We decided to learn more about the state of vinyl in the state of Maine, and made a pilgrimage to the city of Waterville where we found The Record Connection. The store is a used book and record shop, located a few miles off I95, and a good 50 miles or so from where we live, but, as we discovered, well worth the trip. It does not hurt that there is a fine brew pub at about the midway point where Bethany loves getting her ass kicked in Rummy.
Two rekkids in this recent haul were by pianist/composer Ahmad Jamal, one of the most overlooked and under-appreciated artists alive today(Ahmad is pushing 81 and still on the road). Those who know him, or at least of him, associate the tune "Poinciana" with him. It is not one of his compositions, but it might as well be, since he is one of these musicians who can own a tune, regardless of the performance practices of other artists (even the composers) . Not to say that he is disrespectful, far from it. He brings the music into himself and breathes a piece of his life back out, like the way plants take in CO2 and give back oxygen (one other artist who is very, very good at this is Richie Havens) .
Ahmad's phrases flow along, and occasionally burst into blossoms of sound and color, yet never overwhelming or overstating. In no tune is this more clear than in his performance of "Autumn Leaves", from the "Poinciana" album. He so carefully uses texture to create shapes within the structure of the tune, and is very conscious of meaning and context. Ideas develop and return, as in the best "composed" music (I know a few composers, myself among them, who would give their eye-teeth to write with that kind of acuity, much less improvise).
For me, the blossoms that fly from Ahmad's hands are the same blossoms that we found in the stacks at Record Connection, which in turn is yet another blossom we found on a side street in Waterville.
1 comment:
Musical blossom - wonderful. Your descriptions of music are incredibly effective. Great post.
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