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Live
At New Morning, Paris
Jim
Pepper ts & voc
Mal Waldron p
Ed Schuller b
John Betsch dr
Titles:
Flying at new morning
Three quarter gemini
Somewhere over the rainbow
Ski jumping blues
Soul mates
Green pepper - freewheelin´ at utopia
Legacy of the flying eagle # 2
(Remembrance + Ya Na Ho + Four Winds + Witchi Tia To)
Producer:
Peter Wiessmueller
Recording: Radio France, Hanno Ströher & Raimo Jokela,
Yle
Locations: Live At New Morning - Paris, Club Utopia - Innsbruck
& Hotel Ilves / Ball Room At Tampere Jazz Happening, all
in 1989
(c) & (p) 1999 Pasparamas Music
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ETERNALLY
FLOWING WATER - YOU CAN'T GET EVER HAVE ENOUGH !
It's
now over seven years ago that the jazz world lost one of
its most original voices: Jim Pepper, the saxophonist with
an unmistakeably own individual sound, with original compositions
and an ardent voice. Tutu Records has the good fortune to
possess a few live recordings. Here's a selection from them!
The Flying Eagle made a stop-over at the New Morning in
Paris to create a scintillating live ambience...Not just
a casual jam based on stale jazz standards with never-ending
solos, as so often is the case, but an improvising 'working
band', with a comcept that just keeps the sparks flying!
Too often, Jim Pepper's music was patronisingly entitled
Red Indian jazz. With the present album, it becomes abundantly
clear once again, that this is very short of the truth.
Not just the other personalities who're involved are a guarantee
for the consistently high artistic standard of the improvisation:
Mal Waldron with a typically light hand on the piano,
as also the utterly appropriate rhythm section with Ed Schuller
on bass and John Betsch on the drums, "swinging' as swing
can"; and of course, first and foremost, Jim Pepper himself,
that great tylist and improvisor!
In the "Pep" classic, Three-Quarter Gemini, all the particpants
leave you their visiting cards. And in addition to this,
two ballads: In Paris, Pepper seemed to find himself repeatedly
Somewhere Over The Rainbow; and then there's the original
Mal Waldron ballad, Soul Mates, in this live quartet set-up,
the studio version of which the composer
once spontaneously dedicated to his duo partner, Jim Pepper.
A very special surprise is Ski-Jumpin' Blues, with verses
about Jim Pepper's highly personal grappling with the border
zones of living, his crazy life! And of course, what can't
be left out, as a starter, that vergreen, Witchi Tia To,
trimmed with a medley that picks up the most popular Pepper
tunes, robust and poetic at once; a catchy tune - but also
a litany - to that "eternally flowing water" - which you
can't ever get enough of.
Jazzdimensions
about 'Live
At New Morning, Paris' Jazzdimensions:
"Face the nation" - Nachruf auf Jim Pepper
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