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Thelonious Monk - Something in Blue (1971) [24.96 FLAC] vinyl
Genre: Jazz
Source: Black Lion Records BLPP-30119 vinyl
Codec: FLAC
Bit rate: ~ 2,500 kbps
Bit depth: 24
Sample rate: 96 kHz
01 Blue Sphere
02 Hackensack
03 Nice Work If You Can Get It
04 Criss Cross
05 Something in Blue
06 Evidence
07 Jackie-Ing
08 Nutty
The most important jazz musicians are the ones who are successful in creating their own original world of music with its own rules, logic, and surprises. Thelonious Monk, who was criticized by observers who failed to listen to his music on its own terms, suffered through a decade of neglect before he was suddenly acclaimed as a genius; his music had not changed one bit in the interim. In fact, one of the more remarkable aspects of Monks music was that it was fully formed by 1947 and he saw no need to alter his playing or compositional style in the slightest during the next 25 years.
Thelonious Monk grew up in New York, started playing piano when he was around five, and had his first job touring as an accompanist to an evangelist. He was inspired by the Harlem stride pianists (James P. Johnson was a neighbor) and vestiges of that idiom can be heard in his later unaccompanied solos. However, when he was playing in the house band of Mintons Playhouse during 1940-1943, Monk was searching for his own individual style. Private recordings from the period find him sometimes resembling Teddy Wilson but starting to use more advanced rhythms and harmonies. He worked with Lucky Millinder a bit in 1942 and was with the Cootie Williams Orchestra briefly in 1944 (Williams recorded Monks "Epistrophy" in 1942 and in 1944 was the first to record "Round Midnight" , but it was when he became Coleman Hawkins regular pianist that Monk was initially noticed. He cut a few titles with Hawkins (his recording debut) and, although some of Hawkins fans complained about the eccentric pianist, the veteran tenor could sense the pianists greatness.
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