Nice The sound on the piano was very debatable(But I guess there is something I am missing here?).I really liked how relaxed the music was, remined me a bit of Bill Evans. And I am always ready for some cool-jazz
what did you do to get the lid off that? i thought it was superglued. it just snaps off?
i like the end...too...how you fade into 'bweep, bweep, bweep.............' and then 'bweep.' you are very generous to give so much time to the sax and drummer. you don't hog the stage. you have an innate sense for jazz. i like the re-emergence, too.
did you ever hear david sanborn (saxophonist)? the sax player reminds me of his casual style.
I've been told I look like Bill Evans,
I know this is an old post but I felt compelled to comment.. there is some great stuff in the improvisation, I really liked some of the stuff that was happening, it was very musical..I really like the rhythm section.. wayne's tunes are very impressionistic but they are very rhtymically driven and they swing hard, and i really liked the fact the the performance captured that.I just wanted to give some suggestion.. maybe i am not qualified to do so but I am guessing you are primarily a classical pianist? (correct me if i am wrong).
I felt like the lines were wondering from time to time, and having some bebop lines under your hands can benefit quite a bit. I don't think you have to be able to play like Bud Powell, but most people that play post-bop do carry that element into their playing. I also think it would help to simplify.. using the blue scale, rhytmic reptition..using chords in improv as part of the solo.. you are already doing them but i guess it would be nice to have more of that.
I remember liking the part where you played the triplet and I really liked that..i think another thing to develop is the rhyhtmic aspect.. there are so many hemiloas that you can play and it really compliments the style.. for example playing triplets and accenting every 2 notes or ever 4 notes or or making 2 measures of 3/4 into 3 measures of 2/4 by accenting every 2 beats (found in Barque music often)..]I know I am saying a lot but these are things I found in post bop that is part of the vocabulary.. when I hear Herbie Hancock he has all of that going on.. like at the end of his solo on Speak no evil he plays 3/4 over 4/4 (accenting every 4 triplet).. and how he is mainly using blues licks on Fee-Fi-Fo-Fum
again i just felt compelled to write something because there were so many great things about this solo, i just thought if all those elemnets were there you will be kicking some serious @$$ as some would say