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Posted

"Featuring the great masters of European jazz such as Chris Barber, Jan Garbarek, Juliette Gréco, Stefano Bollani and Till Brönner, to name but a few" - huh? Juliette Gréco and Till Brönner and Chris Barber are some of "the great masters of European jazz"? Sorry, give me a break!

Everyone knows Garbarek, he's more of a new agey easy listening guy by now, and Bollani while very, very good, is only just getting started...

alternative list (incomplete) of "great masters of European jazz":

Albert Mangelsdorff

John Surman

Peter Brötzmann

Misha Mengelberg

Han Bennink

Derek Bailey (jazz? well...)

Enrico Rava

Gianluigi Trovesi

Giorgio Gasini

Bernard Peiffer

Barney Wilen

Irene Schweizer

Pierre Favre

Daniel Humair

Louis Sclavis

Michel Portal

Henri Texier

Aldo Romano

Manfred Schoof

Krzystof Komeda

Bernt Rosengren

NHOP

Peter Trunk

Ronnie Ross

Tony Coe

Francy Boland

...

wtf?

I quite liked Benedikt's Blue Note film, but then mostly so because it was nice for the newbie I was back then, to see so many photos of these great musicians... but this is way over the top!

Posted

If history is the DVD's theme, your list, UBU, is far too limited, a Marsalis in reverse approach :)

It comes down to one's definition of "European jazz." Are we talking about European jazz forms or any jazz played by Europeans? Chris would fit into the latter concept, Garbarek into the former (your categorization notwithstanding).

Actually, garthsj's heading is as misleading as the DVD's title--its subtitle is, "The story of jazz in Europe," which leaves it wide open as to who is qualified for inclusion. Sounds like this might be nothing more than a collection of jazz performances on European soil. Armstrong? Miles? The stretch is obvious.

Posted

"Featuring the great masters of European jazz such as Chris Barber, Jan Garbarek, Juliette Gréco, Stefano Bollani and Till Brönner, to name but a few" - huh? Juliette Gréco and Till Brönner and Chris Barber are some of "the great masters of European jazz"? Sorry, give me a break!

Everyone knows Garbarek, he's more of a new agey easy listening guy by now, and Bollani while very, very good, is only just getting started...

alternative list (incomplete) of "great masters of European jazz":

for those who only read the big print, soo...

If history is the DVD's theme, your list, UBU, is far too limited, a Marsalis in reverse approach :)

It comes down to one's definition of "European jazz." Are we talking about European jazz forms or any jazz played by Europeans? Chris would fit into the latter concept, Garbarek into the former (your categorization notwithstanding).

Actually, garthsj's heading is as misleading as the DVD's title--its subtitle is, "The story of jazz in Europe," which leaves it wide open as to who is qualified for inclusion. Sounds like this might be nothing more than a collection of jazz performances on European soil. Armstrong? Miles? The stretch is obvious.

If there wasn't a smiley there, my short reply would be eff-off... I don't like being compared to Wynetone, and I don't think my posting activities here give you any reason to do that, so please don't do that again, thanks for understanding.

The Amazon blurb mentions how Benedict travelled through all of Europe to collect material... and if the all-encompassing aspect of this project gets stressed like it is in that blurb, I can't but oppose to that, even more so with the few mentioned names. Of course it didn't escape me that most of the names on the DVD cover are Americans - all the weirder. However, even if it's about expats in Europe and/or defining concert on European soil (yuck, Blut & Boden anyone? Is "soil" a harmless word in Engish/American?), the list would be different, including, for instance, Coleman Hawkins, Kenny Clarke, Ben Webster, Dexter Gordon, or in case of concerts, the Miles 1960 tour, the first bop concerts after WWII, or the Fondation Maeght concerts by Taylor and Ayler, or the Antibes concert by Coltrane.

alternative list (incomplete) of "great masters of European jazz":

Wot - no Tubby Hayes and Joe Harriott? :w

or Martial Solal.

As you might well know, I love Solal, you might know less about my love for Harriott, and as for Tubby, I'm not so well-versed yet... but I liked the four or five albums I've heard (including the great first one by Dizzy Reece on Blue Note).

Posted (edited)

oh, and I still think this DVD looks like a weird over-ambitious thing...

the film's from 2006, here's the cast list lifted off the IMDB entry:

Arild Andersen ... Himself

Georg Baselitz ... Himself

Django Bates ... Himself

Stefano Bollani ... Himself

Till Brönner ... Himself

Dee Dee Bridgewater ... Herself

Richard Cook ... Himself

Wolfgang Dauner ... Himself

Karl-Heinz Drechsel ... Himself

Manfred Eicher ... Himself

Jon Falt ... Himself

Jan Garbarek ... Himself

Michel Godard ... Himself

Dexter Gordon ... Himself (archive footage)

Dusko Gojkovic ... Himself

Juliette Gréco ... Herself

Arve Henriksen ... Himself

Anders Jormin ... Himself

Krzysztof Komeda ... Himself (archive footage)

Joachim Kühn ... Himself

Paul Kuhn ... Himself

Slawomir Kurkiewicz ... Himself

Gérard La Viny ... Himself (as Gérard Lavigny)

Albert Mangelsdorff ... Himself

Marilyn Mazur ... Herself

Palle Mikkelborg ... Himself

Pino Minafra ... Himself

Michal Miskiewicz ... Himself

Niels Henning Ørsted Pedersen ... Himself

Enrico Rava ... Himself

Antonello Salis ... Himself

Klaus Schulz ... Himself

Coco Schumann ... Himself

Louis Sclavis ... Himself

Martial Solal ... Himself

Tomasz Stanko ... Himself

Bobo Stenson ... Himself

Stan Tracy ... Himself

René Urtreger ... Himself

Christian Wallumrod ... Himself

Marcin Wasilweski ... Himself

Ben Webster ... Himself (archive footage)

Richard Williams ... Himself

Robert Wyatt ... Himself

Joseph Zawinul ... Himself (as Joe Zawinul)

rest of cast listed alphabetically:

Louis Armstrong ... Himself (archive footage) (uncredited)

Dizzy Gillespie ... Himself (archive footage) (uncredited)

looks a bit better, but then again... it seems more or less limited to mainstream (incl. ECM, but then that turned maisntream long time ago), however with Sclavis, Rava, Urtreger, Kühn, Minafra, Salis etc. there are some interesting musicians in there, it seems.

(edited for crappy original editing)

Edited by king ubu

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