Re: [Harp-L] Coltrane and Ballads- creative inspirations
- To: icemanle@xxxxxxx, harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: Re: [Harp-L] Coltrane and Ballads- creative inspirations
- From: Grant Dermody <gdermody@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 20 Apr 2006 12:49:07 -0700 (PDT)
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Hello everyone,
Longtime lurker Grant Dermody from Seattle here. I have enjoyed this thread very much. If I may, I'd like to ask you all about individual all time great harmonica tunes that inspired, amazed, made you want to pick up the instrument in the first place.
How's this for a start?
Steady- William Clarke
Roller Coaster- Little Walter
In a Sentimental Mood- Charlie Leighton
Lost John- Sonny Terry
Walter's Boogie- Walter Horton
icemanle@xxxxxxx wrote:
This is great stuff and of much interest to me as a musician/harmonica player.
Here are 5 suggestions for listening, each dealing with another musical aspect
Portishead - "Live in NYC" - you wanna know about minimalism, simplicity and SLOW? Check'em out.
Eva Cassidy - anything she sings will give you a glimpse into the workings of a musical angel
Brian Ferry - "Taxi" - how one can play other's music and make it original again
Roger Waters - "Amused to Death" - creative genius in subject and sonic wonderland
Peggy Lee/Tony Bennet - how to lyrically tell a story through song
The Iceman
-----Original Message-----
From: aeskow@xxxxxxx
To: harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Thu, 20 Apr 2006 08:47:34 -0400
Subject: [Harp-L] Coltrane and Ballads
Lost in the to-and-fro--and perhaps even the hither-and-thither--about A Love
Supreme (before whose altar I, personally, worship) is a whole other aspect of
Coltrane's playing that I find too often neglected--and in the long run perhaps
of equal or greater use to most harp players, and that is his insanely delicate
and heartfelt way with a ballad. On my own desert island compilation of discs
I'd be sure to include the Ballads album he did with Johnny Hartman, whose voice
may be an acquired taste (I think it's what the adjective "plummy" was invented
for) but which I dig a lot. Just hearing the way Coltrane cuts to the heart of
each melody with a samurai grace is a master class in soul. It's as if, having
plumbed the depths of the cosmos via his sax and his dope, he returned to some
timeless simplicities and was able to evoke them with brushstrokes of perfect
grace.
Peace and Respect,
Johnny T
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