jazz Festival on July 5, 1973, offers an in-concert summation of his early solo years. “Newport Romp,” specially written for the festival, is a jaunty, joyous piece of hard bop...

    In November 1991, Tyner, then 52, assembled a 15-piece big band, which offered dynamic reworkings of three of his signature songs (“Passion Dance,” “High Priest,” and “Fly With The Wind”) alongside three tastefully-executed jazz standards. The arrangements are deft and inventive, and Tyner, attacking his piano with venom, more than holds his own ag...

    Recorded in Tokyo and released via the Victor company in Japan before being issued by Milestone in the US, Echoes Of A Friend is a collection of unaccompanied Coltrane-inspired piano music. An intimate solo recording, the album includes ornate, heavily embroidered versions of Coltrane’s “Naima,” “The Promise” and “My Favorite Things.” The record’s ...

    Tyner’s fourth outing for Impulse! put him in the studio with fellow Coltrane quartet members, bassist Jimmy Garrison and drummer Elvin Jones, along with a three-horn frontline (John Gilmore, Frank Strozier, and Thad Jones). A solid collection of hard bop and modal jazz, Tyner was only 24 when he recorded the album, but he was already showing a mat...

    This album, the second of Tyner’s career, released when he was 24 years old, is a rewarding trio session featuring bassist Henry Grimes and drummer Roy Haynes. The three musicians gel telepathically on two original tunes and three standards; standouts include the turbo-charged title song, the swinging “Old Devil Moon” and “Blues Back,” which begins...

    Tyner used a larger compositional canvas for this ambitious project, on which he arranged four original tunes as well as one standard (“You Stepped Out Of A Dream”) for an orchestra conducted by William Fischer. Flautist Hubert Laws also guests, adding decorative touches to Tyner’s material, which ranges from cinematic tone poems (the title track) ...

    Tyner’s first album for producer Orrin Keepnews’ Milestone label was this barnstormer, a quartet session that also found the pianist dabbling with the flute, koto (a Japanese stringed instrument), and percussion. The opener, “Ebony Queen” is a searing modal tone poem featuring incendiary sax work by Sonny Fortune, while “A Prayer For My Family,” wi...

    Tyner led a seven-piece band on this album, which included violinist John Blake, whose distinctive sound graced four of Horizon’s five tracks. Blake also contributed two tracks, the achingly beautiful ballad “Woman Of Tomorrow” and the more explorative modal piece “Motherland,” but the album’s cornerstone is Tyner’s self-written title track, a Lati...

    Recorded in 1970 but shelved until 1973, by which time Tyner had left Blue Note for Milestone, Extensions finds Tyner in stellar company mining a deep spiritual jazz vibe. Alice Coltrane guests on harp on three of the album’s four modal-flavored songs, augmented by a quintet that includes jazz luminaries Wayne Shorter, Gary Bartz, Ron Carter, and E...

    Though accompanied solely by bassist Ron Carter and drummer Elvin Jones, Trident isn’t a conventional trio album. That’s because Tyner plays harpsichord and celesta on some tracks, imbuing the record with unique sonic properties. He pays homage to Coltrane by including a combustible version of the saxophonist’s “Impressions”; Thelonious Monk’s geni...

    • Charles Waring
    • 18 min
  3. # 3 recorded at the Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey on December 1, 1967 and originally issued on 'Tender Moments' (Blue Note BST 84275) # 4 recorded at the Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey on August 23, 1968 and originally issued on 'Expansions' (Blue Note BST 84338)

    • (1)
    • 1
  4. 4 de nov. de 2023 · Many of the Blue Note albums he played on are considered classics, including: ‘Song For My Father’ by Horace Silver; ‘The Sidewinder’, Lee Morgan; ‘The Real McCoy’, McCoy Tyner; ‘Unity’, Larry Young; ‘Point Of Departure’, Andrew Hill; and ‘Idle Moments’ by Grant Green.

  5. Play all. Enjoy this playlist of saxophone great, Joe Henderson. Be sure to subscribe for more playlists like this and to listen to some of my own music. Thanks! joehe...

  6. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1989 CD release of "The Blue Note Years" on Discogs.