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Posted

What is the original piece of music that became:

1. My Reverie (Claude Debussy is the composer)

2. These Are The Things I Love (Tchaikovsky composer)

Also, what is the piece of music from which Woody Shaw lifted the intro to 'Zoltan'?

Thanks,

Bertrand.

Posted (edited)

What is the original piece of music that became:

1. My Reverie (Claude Debussy is the composer)

2. These Are The Things I Love (Tchaikovsky composer)

Also, what is the piece of music from which Woody Shaw lifted the intro to 'Zoltan'?

Thanks,

Bertrand.

I think it's from the Hary Janos Suite, composed by Zoltan Kodaly.

Didn't Coltrane borrow from two different classical compositions when writing the melody of "Impressions"?

Guy

Edited by Guy Berger
Posted

Yes, Ravel's Pavane pour une infante defunte and Morton Gould's Pavanne from his Symphonette No. 2 (kind of classical-pops). Put the two of these on top of So What harmonies and you've got Impressions.

The Debussy is just titled "Reverie" and the Tchaikovsky is his "Melodie" Op. 42.

Mike

Posted (edited)

Thanks Mike and Guy.

Since Guy brought up the whole 'Pavanne'/'Impressions' thing, I had another question about that.

I can't discern any similarities between 'Pavanne' as recorded by Larry Young, and 'Impressions'. Is it the different harmonies that are throwing me off? Any guidelines that might help me make the connection?

Thanks,

Bertrand.

Edited by bertrand
Posted

Yes, Ravel's Pavane pour une infante defunte and Morton Gould's Pavanne from his Symphonette No. 2 (kind of classical-pops). Put the two of these on top of So What harmonies and you've got Impressions.

The "Impressions" theme is clearly played, many years before Coltrane's Impulse recording, by Ahmad Jamal in his version of Gould's "Pavanne" (Epic, 1955) B-)

Luca

Posted

Well, yes, obviously, because Jamal plays what Gould wrote in 1938. Jimmie Lunceford and Charlie Barnet had versions in 1940 - maybe Glenn Miller in 1939.

Wasn't Lewis Porter who wrote that in 1947 Coltrane had played an arrangement of Ravel's Pavane?

Luca

Posted

Bertrand, don't know if your interest extends this far, but there's a good ASV compilation called JAZZING THE CLASSICS that features the kind of tunes you're talking about, drawn from the late 1930s/early 1940s, when that trend was in vogue.

Posted

The book of Kismet makes use of Borodin, including "Baubles Bangles & Beads" & "Stranger in Paradise". -- Then there's Dvorak & "Going Home". Nice version on Bill Mays's Palmetto disc.

Art Tatum of course did a lot of stride piano versions of light classical repertoire.

Posted

It seems like I remember reading that Wayne Shorter's "Dance Cadaverous" was inspired by Sibelius' "Valse Triste," which also appeared later on a different Wayne Shorter album. I don't have either available to confirm right now, but maybe someone else does.

Posted

I believe that Ravel's Pavane pour une infante defunte is also the basis of "The Lamp is Low." And Duke Jordan's "Jordu" makes use of "In the Hall of the Mountain King" from Grieg's Peer Gynt Suite.

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